Aidin Namin, Ph.D.

Associate Professor of Marketing Analytics, College of Business Administration

  • Los Angeles CA UNITED STATES

Contact

Biography

You can contact Aidin Namin at aidin.namin@lmu.edu.

A modeler by training and passion, Dr. Aidin Namin received his Ph.D. from the University of Texas at Dallas, and his MBA and B.S. degrees from Sharif University of Technology.

Applying quantitative and econometrics techniques, his research interests are marketing and data analytics in the areas of retailing and digital marketing. Dr. Namin has received several grants, research and teaching awards from different institutions. Some of these awards include LMU Excellence in Research Award; recognition as a Thought Leader in Retailing Research; the Paul R. Lawrence Award from the Case Research Foundation; four Best Paper Awards in Marketing Analytics and Big Data; Research Award from Western Decision Sciences Institute; AEF Visiting Professor; Outstanding Reviewer recognitions from Journal of Business Research, Journal of Retailing and Consumer Services, Emerald Publishing, and Elsevier Publishing; and the competitive AMS-AFM research grant from the Academy of Marketing Science. Dr. Namin has also been the recipient of three major teaching awards. Two national teaching awards (the AMA and the ACME Teaching Innovation Awards), and the Teacher of the Year award from UT Dallas. The AMA Teaching Award is considered the most prestigious teaching award in the field of Marketing. Dr. Namin is also selected as Best 40-Under-40 Business School Professors by Poets&Quants for excellence in research and teaching.

His research has been published in high quality academic journals including the Journal of Retailing, Journal of Interactive Marketing, Journal of Business Research, International Journal of Hospitality Management, Journal of Retailing and Consumer Services, and Journal of Product and Brand Management. Dr. Namin is co-chair for the leading academic retailing foundation: the American Collegiate Retailing Association (ACRA) 2023 conference. He has served as Editor (Special Issue) of a prominent journal in the field. He is currently serving on the Editorial Board of Journal of Business Research and Journal of Marketing Analytics, and as a reviewer for multiple reputable journals. Before starting the PhD program, Dr. Namin worked in the industry as a data analyst and market researcher for some years.

On the personal side, Aidin cares a lot about his family as well as his students. He enjoys outdoor activities. He spends some of his free trying new food recipes found on the Internet!

Education

University of Texas at Dallas

Ph.D.

Marketing Analytics

Sharif University of Technology

MBA

Graduate Studies

Sharif University of Technology

B.S.

Industrial Engineering

Social

Areas of Expertise

Marketing Analytics
Data Analytics
Modeling
Econometrics
Retailing
Pricing Models

Industry Expertise

Market Research
Research

Accomplishments

Best 40-Under-40 Business School Professors by Poets&Quants

2023-06-05

Selected from more than 1,500 nominations for demonstrated excellence in teaching and research.

Best Paper Award Honorable Mention

2023-05-01

Winner of Best Paper Award Honorable Mention for a paper published in the Journal of Interactive Marketing (an AMA journal).

2023 AMA Teaching Award

2023-02-11

This award given by the American Marketing Association (AMA) is considered the most prestigious teaching award in the marketing field and recognizes innovative excellence in marketing education for novelty, quality and demonstrated impact of pedagogical innovation that advances the discipline of marketing education.

Show All +

Articles

Innovations in retail delivery: Current trends and future directions

Journal of Retailing

Brian Ratchford, Dinesh K. Gauri, Rupinder P. Jindal, Aidin Namin

2023-12-01

Spurred on by the transition to omnichannel retailing and advances in technology, retail delivery process has seen many innovations in recent years. The delivery process, broadly defined, is the set of tasks needed to deliver the product from the retailer to the final consumer. Innovations pertain to modes of delivery, locations of delivery, and trade-offs between delivery speed and delivery charges. We attempt to build a typology of innovations and their use, and summarize their potential costs and benefits to retailers and consumers. It is easily seen that many of the innovations can be labor saving for retailers. But there has been little evidence on consumer reactions. For this purpose, we conduct a national survey to examine the likelihood of adoption of a number of innovations in delivery. We find that although overall interest in these innovations is not high at this early stage, there is a significantly large segment of customers who are more likely to adopt these innovations. These customers are predominantly millennials, have higher incomes, and they are tech-savvy, innovative, environmentally conscious, and value quality. The findings suggest that retailers need to be strategic about choosing targets for successfully propagating these innovations.

View more

Technology within cultures: Segmenting the wired consumers in Canada, France, and the USA

Journal of Business Research

Aidin Namin, Maria Petrescu and Marie-Odile Richard

2023-09-01

This paper uses a state-of-the-art quantitative modeling approach to latent class analysis to analyze American, Canadian, and French consumers’ perception of technology-based products and their cultural values. It identifies hidden segments of consumers based on technology adoption propensity, cosmopolitan characteristics, and identification with the global consumer culture. The study emphasizes the diversity and variability between and among countries regarding localism, globalism, cosmopolitanism, and the global consumer culture. The framework provides a new way to evaluate modern consumers and reflects the combination of national/regional cultural characteristics and global culture elements while highlighting the relevance of modern technologies and communication methods in leveling consumer preferences and attitudes across cultures. From a theoretical viewpoint, this article provides a new framework incorporating technology adoption propensity and cultural elements in the empirical evaluation of modern consumers.

View more

The role of feedback source and valence in crowdsourced idea innovation

Behaviour & Information Technology

Aidin Namin, Rambod Dargahi and Andrew Rohm

2023-02-13

This research investigates the effect of feedback source (expert vs. peer) and feedback valence (negative vs. positive) on the motivation of individuals in an online crowdsourced ideation platform to generate better ideas. By collecting and analyzing over 300 observations of experimental data, this study’s findings indicate that the mere presence of feedback, compared with no feedback, increases the likelihood of innovation in idea generation. Additionally, feedback from experts, rather than peers, increases the likelihood of innovation in idea generation.

View more

Show All +
Powered by