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As online and digital transformations disrupt their business, retailers are aware of the crucial role of collecting, analyzing, and translating consumer data into competitive advantages. Underlying these disclosures of data from consumers to firms are, often implicit, terms that guide consumers’ expectations regarding the data exchange. This manuscript develops and discusses a conceptual framework that identifies four key criteria (data ownership, data intimacy, data permanence, data value) that make up consumers’ perceptions of the terms of the data exchange, and highlights how these terms affect important firm outcomes. It identifies factors that enhance firms’ ability to leverage consumer data, as well as factors that could increase the risk of violating the terms of these agreements. Understanding and operating within these terms is essential to signal respect for consumer privacy, while allowing firms to deliver data-driven value to consumers. Violating these terms, even those that are implicit, can create negative externalities with financial, reputational, and legal repercussion on the firm. The authors propose 11 research questions, and also provide managerial implications for how to better leverage data from and for valuable customer relationships.
Krafft et al. (Sat,) studied this question.