“…Lawrence F. Feick and Linda L. Price's original 'foundational' papers on mavens (Feick and Price, 1987;Price, Feick and Guskey-Federouch, 1988;Price, Feick and Guskey, 1995) have attracted numerous replications and extensions. This includes psychological influences, motives, and maven profiling (Goldsmith, Flynn, and Clark, 2012;Vazifehdoost, Akbari, and Charsted, 2012;Fitzmaurice, 2011;Stokburger-Sauer and Hoyer, 2009;Goldsmith, Clark, and Goldsmith, 2006;Clark and Goldsmith, 2005;Walsh, Gwinner, and Swanson, 2004), the extent of the maven repertoire across product and service categories (Slama and Williams, 1990), the presence of teen Internet mavens and their influence in family decision-making (Belch, Krentler and Willis-Flurry, 2005), mavens and consumer self-confidence (Clark, Goldsmith, and Goldsmith, 2008;Chelminski, and Coulter, 2007), mavens' attitudes towards technology (Geissler and Edison, 2005), consumer innovativeness of mavens (Andrews and Benedicktus, 2015;Ruvio and Shoham, 2007;Goldsmith, Flynn, and Goldsmith, 2003), maven blog activity (Kim et al,2012), the value of mavens in product referrals (Walsh and Elsner, 2012), mavens' adoption of service innovations (Evanschitzky et al,2014), and market maven activities in illicit markets (O'Sullivan, 2015), among many other areas that have received scrutiny.…”