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1.
Re-examining salesperson goal orientations: Personality influencers, customer orientation, and work satisfaction 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
Eric G. Harris John C. Mowen Tom J. Brown 《Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science》2005,33(1):19-35
Several scholars have noted the importance of relationship marketing and the critical role that salesperson knowledge plays
in the formation of buyer-seller relationships. However, research on salesperson learning motivations has been relatively
scarce compared with research on firm-level learning orientations. One promising stream of research in this area is salesperson
goal orientation. Drawing from previous work in control theory, the authors extend previous research in this area by proposing
relationships between personality influencers, goal orientations, customer/selling orientation, and overall work satisfaction.
Their hypotheses are tested using data obtained from a sample of 190 real estate agents. The results provide support for their
hypothesized model. Specifically, learning orientation is shown to positively influence customer orientation, while performance
orientation is shown to positively influence selling orientation.
Eric G. Harris (eharris@lklnd.usf.edu Ph.D., Oklahoma State University) is an assistant professor of marketing at the University of South
Florida. His current research interests include goal orientation, customer orientation, and personality models applied to
consumer and employee behavior. He has published articles in theJournal of the Academy of Marketing Science, Psychology & Marketing, theJournal of Consumer Marketing, theJournal of Business & Psychology, Services Marketing Quarterly, theJournal of Services Marketing, and theJournal of Marketing Management.
John C. Mowen (jcmmkt@okstate.edu) Ph.D., Arizona State University) is Regents Professor and holds the Noble Chair of Marketing Strategy
at Oklahoma State University. He has published articles in numerous leading journals, including theJournal of the Academy of Marketing Science, theJournal of Marketing Research, theJournal of Marketing, Decisions Sciences, theJournal of Applied Psychology, theJournal of Personality and Social Psychology, Psychology and Marketing, and theJournal of Consumer Psychology. He is a past president of the Society for Consumer Psychology. His teaching and consulting interests focus on consumer behavior
and motivating the workforce. His research focuses on the factors that motivate and influence the decisions of consumers and
employees.
Tom J. Brown (tom.brown@okstate.edu; Ph.D., University of Wisconsin) is Ardmore Professor of Business Administration and an associate
professor of marketing at Oklahoma State University. His articles have appeared in leading marketing journals, including theJournal of Marketing Research, the Journal of Marketing, theJournal of Consumer Research, and theJournal of the Academy of Marketing Science. His current research interests include causes and effects of corporate reputation and the customer orientation of service
workers. He is cofounder of the Corporate Identity/Associations Research Group. Teaching interests include marketing research,
services marketing, and corporate communications. He is coauthor (with Gilbert A. Churchill Jr.) ofBasic Marketing Research (5th ed.). Consulting interests include marketing research, corporate reputation, and the customer orientation of service
workers. 相似文献
2.
Relational communication traits and their effect on adaptiveness and sales performance 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
Michael L. Boorom Jerry R. Goolsby Rosemary P. Ramsey 《Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science》1998,26(1):16-30
Two relational communication traits, communication apprehension and interaction involvement, are investigated within an adaptive
selling framework to assess their impact on salesperson adaptiveness and sales performance. Using a sample of 239 insurance
salespeople, results demonstrate that salespeople exhibiting lower levels of communication apprehension are more highly involved
in communication interactions, and higher involvement facilitates increased adaptiveness and sales performance. This research
highlights the importance of effective communication within sales interactions and offers suggestions to improve salesperson
communication skill.
Michael L. Boorom is an associate professor of marketing and associate dean of the school of business and public administration at California
State University, San Bernardino. He received his Ph.D. from the University of South Florida. His research interests are salesperson
and sales manager communication skills. His work has been published in theJournal of Personal Selling & Sales Management and several conferences.
Jerry R. Goolsby is an associate professor of marketing at the University of South Florida. He received his Ph.D. from Texas Tech University.
His research interests include sales interactions and salesperson burnout and coping strategies. His work has been published
in theJournal of Marketing, Journal of Marketing Research, Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science, and other marketing journals.
Rosemary P. Ramsey is a professor and chair of the management and marketing department at Eastern Kentucky University. She earned her Ph.D.
from University of Cincinnati. Her research interests include sales interactions and measurement issues. Her work has been
published in theJournal of the Academy of Marketing Science, Journal of Business Research, Journal of Personal Selling & Sales Management,
Journal of Social Behavior and Personality. andJournal of Marketing Education. 相似文献
3.
An examination of selected marketing mix elements and brand equity 总被引:46,自引:0,他引:46
Boonghee Yoo Naveen Donthu Sungho Lee 《Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science》2000,28(2):195-211
This study explores the relationships between selected marketing mix elements and the creation of brand equity. The authors
propose a conceptual framework in which marketing elements are related to the dimensions of brand equity, that is, perceived
quality, brand loyalty, and brand associations combined with brand awareness. These dimensions are then related to brand equity.
The empirical tests using a structural equation model support the research hypotheses. The results show that frequent price
promotions, such as price deals, are related to low brand equity, whereas high advertising spending, high price, good store
image, and high distribution intensity are related to high brand equity.
Boonghee Yoo (Ph.D., Georgia State University) is an assistant professor of marketing at St. Cloud State University. His research interests
include brand equity, cross-cultural scale development, service quality, retail productivity, Internet marketing, and marketing
methodology. He has published previously in theJournal of Retailing, theJournal of Business Research, theJournal of Business & Industrial Marketing, theJournal of Service Research, and theJournal of Marketing Channels.
Naveen Donthu (Ph. D., University of Texas, Austin) is a professor of marketing at Georgia State University. His research interests center
on research methodology, site selection models, comparative and outdoor advertising, brand equity, Hispanic consumer research,
cross-cultural issues, and customer satisfaction. His work has appeared in journals such asMarketing Science, theJournal of Marketing Research, theJournal of Consumer Research, theJournal of the Academy of Marketing Science, theJournal of Advertising, theJournal of Advertising Research, theJournal of Retailing, and theJournal of Business Research.
Sungho Lee (Ph.D., University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign) is an assistant professor of marketing at the University of Seoul, South
Korea. His research focuses on understanding consumers’ cognitive processing of brand and price information, brand extension
and brand equity, and advertising-driven persuasion processes. He has published previously inAdvances in Consumer Research, Asia-Pacific Advances in Consumer Research, Academy of Marketing Science-World Marketing Congress,
Korean Marketing Review, andKorean Management Review. 相似文献
4.
John Kim Jeen-Su Lim Mukesh Bhargava 《Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science》1998,26(2):143-152
This study investigates the role of affect in attitude formation. Two experiments, using established conditioning procedures,
assessed the impact of affect on attitude formation. The results of Experiment 1 indicate that affect can influence attitudes
even in the absence of product beliefs. The results of Experiment 2 suggest that affect plays as important or more important
a role than the belief mechanism in attitude formation, depending on the number of repetitions. Implications of the results
for understanding the role of affect in advertising are discussed.
John Kim is an associate professor of marketing in the School of Business Administration at Oakland University. He earned his Ph.D.
in marketing from the University of Cincinnati. His research interests include consumer decision making, advertising effectiveness,
and brand equity. His work has appeared in theJournal of Marketing Research, theJournal of Consumer Research, and theJournal of Business Research.
Jeen-Su Lim is Interim Chair and a professor of marketing at the University of Toledo. He received his Ph.D. in marketing from Indiana
University. His work has appeared in many journals, including theJournal of Marketing Research, theJournal of Consumer Research, theJournal of Business Research, Industrial Marketing Management, International Marketing Review, Management International Review,
Psychology and Marketing, and theJournal of Health Care Marketing, among others. His research interests include consumer inference processes, new product development and competitive strategy,
and export marketing.
Mukesh Bhargava is an assistant professor in the Department of Marketing and Management at Oakland University. He has a Ph.D. in marketing
from the University of Texas, Austin, and several years of practical experience in advertising and marketing research. His
research includes areas such as advertising effectiveness and evaluation of marketing strategy in business and nonprofit organizations.
His work has appeared in theJournal of Advertising Research, Marketing Letters, theJournal of Business Research, and theJournal of the Academy of Marketing Science, among others. 相似文献
5.
Jack J. Kasulis Fred W. Morgan David E. Griffith James M. Kenderdine 《Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science》1999,27(3):320-332
The use of trade promotions as a channel-programming tool has increased substantially in the past decade. In focusing on the
tactical implications of trade promotions, some firms appear to have underestimated the tendency of poorly planned trade promotions
to interfere with the implementation of a marketing strategy. In this article, the authors examine the complex issue of trade
promotion use from both long-term and short-term perspectives. Different trade promotions can produce dissimilar types of
channel cooperation, consumer responses, and postpromotion channel member behavior, resulting in differences in distribution-programming
preferences between suppliers and retailers. The authors argue that the adjudication of these different preference structures
is addressed through the market power of the channel participants. Based on an assessment of these channel relationships,
an approach for suggested courses of action is forwarded.
Jack J. Kasulis is an associate professor of marketing at the University of Oklahoma. He obtained his Ph.D. in marketing from Northwestern
University in Evanston, Illinois, and has research interests in marketing channels, retailing, and consumer behavior. His
articles have appeared in such journals as theJournal of Consumer Research, Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science, European Journal of Marketing, Journal of Business
Research, Journal of Advertising Research, and various other journals and proceedings.
Fred W. Morgan is the Ashland Professor of Marketing at the University of Kentucky. He obtained his Ph.D. in marketing from Michigan State
University in East Lansing and has research interests in legal issues in marketing, sales management, and marketing channels.
His articles have appeared in such journals as theJournal of Marketing, Journal of Marketing and Public Policy, Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science, Journal of Marketing
Channels, and various other journals and proceedings.
David E. Griffith is an associate professor and the Harvey Jones Chair of Marketing at Ouachita Baptist University. He obtained his Ph.D. in
marketing from the University of Texas in Austin and has research interests in marketing channels, marketing strategy, and
ethics. His research has appeared inMarketing Letters, Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science, Journal of Marketing Channels, and various other journals and proceedings.
James M. Kenderdine is an associate professor and director of the Distribution Research Program at the University of Oklahoma. He obtained his
D.B.A. from Indiana University in Bloomington. His research interests are in wholesaling, retailing, and marketing channels.
His publications have includedThe Changing Economics of Wholesaling: A North American Chart Book, Wholesaling in Transition: An Executive Chart Book, and articles in various journals and proceedings. 相似文献
6.
A refinement and validation of the MARKOR scale 总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3
Ken Matsuno John T. Mentzer Joseph O. Rentz 《Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science》2000,28(4):527-539
In this article, the authors attempt to develop an improved market orientation scale built on Kohli, Jaworski, and Kumar’s
market orientation scale (MARKOR). The modified scale is then compared with the MARKOR scale in a validation study. The authors
argue that the scale improves operationalization of the market orientation construct, and the results indicate that the psychometric
properties of the new scale are superior to those of the MARKOR scale. Implications of the results are discussed, and a future
research agenda is offered.
Ken Matsuno is assistant professor of marketing at Babson College. He received his Ph.D. from the University of Tennessee. His research
interests include marketing strategy formulation process and its outcomes and business-to-business marketing issues. His work
can be found in theJournal of Marketing, theInternational Journal of Physical Distribution and Logistics Management, and several academic conference proceedings.
John T. Mentzer is the Harry J. and Vivienne B. Bruce Excellence Chair of Business Policy in the Department of Marketing, Logistics, and
Transportation at the University of Tennessee. He received his Ph.D. from Michigan State. He has published in theJournal of the Academy of Marketing Science, Journal of Marketing, Journal of Business Logistics International Journal of
Physical Distribution and Logistics Management, Transportation Journal, Columbia Journal of World Business, Industrial Marketing
Management, Research in Marketing, and other journals.
Joseph O. Rentz is associate professor of marketing at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville. He received his Ph.D. from the University
of Georgia. His research interests include cohort analysis, measurement issues in marketing, generalizability studies, and
itnerfunctional effectiveness. He has published articles in theJournal of the Academy of Marketing Science, Journal of Marketing, andJournal of Marketing Research among others. 相似文献
7.
8.
Contracts, norms, and plural form governance 总被引:21,自引:0,他引:21
Joseph P. Cannon Ravi S. Achrol Gregory T. Gundlach 《Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science》2000,28(2):180-194
The organization of interfirm exchanges has become of critical importance in today’s business environment. Many scholars have
criticized the inadequacies of legal contracts as mechanisms for governing exchange, especially in the face of uncertainty
and dependence. Other scholars argue that it is not the contracts per se but the social contexts in which they are embedded
that determine their effectiveness. This study investigates the performance implications of governance structures involving
contractual agreements and relational social norms, individually and in combination (plural form) under varying conditions
and forms of transactional uncertainty and relationship-specific adaptation. Hypotheses are developed and tested on a sample
of 396 buyer-seller relationships. The results provide support for the plural form thesis—increasing the relational content
of a governance structure containing contractual agreements enhances performance when transactional uncertainty is high, but
not when it is low. Implications for theory and future research are discussed.
Joseph P. Cannon (Ph.D., University of North Carolina) is an assistant professor of marketing at Colorado State University. His areas of research
interest include the effective management of business-to-business buyer-seller relationships in domestic and international
markets. His research has appeared in theJournal of Marketing Research, theJournal of Marketing, theAcademy of Management Review, theJournal of Public Policy & Marketing, and other publications. He is a member of the Editorial Review Board of theJournal of Marketing.
Ravi S. Achrol (Ph.D., Northwestern University) is a professor of marketing and global management research professor in the School of Business
and Public Administration at George Washington University. Prior to joining George Washington University in 1991, he served
for 10 years on the faculty of the University of Notre Dame. His areas of research interests include interorganization theory
and marketing strategy. His articles have appeared in theJournal of Marketing, theJournal of Marketing Research, Social Science Research, theJournal of Business Strategy, theJournal of Public Policy and Marketing, and various other publications. He is a member of the Editorial Review Board of theJournal of Marketing.
Gregory T. Gundlach (Ph.D. J.D. University of Tennessee) is an associate professor of marketing in the College of Business Administration at
the University of Notre Dame. His areas of research interest include theories of exchange governance, industrial organization,
and antitrust policy. His articles have appeared in theJournal of Marketing, theJournal of Marketing Research, Marketing Science, theJournal of Public Policy & Marketing, theJournal of Business Research, Antitrust Bulletin, and other publications. He is a member of the Editorial Review Board of theJournal of Marketing, theJournal of the Academy of Marketing Science, theJournal of Public Policy & Marketing, and theJournal of Retailing. 相似文献
9.
Jeffrey G. Blodgett Long-Chuan Lu Gregory M. Rose Scott J. Vitell 《Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science》2001,29(2):190-202
This study applied Hofstede’s typology to examine the effect of culture on ethical sensitivity toward various stakeholders.
It was found that uncertainty avoidance had a positive effect and that power distance and individualism/masculinity had negative
effects on ethical sensitivity. The results also indicated that ethical sensitivity to stakeholder interests is dependent
on which stakeholder is affected. Although Americans and Taiwanese sales agents were equally sensitive to customer interests,
the Taiwanese were more sensitive to the interests of their company and a competitor but were less sensitive to the interests
of a colleague. This study should prove valuable to international marketers because the cultural typology allows managers
to identify differences in work-related values of employees across different nationalities and thus provides a theoretical
base for designing more effective sales management practices.
Jeffrey G. Blodgett (Ph.D., Indiana University) is an associate professor of marketing at the University of Mississippi. His research interests
include consumer complaint behavior and cross-cultural issues. His work has been published in theJournal of Retailing, Journal of Services Research, Journal of Business Research, Psychology and Marketing, and in other marketing journals.
Long-Chuan Lu is an assistant professor of marketing at the National Chung-Cheng University of Taiwan. He received his Ph.D. from the University
of Mississippi. His work has previously appeared in theJournal of Business Ethics, in addition to other journals and conference proceedings.
Gregory M. Rose (Ph.D., University of Oregon) is an assistant professor of marketing at the University of Mississippi. His research interests
include consumer socialization and cross-cultural consumer behavior. He has published articles in theJournal of Consumer Research, Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science, Journal of Business Research, Journal of Consumer
Psychology, Journal of Advertising, Journal of Marketing, and other journals and proceedings.
Scott J. Vitell is the Phil B. Hardin Professor of Marketing at the University of Mississippi, receiving his Ph.D. from Texas Tech University.
His previous work has appeared in theJournal of the Academy of Marketing Science, Journal of Business Research, andResearch in Marketing and the Journal of Business Ethics, in addition to numerous other journals and conference proceedings. 相似文献
10.
Victoria D. Bush Gregory M. Rose Faye Gilbert Thomas N. Ingram 《Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science》2001,29(4):391-404
Given the increase in cultural diversity within marketing organizations as well as within current and potential customer bases,
possessing the appropriate communication skills becomes crucial to success in managing culturally diverse relationships. Although
marketing researchers have recognized the importance of adaptive selling behavior for successful buyer-seller relationships,
the exploration of the intercultural aspects of these relationships has only recently begun. This article examines how adaptive
selling behaviors and intercultural dispositions of marketing executives contribute to their perceived intercultural communication
competence. Results show that in addition to being adaptive, the intercultural disposition of a marketer is of key importance
in developing intercultural communication competence. Theoretical and practical implications for incorporating intercultural
communication into the development of successful buyer-seller relationships are discussed.
Victoria D. Bush (Ph.D., University of Memphis) is an associate professor of marketing at the University of Mississippi. Her research has
appeared in such journals as theJournal of Advertising, theJournal of Advertising Research, Industrial Marketing Management, theJournal of Public Policy and Marketing, theJournal of Business Ethics, and theJournal of Services Marketing. Her research interests are in diversity, advertising, and ethics.
Gregory M. Rose (Ph.D., University of Oregon) is an associate professor of marketing at the University of Mississippi. His research interests
include consumer socialization and cross-cultural consumer behavior. He has published or has forthcoming articles in theJournal of Consumer Research, theJournal of the Academy of Marketing Science, theJournal of Business Research, theJournal of Consumer Psychology, theJournal of Advertising, theJournal of Marketing, and other journals and proceedings.
Faye Gilbert (Ph.D., University of North Texas) is an associate professor of marketing at the University of Mississippi. She has published
in theJournal of Business Research, Psychology and Marketing, theJournal of Health Care Marketing, theJournal of Research in Pharmaceutical Economics, theJournal of Applied Business Research, theJournal of Marketing Management, theJournal of Marketing Theory and Practice, and theJournal of Marketing Education, among others. Her work emphasizes the application of consumer behavior theory to health care and to channel relationships.
Thomas N. Ingram (Ph.D., Georgia State University) is a professor of marketing at Colorado State University. He has been honored as the Marketing
Educator of the Year by Sales and Marketing Executives International (SMEI) and as a recipient of the Mu Kappa Tau National
Marketing Honor Society Recognition Award for Outstanding Scholarly Contributions to the Sales Discipline. He has served as
the editor of theJournal of Personal Selling and Sales Management and is the current editor of theJournal of Marketing Theory and Practice. His primary research is in personal selling and sales management. His work has appeared in theJournal of Marketing, theJournal of Marketing Research, theJournal of Personal Selling and Sales Management, and theJournal of the Academy of Marketing Science, among others. He is the coauthor of three textbooks:Professional Selling: A Trust-Based Approach, Sales Management: Analysis and Decision Making, andMarketing: Principles and Perspectives. 相似文献
11.
Sundar Bharadwaj Terry Clark Songpol Kulviwat 《Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science》2005,33(3):347-359
Market growth plays a central role in virtually all strategic marketing models developed in the past 30 years. Although marketing
scholars seem implicitly to assume that marketing efforts contribute in some way to market growth, market growth per se remains
a conceptual black box in marketing. Using new developments in endogenous growth theory, this article explores the link between
marketing actions and market growth. In particular, the authors develop a conceptual model arguing that the effect of endogenous
actions on market growth is mediated by knowledge creation, matching, and diffusion. Propositions are proposed to guide future
research. The authors discuss the implications for marketing strategy at both business discipline and public policy levels.
Sundar Bharadwaj (Sundar_Bharadwaj@bus.Emory.edu) is an associate professor of marketing in the Goizueta Business School at Emory University.
He received his Ph.D. from Texas A&M University. His research interests focus on marketing strategy, performance, and risk.
His research has appeared in theJournal of Marketing, Management Science, and theitJournal of the Academy of Marketing Science, among others.
Terry Clark (tclark@cba.siu.edu) is a professor and chair in the marketing department at Southern Illinois University, Carbondale. He
received his Ph.D. from Texas A&M University. His research interests include the intersection of international marketing and
marketing strategy. His research has appeared in theJournal of Marketing and theJournal of the Academy of Marketing Science, among others.
Songpol Kulviwat (mktszk@hofstra.edu) is an assistant professor of marketing and international business at Hofstra University. He received
his Ph.D. in marketing from Southern Illinois University. His research interests include Internet marketing, hightech marketing,
international business (sncross-cultural research), and information technology. Prior to his academic career, he worked in
the area of international sales management in Thailand. 相似文献
12.
Dong-Jin Lee M. Joseph Sirgy James R. Brown Monroe Murphy Bird 《Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science》2004,32(1):32-48
In this article, the authors report the development and testing of a model of importers' benevolence toward their foreign
export suppliers. The model posits that an importer's satisfaction with and commitment to its relationship with a foreign
export supplier will have a positive impact on the importer's benevolence toward that supplier, that an importer's benevolence
positively influences relationship performance, and that the benevolence-performance link is moderated by relationship duration.
The authors tested the model with a sample of U.S. importers who buy from foreign exporters. The results indicate that the
importers' commitment to the relationship significantly influenced its benevolence; however, importers' satisfaction with
the relationship did not significantly affect their benevolence. Importers' altruistic benevolence had a positive impact on
performance in mature relationships but not in new relationships. Importers' mutualistic benevolence had a significant influence
on performance regardless of relationship duration.
Dong-Jin Lee (djlee@base.yonsei.ac.kr) (Ph.D, Virginia Tech) is an associate professor of marketing at Yonsei University in Seoul, Korea.
His research has been published in theJournal of Marketing, theInternational Journal of Marketing Research, and theJournal of Advertising, among others. His research interests include relationship marketing and quality-of-life studies.
M. Joseph (Joe) Sirgy (sirgy@vt.edu) (Ph.D., University of Massachusetts) is a consumer psychologist, professor of marketing, and Virginia Real
Estate Research Fellow at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University. He has published extensively in the area of
consumer behavior and quality-of-life research. He is the author/editor of several consumer behavior and quality-of-life research
books. He presently serves as an editor of the Quality-of-Life/Marketing section of theJournal of Macromarketing. He founded the International Society for Quality-of-Life Studies in 1995 and is currently serving as its executive director.
He coorganized at least seven conferences related to quality of life. He has served the Academy of Marketing Science (AMS)
in many positions dating back to the early 1980s (e.g., board of governors, VP-programs, president-elect, cochair of several
AMS conferences, conference track chairs).
James R. Brown (jamesb@vt.edu) (D.B.A., Indiana University) is a professor of marketing in the Pamplin College of Business at Virginia Polytechnic
Institute and State University. His research has been published in theJournal of Marketing, theJournal of Marketing Research, theJournal of the Academy of Marketing Science, and theJournal of Retailing, among others. He serves on the editorial review boards of several leading academic journals in marketing. His research interests
focus on the structure, behavior, and performance of marketing channels and channel institutions.
Monroe Murphy Bird (mobird@vt.edu) (Ph.D., University of Arkansas) is a professor of marketing and the National Association of Purchasing Managers
(NAPM) Carolinas-Virginia Professor of Purchasing in the Pamplin College of Business at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and
State University. His research has been published in theJournal of Marketing, theJournal of the Academy of Marketing Science, theJournal of Retailing, Industrial Marketing Management, and theAcademy of Management Journal, among others. He has served on the editorial boards of several of the business-to-business marketing journals for many years.
His major research interests have been in profit and productivity advances within the business-to-business area, with a special
emphasis in the industrial sector of that field. As of late, he has turned his interests to ethical issues in business-to-business
buying and selling. 相似文献
13.
Service failure and recovery: The impact of relationship factors on customer satisfaction 总被引:15,自引:0,他引:15
Ronald L. Hess Shankar Ganesan Noreen M. Klein 《Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science》2003,31(2):127-145
This research investigated how customers' relationships with a service organization affect their reactions to service failure
and recovery. Our conceptual model proposed that customer-organizational relationships help to shape customers' attributions
and expectations when service failures occur. The empirical results showed that customers with higher expectations of relationship
continuity had lower service recovery expectations after a service failure and also attributed that failure to a less stable
cause. Both the lower recovery expectations and the lower stability attributions were associated with greater satisfaction
with the service performance after the recovery. These effects appeared to be key processes by which relationships buffer
service organizations when service failures occur.
Ronald L. Hess Jr. (ron. hess@business.wm.edu) (Ph.D., Virginia Tech) is currently an assistant professor of marketing at the College of William
& Mary. His research interests include customer responses to service and product failures; organizational complaint handling;
and customer assessments of satisfaction, loyalty, and service quality. He has published his research inMarketing Letters and several conference proceedings.
Shankar Ganesan (sganesan @bpa.arizona.edu) (Ph.D., University of Florida) is an associate professor of marketing and Lisle and Rosslyn Payne
Fellow in Marketing at the Eller College of Business and Public Administration, University of Arizona. His research interests
focus on the areas of interorganizational relationships, buyer-seller negotiations, service failure and recovery, new product
innovation, and E-marketing. He is the author of several articles that have appeared in leading academic journals, including
theJournal of Marketing Research, theJournal of Marketing, theJournal of Retailing, theJournal of Personal Selling and Sales Management, theJournal of the Academy of Marketing Science, and theJournal of Applied Psychology. He currently serves on the editorial review board of theJournal of Marketing Research and theJournal of Marketing.
Noreen M. Klein (nklein@vt.edu) (Ph.D., Pennsylvania State University) is currently an associate professor of marketing at Virginia Polytechnic
Institute and State University. Her research interests include consumer decision making and the behavioral aspects of pricing,
and her research has been published in the theJournal of Consumer Research, Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Making, and theJournal of the Academy of Marketing Science. 相似文献
14.
Spreading the word: Investigating antecedents of consumers’ positive word-of-mouth intentions and behaviors in a retailing context 总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6
Tom J. Brown Thomas E. Barry Peter A. Dacin Richard F. Gunst 《Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science》2005,33(2):123-138
Empirical studies investigating the antecedents of positive word of mouth (WOM) typically focus on the direct effects of consumers’
satisfaction and dissatisfaction with previous purchasing experiences. The authors develop and test a more comprehensive model
of the antecedents of positive. WOM (both intentions and behaviors), including consumer identification and commitment. Specifically,
they hypothesize and test commitment as a mediator and moderator of satisfaction on positive WOM and commitment as a mediator
of identification on WOM. Using data obtained from customers of a retailer offering both products and services, they find
support for all hypothesized relationships with WOM intentions and/or WOM behaviors as the dependent variable. The authors
conclude with a discussion of their findings and implications for both marketing theory and practice.
Tom J. Brown (tomb@okstate.edu) is Ardmore Professor of Business Administration and an associate professor of marketing at Oklahoma State
University. He received his Ph.D. from the University of Wisconsin-Madison. His articles have appeared in leading marketing
journals including theJournal of Marketing Research, theJournal of Marketing, theJournal of Consumer Research, and theJournal of the Academy of Marketing Science. His current research interests include causes and effects of corporate reputation and the customer orientation of service
workers. He is cofounder of the Corporate Identity/Associations Research Group. Teaching interests include marketing research,
services marketing, and corporate communications. He is coauthor (with Gilbert A. Churchill Jr.) ofBasic Marketing Research (5th ed.).
Thomas E. Barry (tbarry@mail.smu.edu) is a professor of marketing and vice president for executive affairs at Southern Methodist University
in Dallas, Texas. He received his Ph.D. from the University of North Texas. His primary teaching and research interests are
in the areas of integrated marketing communications, marketing management, brand equity, loyalty, and advertising effectiveness.
His research has appeared in numerous journals including theJournal of Marketing Research, theJournal of Advertising Research, theJournal of Advertising, theJournal of Consumer Psychology, and theJournal of the Academy of Marketing Science. He is the author or coauthor of two books in marketing and advertising management. He has consulted for a variety of firms
and is a director on four boards. In 1995, he received the Outstanding Contributions in Advertising Research Award from the
American Academy of Advertising.
Peter A. Dacin (pdacin@business.queens.ca) is a professor of marketing at Queen’s University in Kingston, Ontario, Canada. He received his
Ph.D. from the University of Toronto. His primary teaching and research interests lie in consumer/managerial judgment formation,
brand equity/dilution, corporate reputation, and research methods and design. He has also published in the area of sales force
management. His research has appeared in several leading journals including theJournal of Marketing, theJournal of Marketing Research, and theJournal of Consumer Research. In addition, he has published in numerous conference proceedings. He is currently the chair of the American Marketing Association’s
ConsumerBehavior Special Interest Group, serves on the Academic Council of the American Marketing Association, and is cofounder
of the Corporate Identity/Associations Research Group.
Richard F. Gunst (rgunst@mail.smu.edu) is a professor and chair of the Department of Statistical Science at Southern Methodist University
(SMU) in Dallas, Texas. He received his Ph.D. from SMU. His primary teaching and research interests are in the areas of linear
and nonlinear modeling and regression analysis, with an emphasis on spatial statistical modeling. He has co-authored three
books on regression analysis and the statistical design and analysis of experiments, in addition to publishing scholarly articles
in theJournal of the American Statistical Association, Biometrika, Biometrics, andTechnometrics. He has received the W. J. Youden (1974, 1985) and Frank Wilcoxon (1994) Publication Awards fromTechnometrics, and the American Statistical Association’s Award for Outstanding Statistical Application Award (1994). He is a fellow of
the American Statistical Association and received its Founders Award in 1999. 相似文献
15.
Les Carlson Russell N. Laczniak Ann Walsh 《Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science》2001,29(3):276-288
This article describes a study on mothers’ views of television and children’s perceptions of their mothers’ socialization
efforts regarding television. Results from the investigation involving 174 mother and child (in Grades 3–6) dyads suggest
that mothers’ perceptions of their responsibilities regarding children’s television viewing vary by parental style. In addition,
children’s perceptions of mothers’ verbal interactions about TV and coviewing together with opinions, monitoring, and controlling
of television similarly vary across parental styles. These findings support previous research that parental styles play a
role in determining the manner in which mothers socialize their offspring about television.
Les Carlson (Ph.D., University of Nebraska-Lincoln) is a professor of marketing at Clemson University. His research interests center
on consumer socialization and environmental advertising. His work has appeared inInternational Marketing Review, Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science, Journal of Advertising, Journal of Business Research,
Journal of Consumer Affairs, Journal of Consumer Psychology, Journal of Consumer Research, Journal of Current Issues and Research
in Advertising, Journal of General Psychology, Journal of Macromarketing, Journal of Marketing Education, Journal of Marketing
Theory and Practice, Journal of Personal Selling and Sales Management, Journal of Public Policy and Marketing, and various conference proceedings. He is a past editor of theJournal of Advertising.
Russell N. Laczniak (Ph.D., University of Nebraska-Lincoln) is a professor of marketing and chair, Departments of Management and Marketing, at
Iowa State University. His primary research interests deal with marketing communication. His research has been published in
theJournal of Consumer Psychology, Journal of Advertising, Journal of Current Issues and Research in Advertising, Journal of
the Academy of Marketing Science, Journal of Public Policy & Marketing, Journal of Consumer Affairs, Journal of Business Research,
Psychology and Marketing, Journal of Marketing Theory and Practice, Journal of Marketing Communications, Marketing Letters, and various conference proceedings.
Ann Walsh (Ph.D., University of Nebraska-Lincoln) is an assistant professor of marketing at Western Illinois University. She has published
in theJournal of Advertising, Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science, Journal of Consumer Affairs, and American Marketing Association Educators’ Proceedings. 相似文献
16.
Sangphet Hanvanich K. Sivakumar G. Tomas M. Hult 《Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science》2006,34(4):600-612
Extensive research has documented how firms’ learning orientation and memory are related to organizational performance. The
objective of this study is to examine the moderating role of turbulence on the relationships between firms’ learning orientation
and memory and their organizational performance and innovativeness. The study also provides insight into the differential
relationships of firms’ learning orientation and memory to their performance and innovativeness. Using survey data collected
from 200 supply management professionals, the results suggest that the extent to which learning and memory are associated
with organizational performance is contingent on the level of environmental turbulence. Specifically, under low environmental
turbulence, learning orientation and organizational memory appear to be related to performance and innovativeness; however,
under high environmental turbulence, only learning orientation is a useful predictor.
Sangphet Hanvanich (hanvanich@xavier.edu) is an assistant professor of marketing at Xavier University. She received her PhD from Michigan State
University. She has published in various journals including theJournal of Service Research andStrategic Management Journal. Her primary research interests are in the areas of marketing strategy, marketing alliances, international business, and
international marketing.
K. Sivakumar (k.sivakumar@lehigh.edu) (PhD, Syracuse University) is the Arthur Tauck Professor of International Marketing and Logistics,
chairperson, and a professor of marketing in the Department of Marketing at Lehigh University. Before joining Lehigh in 2001,
he spent 9 years as a faculty member with the University of Illinois at Chicago. His research interests include pricing, global
marketing, and innovation management. His research has been published in theJournal of the Academy of Marketing Science, the Journal of Marketing, theJournal of International Business Studies, Decision Sciences Journal, Marketing Letters, the Journal of Business Research,
the Journal of Interactive Marketing, theJournal of International Marketing, International Marketing Review, theJournal of Product Innovation Management, Pricing Strategy & Practice: An International Journal, Psychology & Marketing, Marketing
Science Institute’s Working Paper Series, and other publications. He has won several awards for his research (including the Donald Lehmann Award) and is on the editorial
review board of several scholarly journals. He has won outstanding reviewer awards from two journals. Home page: www.lehigh
.edu/~kasg.
G. Tomas M. Hult (nhult@msu.edu) is a professor of marketing and supply chain management and director of the Center for International Business
Education and Research at Michigan State University. He serves as executive director of the Academy of International Business.
He is associate editor of theJournal of International Business Studies, Decision Sciences, and theJournal of Operations Management. His research has been published in theJournal of the Academy of Marketing Science, Academy of Management Journal, Strategic Management Journal, theJournal of Marketing, Decision Sciences, theJournal of Operations Management, theJournal of Management, and theJournal of Retailing, among others. 相似文献
17.
Fang Wu Vijay Mahajan Sridhar Balasubramanian 《Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science》2003,31(4):425-447
Across industries, firms have adopted e-business initiatives to better manage their internal business processes as well as
their interfaces with the environment. In this study, a unified framework that captures the antecedents of e-business adoption,
adoption intensity, and performance outcomes is proposed and empirically tested using data collected from senior managers
in four technology-intensive industries. Applying a framework that captures the intensity of e-business adoption across four
business process domains, the authors find that the antecedents and performance outcomes of e-business adoption are best studied
in a process-specific context. They find, for example, that while the communication and internal administration aspects of
e-business positively affect performance outcomes, the more high-profile activities related to online order taking and e-procurement
do not. The authors' findings provide the foundation for a more rigorous study of e-business.
Fang Wu (fangwu@msu.edu) (Ph.D., University of Texas at Austin) is an assistant professor of marketing at the Eli Broad College of
Business, Michigan State University. Her current research interests include e-business adoption strategy, knowledge transfer
in new product alliances, interfirm learning dynamics, and marketing knowledge management.
Vijay Mahajan (vijay.mahajan@bus.utexas.edu) (Ph.D., University of Texas at Austin) is the John P. Harbin Centennial Chair in Business
and a professor of marketing at the McCombs School of Business, University of Texas at Austin, and dean of the Indian School
of Business at Hyderabad, India. He has written extensively on product diffusion, marketing strategy, and marketing research
methodologies. He has written and/or edited eight books. His research appears in journals such as theJournal of Marketing Research, theJournal of Marketing, Marketing Science, Management Science, andHarvard Business Review. He has received the Best Research Paper Award from theJournal of Retailing (1982, 1985), theJournal of Marketing (Maynard Award, 1990), and theInternational Journal of Research in Marketing (Prentice Hall Award, 1995). He also received the American Marketing Association (AMA) Charles Coolidge Parlin Marketing
Research Award (1997) and the AMA Marketing Research Special Interest Group Gilbert Churchill Award in 1999, recognizing lifetime
achievement in marketing research.
Sridhar Balasubramanian (balasubs@bschool.unc.edu) (Ph.D., Yale University) is an assistant professor of marketing at Kenan-Flagler, the University
of North Carolina Business School. His research interests cover multiple areas including marketing strategy, channel portfolio
management, e-commerce and m-commerce, direct marketing and customer relationship management, game theory and the management
of competition, digitization, and strategic compensation. His research has been published or is forthcoming in journals such
asMarketing Science, Management Science, Statistica Neerlandica, theInternational Journal of Electronic Commerce, Decision Support Systems, and theJournal of Retailing. He received the John D. C. Little Award for 1998 from the Institute for Operations Research and the Management Science (INFORMS)
for the best marketing paper inMarketing Science andManagement Science. He has worked as a marketing strategy adviser to start-up companies and served as guest coeditor of the Centennial Issue
of theJournal of Retailing. 相似文献
18.
A conceptual model of preventive health care behavior is proposed and tested. Results suggest that preventive health care
behaviors are strongly influenced by the value consumers perceive in engaging in such actions. This value is greatly affected
by response efficacy, or the person’s belief that a specific action will mitigate the health threat. A separate consideration
affecting adherence to a prescribed preventive health care behavior is self-efficacy, or the person’s belief that the target
behaviors can be enacted. Additionally, health motivation and health consciousness are also shown to influence preventive
health care behaviors. Future research directions and managerial implications of the findings are outlined.
Rama K. Jayanti (Ph.D., Louisiana State University) is an assistant professor of marketing, James J. Nance College of Business, Cleveland
State University, Cleveland, Ohio. Her primary research interests include services marketing and consumer behavior. She has
published articles inJournal of Health Care Marketing; Journal of Consumer Satisfaction, Dissatisfaction, and Complaining Behavior; andJournal of Professional Services Marketing.
Alvin C. Burns is a professor of marketing and department chairman at Louisiana State University. His articles have appeared in publications
such as theJournal of Marketing Research, Journal of Health Care Marketing, Journal of Advertising, Journal of Advertising Research, andAsian Journal of Marketing. Burns belongs to the American Marketing Association, the Association for Consumer Research, and the Association for Business
Simulation and Experiential Learning. He is the lead author ofMarketing Research (Prentice Hall, 1995). 相似文献
19.
20.
The role of satisfaction with territory design on the motivation, attitudes, and work outcomes of salespeople 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
Ken Grant David W. Cravens George S. Low William C. Moncrief 《Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science》2001,29(2):165-178
The primary emphasis of previous research concerning salespeople has been focused on their attitudes and behavior. The relationship
between organizational variables and salesperson attitudes and behavior has received very limited attention. Sales territory
design is largely uncontrollable by the salesperson, yet is acknowledged by managers and researchers as an important factor
enabling salespeople to perform well. The objective is to examine satisfaction with territory design from the perspective
of the salesperson. A conceptual model and hypotheses are developed linking the satisfaction with territory design with role
ambiguity, intrinsic motivation, job satisfaction, and performance. Role conflict, met expectations, organizational commitment,
and intention to leave are also included in the model. Survey results provide strong support for 19 of the 21 hypotheses examined.
The findings offer significant insights concerning the role of territory design satisfaction in face-to-face selling and its
consequences. Several managerial implications and avenues for future research are discussed.
Ken Grant is the deputy head in the Department of Marketing, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia. He is a member of the editorial
boards of theEuropean Journal of Marketing and theJournal of Marketing Practice: Applied Marketing Science. He has published in theInternational Journal of Research in Marketing, European Journal of Marketing, Industrial Marketing Management, and several other journals. He advises companies on marketing planning, new products, and sales management and conducts
research and publishes in these areas.
David W. Cravens holds the Eunice and James L. West Chair of American Enterprise Studies at Texas Christian University. His research on sales
management and marketing strategy has been published in theJournal of Marketing, Journal of Marketing Research, Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science, and other leading journals in marketing and management. Before becoming an educator, he held various industry and government
executive positions. He is internationally recognized for his research on marketing strategy and sales management. He has
been a visiting scholar at universities in Austria, Australia, Chile, Czech Republic, England, Ireland, Germany, Mexico, the
Netherlands, New Zealand, Singapore, and Wales. His textbook,Strategic Marketing (Irwin/McGraw-Hill 2000), is widely used in strategy and management courses.
George S. Low is an associate professor of marketing in the M. J. Neeley School of Business, Texas Christian University. He received a
B.A. in advertising from Brigham Young University, an M.B.A. from the Richard Ivey School of Business at the University of
Western Ontario, and a Ph.D. in marketing from the University of Colorado-Boulder. His research on the management of integrated
marketing communications and brands has been published in theJournal of Marketing Research, Journal of Retailing, Journal of Advertising Research, Marketing Management, Marketing Science
Institute’s Working Paper Series, and other journals.
William C. Moncrief is a senior associate dean and professor of marketing at Texas Christian University in Fort Worth, Texas. He received his
B.Sc. in political science and his M.B.A. from the University of Mississippi. He completed his Ph.D. at Louisiana State University
in 1983. His work has been published in leading marketing and sales journals, including theJournal of Marketing Research, Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science, European Journal of Marketing, Journal of Business
Research, Industrial Marketing Management, andJournal of Personal Selling and Sales Management, among others. His research interests are in the field of sales management and include topics such as sales deployment, sales
contests, international sales, telemarketing, turnover, laptop computers, sales job activities, and quality control. He has
taught in Germany, conducted research in Europe, and has most recently consulted in Mexico. 相似文献