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1.
Edwin Nijssen Jagdip Singh Deepak Sirdeshmukh Hartmut Holzmüeller 《Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science》2003,31(1):46-60
Few, if any, past studies have attempted to develop a model to capture and explain industry context variability and hypothesize
its effects on consumer-firm relationships. Generally, industry effects are ignored, described, or explained post hoc. Using
the notion of consumers' dispositions toward a market, a framework is proposed for understanding the influence of industry
context on consumer satisfaction, trust, value, and loyalty in relational exchanges. The empirical results of a survey in
two service industries show that industry contexts matter and yield significant direct and moderating effects on consumer-firm
relationships. The study underscores the promise of a dispositional approach for providing insights for the theory and practice
of relationship marketing, resolvin goutstanding questions, and proposing fruitful areas for further examination.
Edwin Nijssen, Ph.D., is a professor of marketing at the Nijmegen School of Management at the University of Nijmegen, the Netherlands.
His research interest focuses on strategic and international marketing issues, relationship marketing, brand management, and
new-product development. He has published inLong Range Planning, theJournal of Product Innovation Management, Technology Forecasting and Social Change, R&D Management, Industrial Marketing Management, and theJournal of International Marketing and has written several books on marketing strategy.
Jagdip Singh, Ph.D., is a professor of marketing at the Weatherhead School of Management at Case Western Reserve University. His primary
areas of research include consumer dissatisfaction and trust, measurement issues—including relationships between theoretical
concepts and empirical observations— and the effectiveness of boundary role personnel. He has published in theJournal of Marketing, theAcademy of Management Journal, theJournal of the Academy of Marketing Science, Behavioral Research in Accounting, andManagement Science, among others.
Deepak Sirdeshmukh, Ph.D., is a visiting assistant professor of marketing at the Weatherhead School of Management at Case Western Reserve University.
His primary areas of research include consumer trust and consumer processing of brand information. He has published in theJournal of Marketing, theJournal of Marketing Research, theJournal of Consumer Research, theJournal of the Academy of Marketing Science, and theJournal of Consumer Psychology, among others.
Hartmut H. Holzmüeller, Ph.D., is a professor of marketing at the School of Business at Dortmund University, Germany. His research interests include
cross-national consumer research and customer relationship marketing. Most of his work has been published in German. His articles
also appeared in theJournal of International Marketing, Management International Review, andInternational Business Review. 相似文献
2.
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
3.
Customer loyalty: Toward an integrated conceptual framework 总被引:67,自引:0,他引:67
Customer loyalty is viewed as the strength of the relationship between an individual’s relative attitude and repeat patronage.
The relationship is seen as mediated by social norms and situational factors. Cognitive, affective, and conative antecedents
of relative attitude are identified as contributing to loyalty, along with motivational, perceptual, and behavioral consequences.
Implications for research and for the management of loyalty are derived.
His research interests include consumer decision making, information processing, and consumer loyalty. He has published in
theJournal of Consumer Research andAdvances in Consumer Research.
His research interests are consumer information processing, persuasion cues in advertising, and international marketing. His
articles have appeared in theJournal of Consumer Research, Journal of Marketing Research, Journal of Consumer Psychology, andCanadian Journal of Administrative Sciences as well as in a number of conference proceedings. 相似文献
4.
The purpose of this study is to provide a preliminary investigation of the effectiveness of Internet marketers’ various attempts
to develop consumer trust through Web signals. The work is an exploration of the context-specific nature of trust in e-commerce.
An online experiment compares three potential signals of trust in an Internet retail firm: (1) a third-party certification
(i.e., a “trustmark”), (2) an objective-source rating (i.e., a review from Consumer Reports magazine), and (3) an implication
of investment in advertising (i.e., a television advertisement to air during the Super Bowl). The trustmark had the greatest
effect on perceived trustworthiness, influencing respondents’ beliefs about security and privacy, general beliefs about firm
trustworthiness, and willingness to provide personal information. The relationship between Internet experience and trust was
in the form of an inverted U.
K. Damon Aiken (kaiken@mail.ewu.edu) is an assistant professor at Eastern Washington University at Cheney, Washington. He received his PhD
from the University of Oregon. His primary teaching and research interests lie in Internet marketing, consumer attitude formation,
and trust development. He has also published in the area of sport marketing, investigating fan attitudes and values. His research
has appeared in theJournal of Advertising Research, theInternational Journal of Internet Marketing and Advertising, theBusiness Research Yearbook, andSport Marketing Quarterly, among others.
David M. Boush (dmboush@lcbmail.uoregon.edu) is an associate professor of marketing in the Lundquist College of Business at the University
of Oregon in Eugene. He received his PhD from the University of Minnesota. His research interests center on the relationship
between consumer behavior and marketing management decisions, especially those involving advertising, branding, and the Internet.
His research has appeared in publications such as theJournal of Marketing Research, theJournal of Consumer Research, theJournal of Business Research, theJournal of International Business Studies, Psychology and Marketing, Marketing Letters, and theJournal of Current Issues and Research in Marketing. He serves on the editorial board of theJournal of the Academy of Marketing Science. 相似文献
5.
The authors investigate how reward schemes of a loyalty program influence perceived value of the program and how value perception
of the loyalty program affects customer loyalty. The results show that involvement moderates the effects of loyalty programs
on customer loyalty. In high-involvement situations, direct rewards are preferable to indirect rewards. In low-involvement
situations, immediate rewards are more effective in building a program's value than delayed rewards. Under high-involvement
conditions, value perception of the loyalty program influences brand loyalty both directly and indirectly through program
loyalty. Under low-involvement conditions, there is no direct effect of value perception on brand loyalty.
Youjae Yi (uoujae@snu.ac.kr) (Ph.D., Stanford University, 1987) is a professor of marketing in the College of Business Administration
at Seoul National University. He was at the University of Michigan as an assistant professor, Sanford Robertson Assistant
Professor, and tenured associate professor. His work has appeared in theJournal of Marketing Research, theJournal of Consumer Research, theJournal of Applied Psychology, theJournal of the Academy of Marketing Science, theJournal of Consumer Psychology, theJournal of Advertising, and theJournal of Econometrics. He is currently an editor of theKorean Journal of Consumer Studies and was an editor of theSeoul Journal of Business.
Hoseong Jeon (jeonho1@snu.ac.kr) is a doctoral candidate in the College of Business Administration at Seoul National University. He received
his M.A. in advertising from Michigan Sate University. His current research interests include customer relationship management,
advertising effects on consumer attitudes, and determinants of customer loyalty. 相似文献
6.
A scale for measuring attitude toward private label products and an examination of its psychological and behavioral correlates 总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4
Scot Burton Donald R. Lichtenstein Richard G. Netemeyer Judith A. Garretson 《Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science》1998,26(4):293-306
A measure of consumers’ attitude toward private label brands is developed, and its psychometric properties are assessed. Predictions
are then tested regarding relationships between private label attitude and (1) latent perceptual and sales promotion constructs,
and (2) purchase behaviors measured in a field setting. The measure is positively related to value consciousness, deal proneness,
and smart-shopper self-perceptions, and negatively related to the propensity to be brand loyal and hold price-quality perceptions.
Predictive validity of the private label measure is supported by a positive relationship with private label purchases from
a grocery store shopping trip. Despite a positive relationship between the latent constructs of private label attitude and
deal proneness, the consumer segment that allocated a high percentage of total purchases to private label products made fewer
purchases on sale or with a coupon. These findings suggest that consumers may choose between price-related deals and private
label purchases.
Scot Burton is professor and Wal-Mart chairholder in the Department of Marketing and Transportation at the University of Arkansas. His
research interests include public policy and consumer welfare concerns, consumer price and promotion perceptions, and survey
research measurement issues. His work has been published in theJournal of Marketing, theJournal of Marketing Research, theJournal of Consumer Research, theJournal of the Academy of Marketing Science, Public Opinion Quarterly, theJournal of Applied Psychology, and others.
Donald R. Lichtenstein is a professor in the Department of Maketing at the University of Colorado. His research interests include consumer processing
of price and sales promotion information and consumer welfare issues related to marketplace choice. His work has been published
in theJournal of Marketing, theJournal of Marketing Research, theJournal of Consumer Research, and others.
Richard G. Netemeyer is a professor in the Department of Marketing, E. J. Ourso College of Business Administration at Louisiana State University
(LSU). He received his Ph.D. in business administration from the University of South Carolina in 1986. Since then, he has
been a member of the marketing faculty at LSU. His research interests include measurement and scaling, public policy, maladaptive
behaviors, and consumer behavior in general. His research has been published in theJournal of Consumer Research, theJournal of Marketing Research, theJournal of Marketing, theJournal of Applied Psychology, theJournal of Public Policy & Marketing, and others. He is also a member of the editorial review boards of theJournal of Consumer Research and theJournal of Public Policy & Marketing.
Judith A. Garretson is a Ph. D. candidate in the Department of Marketing and Transportation at the University of Arkansas. Her research interests
include promotion issues and public policy and consumer welfare. her work has appeared in theJournal of Public Policy & Marketing, theJournal of Professional Services Marketing, and proceedings of the American Marketing Association and Association for Consumer Research. 相似文献
7.
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
8.
This study proposes an integrated framework explaining loyalty responses in high-involvement, high-service luxury product
markets. The model is rooted in the traditional (attribute satisfaction)-(overall satisfaction)-(loyalty) chain but explicitly
incorporates facility versus interactive service quality, trust, specific asset investment (SAI), and product-market expertise.
The authors focus on disentangling the direct versus indirect effects of model constructs on attitudinal versus behavioral
loyalty responses. The results support the traditional chain but also show loyalty can be increased by building a trustworthy
image and creating exchange-specific assets. The authors found that overall satisfaction is the precursor both to loyalty
and to building SAI. Finally, consumers have different costs in reducing adverse selection problems with information, and
thus the negative effect of product-market expertise on behavioral loyalty needs to be controlled if the direct versus indirect
effects of model constructs on loyalty are to be disentangled.
Jyh-Shen Chiou (jschiou@nccu.edu.tw) (PhD in marketing, Michigan State University) is a professor of marketing in the Department of International
Business at National Chengchi University, Taipei. His research interests include satisfaction and loyalty, strategic marketing,
and international marketing. His work has been published in theJournal of Service Research, Psychology & Marketing, theEuropean Journal of Marketing, theJournal of Interactive Marketing, Information & Management, theJournal of Social Psychology, theJournal of Business Logistics, Advances in Consumer Research, and other scholarly journals. He has taught courses in marketing research, strategic marketing, and global marketing.
Cornelia Droge (droge@msu.edu) is a professor of marketing in the Department of Marketing and Supply Chain Management, the Eli Broad Graduate
School of Management, at Michigan State University. Her research interests focus on satisfaction/ loyalty and strategic marketing
(especially areas related to the interface of marketing with logistics, supply chain, and operations). Her work has appeared
inManagement Science, theStrategic Management Journal, theJournal of Marketing Research, theJournal of Business Logistics, theJournal of Operations Management, theJournal of Product Innovation Management, and other scholarly journals. She is also coauthor of three books. 相似文献
9.
Most prior research on bundling from a consumer perspective has focused on how bundles are processed, particularly from a
prospect theory or mental accounting perspective. In contrast, relatively little research has examined the factors that might
drive consumer preference for bundles versus individual items. This article addresses one such factor: the potential to reduce
search and assembly costs. Through exploratory interviews and two laboratory experiments, the authors show that preference
for a bundle is greater when bundle choice will reduce search effort than when it will not, particularly among consumers who
are less motivated to process information.
Judy Harris (JLHarris@Towson.edu) is an assistant professor in the Department of Marketing and e-Business, College of Business and Economics,
Towson University. She received her doctorate from the University of Houston. Her work has been published in theJournal of the Academy of Marketing Science, theJournal of Retailing, the Journal of Advertising Research, theJournal of Consumer Research, the Journal of Applied Social Psychology, Psychology & Marketing, and other publications.
Edward A. Blair (blair@uh.edu) is a professor and chair of the Department of Marketing and Entrepreneurship, Bauer College of Business, University
of Houston. He is the author of several books, along with numerous articles in such journals as theJournal of Marketing, the Journal of Marketing Research, theJournal of Consumer Research, Public Opinion Quarterly, and others. He has served on the editorial boards of theJournal of Marketing Research, theJournal of the Academy of Marketing Science, and theJournal of Business Research. 相似文献
10.
Madhubalan Viswanathan Terry L. Childers Elizabeth S. Moore 《Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science》2000,28(3):406-424
This article develops and validates measures of intergenerational communication and influence about consumption. Despite the
widespread belief that parents play a pivotal role in the consumer socialization of their children, empirical research on
the skills, attitudes, and preferences transmitted from one generation to the next is quite limited. One factor that may explain
this deficiency is the lack of appropriate instruments for assessing intergenerational issues. Drawing on consumer socialization
theory and research, intergenerational transmission is defined in terms of three components directly relevant to marketplace
transactions: (1) consumer skills, (2) preferences, and (3) attitudes toward marketer-supplied information. Multi-item scales
are developed to measure each of these components. The findings of three studies supporting the reliability, dimensionality,
and validity of the intergenerational scales are reported. Validation efforts incorporate cross-cultural analyses from the
United States and Thailand, as well as dyadic-level comparisons between parents and children.
Madhubalan Viswanathan is an associate professor of marketing at the University of Illinois. He received his Ph.D. from the University of Minnesota.
His research interests include consumer psychology and measurement. His research appears in several journals including theJournal of Consumer Psychology, theJournal of Marketing Research, theJournal of Applied Psychology, Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, andPsychology and Marketing. He serves on the editorial review boards of theJournal of Consumer Psychology andPsychology and Marketing.
Terry L. Childers is a professor of marketing at the University of Minnesota. He received his Ph.D. from the University of Wisconsin. His research
interests include visual information processing, measurement, and psychometrics. His work has been published in several journals
including theJournal of Marketing Research, theJournal of Consumer Research, theJournal of Consumer Psychology, and theJournal of Mental Imagery. He serves on the editorial review boards of theJournal of Consumer Research and theJournal of Business Research.
Elizabeth S. Moore is an assistant professor of marketing at the University of Notre Dame. She received her Ph.D. from the University of Florida.
Her research interests include consumer decision processes within the household, the effects of advertising and promotion
on children, as well as marketing and society issues. Her work has been published in theJournal of Marketing, theJournal of Consumer Research (in press), and theJournal of Macromarketing, as well as other books and conference proceedings. 相似文献
11.
Angry customers don't come back,they get back: The experience and behavioral implications of anger and dissatisfaction in services 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
Roger Bougie Rik Pieters Marcel Zeelenberg 《Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science》2003,31(4):377-393
This article investigates the specific experience of anger and dissatisfaction and their effects on customers' behavioral
responses to failed service encounters across industries. Study 1 demonstrates that anger and dissatisfaction are qualitatively
different emotions with respect to their idiosyncratic experiential content. Study 2 builds on these findings and shows how
anger and service encounter dissatisfaction differentially affect customer behavior. It provides empirical support for the
contention that anger mediates the relationship between service encounter dissatisfaction and customers' behavioral responses.
The findings of Study 2 diverge from previous findings in marketing on the interrelationships between customer satisfaction/dissatisfaction,
related consumption emotions, and customers' behavioral responses to service failure. The implications of these findings for
services marketing theory and practice are delineated.
Roger Bougie (J.R.G.Bougie@uvt.nl) is an assistant professor of marketing at Tilburg University, the Netherlands. His research interests
are emotions and their impact on consumer behavior, and consumer decision making.
Rik Pieters is a professor of marketing at Tilburg University, the Netherlands. His research interests are emotions in consumer behavior,
visual attention and memory, and social networks. His work has appeared in, among others, theJournal of Consumer Research, theJournal of Economic Literature, theJournal of Marketing Research, andMarketing Science.
Marcel Zeelenberg is a professor of social psychology at Tilburg University, the Netherlands. His research interest is in anticipated emotions
and acutal emotional experiences and their impact on behavioral decision making. His work has appeared in, among others, theJournal of Consumer Research, theJournal of Personality and Social Psychology, Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes. 相似文献
12.
The impact of research design on consumer price recall accuracy: An integrative review 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
For almost half a century, researchers have examined consumer knowledge of prices, often with disturbing and conflicting results.
Although the general findings suggest that consumer knowledge of prices is poorer than assumed in neoclassical economic theory,
significant variations among results exist. The authors synthesize findings from prior studies to determine the impact of
research design choices on price recall accuracy measures. A meta-analysis indicates that a significant amount of variation
in the accuracy of consumers’ price recall is related to research design characteristics such as the presence of financial
rewards, respondents’ task size, and the price elicitation approach. Implications for price awareness research are discussed.
Hooman Estelami is an assistant professor of marketing and codirector of the Pricing Center at the Graduate School of Business, Fordham University.
His research has been published in, among others, theJournal of the Academy of Marketing Science, theJournal of Service Research, theJournal of Product and Brand Management, theJournal of Marketing Theory and Practice, theJournal of Consumer Satisfaction/Dissatisfaction and Complaining Behavior, theJournal of Professional Services Marketing, theJournal of Business in Developing Nations.
Donald R. Lehmann is George E. Warren professor of marketing at the Graduate School of Business, Columbia University. His research has been
published in theJournal of Marketing Research, theJournal of Marketing, Marketing Science, theJournal of Business Research, theJournal of Retailing, theJournal of Product Innovation Management, Management Science, Marketing Letters, and elsewhere. He has written numerous books related to marketing research and marketing management. 相似文献
13.
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
14.
Beverly T. Venable Gregory M. Rose Victoria D. Bush Faye W. Gilbert 《Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science》2005,33(3):295-312
Marketing concepts such as corporate identity, image, and branding are important strategies for nonprofit organizations. In
particular, brand personality has been advocated by practitioners but has not been empirically investigated in the nonprofit
context. According to social exchange theory and trust, the authors argue that nonprofit stakeholders perceive nonprofit organizations
at an abstract level because of the organizations’ intangibility and social ideals. This study develops and refines a parsimonious
measure of brand personality specifically for the nonprofit context. The authors conduct a series of six multimethod studies
of nonprofit stakeholders to validate the role of brand personality in nonprofit organizations. The results yield four dimensions
of brand personality for nonprofits: integrity, nurturance, sophistication, and ruggedness. Thus, current and potential donors
ascribe personality traits to nonprofit organizations and differentiate between nonprofits on the basis of the organizations’
personality. Finally, nonprofit brand personality may influence potential donors’ likelihood to contribute.
Beverly T. Venable (venable_beverly@colstate.edu; Ph.D., University of Mississippi) is an assistant professor of marketing at Columbus State
University. Her research interests are in nonprofit marketing, branding, and ethics. She has published in theJournal of Business Ethics and several national and international proceedings.
Gregory M. Rose (rosegm@u.washington.edu; Ph.D., University of Oregon) is an associate professor of marketing at the University of Washington,
Tacoma. His research interests include consumer socialization and cross-cultural consumer behavior. He has published articles
in theJournal of Consumer Research, theJournal of Marketing, theJournal of the Academy of Marketing Science, theJournal of Business Research, theJournal of Advertising, and theJournal of Consumer Psychology, as well as other journals and proceedings.
Victoria D. Bush (vbush@bus.olemiss.edu; Ph.D., University of Memphis) is an associate professor of marketing at the University of Mississippi.
Her research interests include cultural diversity in buyer-seller relationships, advertising ethics, and Internet marketing.
Her research has been published in theJournal of the Academy of Marketing Science, theJournal of Advertising Research, theJournal of Advertising, theJournal of Public Policy and Marketing, andIndustrial Marketing Management, as well as other journals and proceedings.
Faye W. Gilbert (faye.gilbert@gcsu.edu; Ph.D., University of North Texas) is a professor of marketing and dean of the J. Whitney Bunting
School of Business at Georgia College and State University. Her research interests are in customer relationship management,
health care marketing, and sales management. She has published in theJournal of the Academy of Marketing Science, theJournal of Business Research, theJournal of Retailing, Psychology and Marketing, as well as other journals and proceedings. 相似文献
15.
In this article, the authors first propose a simple model summarizing the key drivers of customer loyalty. Then, on the basis
of this model and drawing on key insights from the preceding articles in this issue, they outline a set of issues for further
research related to the quality-value-loyalty chain. Next, the authors develop a conceptual framework that integrates the
quality-value-loyalty chain with the “pyramid model,” which emphasizes the increasing importance of technology-customer, technology-employee,
and technology-company linkages in serving customers. Using this integrated framework as a spring-board, they identify a number
of avenues for additional inquiry pertaining to the three types of linkages.
A. Parasuraman (D.B.A, Indiana University) is a professor and holder of the James W. McLamore Chair in Marketing at the University of Miami.
He teaches and does research in services marketing, service-quality measurement, and the role of technology in marketing to
and serving customers. He has received many distinguished teaching and research awards, including, most recently, the “Career
Contributions to the Services Discipline Award” given by the American Marketing Association's (AMA) SERVSIG. He has written
numerous articles in journals such as theJournal of Marketing, theJournal of Marketing Research, theJournal of Retailing, andSloan Management Review. He is the author of a marketing research text and coauthor of two books on service quality and services marketing. In addition
to being the editor of theJournal of the Academy of Marketing Science (JAMS), he serves on the editorial review boards of five other journals.
Dhruv Grewal (Ph.D., Virginia Tech) is Interim-Chair and a professor of marketing at the University of Miami. He has published more than
40 articles in journals such as theJournal of Marketing, theJournal of Consumer Research, theJournal of Marketing Research, theJournal of the Academy of Marketing Science, and theJournal of Retailing. His research interests focus on retailing, pricing, international marketing, and consumer behavior issues. He currently
serves on the editorial review boards of theJournal of Marketing, theJournal of the Academy of Marketing Science, theJournal of Retailing, and theJournal of Public Policy & Marketing. He has won awards for both his teaching and research. He has coedited a special issue of theJournal of Public Policy & Marketing and of theJournal of Retailing. He was recently elected to the AMA Academic Council—VP Research and Conferences (1999–2001). He is currently writing a book
onMarketing Research (publisher: Houghton Mifflin). 相似文献
16.
Psychological climate, empowerment, leadership style, and customer-oriented selling: An analysis of the sales manager-salesperson dyad 总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2
This study examined antecedents and performancerelated consequences of customer-oriented selling. The antecedents include
sales managers’ leadership styles, psychological empowerment, and the psychological climates of organizations. Data were gathered
on two separate performance outcome measures. Responses from 106 sales managers and 313 sales representatives were analyzed.
The results indicate that transformational leadership, empowerment, and specific components of the psychological climate are
important predictors of customer-oriented selling.
Craig A. Martin (craig.martin@wku.edu), PhD, is an assistant professor of marketing in the Department of Marketing at Western Kentucky University.
He received his PhD from the University of Memphis. He specializes in sales and sales management, the consumer socialization
of adolescents, sports marketing, and advertising to adolescents. He has had research accepted for publication in theJournal of Advertising, theJournal of Advertising Research, theJournal of Consumer Marketing, theJournal of Business and Industrial Marketing, theJournal of Marketing Theory and Practice, theMarketing Management Journal, theInternational Journal of Retail and Distribution Management, theInternational Journal of Internet Marketing and Advertising, and multiple national and regional conferences.
Alan J. Bush (alanbush@memphis.edu), PhD, is a professor of marketing in the Department of Marketing and Supply Chain Management at the
University of Memphis. He received his Ph.D. from Louisiana State University. His current research interests are primarily
sales force research and sports marketing. His research has appeared in theJournal of Marketing Research, theJournal of the Academy of Marketing Science, theJournal of Business Research, theJournal of Retailing, theJournal of Advertising, theJournal of Advertising Research, theJournal of Personal Selling and Sales Management, and others. 相似文献
17.
Overby Jeffrey W. Gardial Sarah Fisher Woodruff Robert B. 《Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science》2004,32(4):437-460
This article investigates the influence of French and American national culture on consumer perceptions of productrelated
value. Employing means-end theory, hypotheses are developed to predict how French versus American national culture influences
the content and structure of consumer value hierachies. Hypotheses are tested using data from in-depth laddering interviews
with a matched sample of French and American consumers. The findings support the contention that differences exist in the
meaning and relative importance of consumer value hierarchy dimensions across the two national cultures. Furthermore, the
analysis suggests that consumption consequences are especially culturally sensitive.
Jeffrey W. Overby (joverby@cob.fsu.edu) is an assistant professor of marketing and international business in the Department of Marketing at
Florida State University. He holds a doctorate from the University of Tennessee, Knoxville. His research interests focus on
customer value determination, service quality, and cross-cultural marketing issues. His work has appeared inInternational Marketing Review and numerous domestic and international conferences, includingProceeding of the 2001 Academy of Marketing Science Annual Conference andProceeding of the Tenth Biennial World Marketing Conference.
Sarah Fisher Gardial (sgardial@utk.edu) is an associate professor and associate dean for academic programs in the College of Business Administration
at the University of Tennessee. She holds a doctorate from the University of Houston. Her research interests focus on customer
value and satisfaction, consumer decision making and information processing, and buyer/seller dyadic relations. Her work has
appeared in numerous journals, including theJournal of Consumer Research, theJournal of Advertising, Industrial Marketing Management, and theJournal of Macromarketing.
Robert B.Woodruff (rwoodruff@utk.edu) is the Proffitt’s, Inc. Professor of Marketing and head of the Department of Marketing and Logistics
at the University of Tennessee. His primary interests are in customer value theory, customer satisfaction theory, and market
opportunity analyses, all with applications to customer-value-based marketing strategies. His work has appeared in theJournal of Marketing, theJournal of Marketing Research, theJournal of the Academy of Marketing Science, theJournal of Consumer Research, and theJournal of Satisfaction, Dissatisfaction & Complaining Behavior. He has received two outstanding reviewer awards from theJournal of the Academy of Marketing Science. 相似文献
18.
Kevin Mason Thomas Jensen Scot Burton Dave Roach 《Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science》2001,29(3):307-317
A multidimensional approach for accuracy of ratings is introduced that examines consumers’ abilities to assess various brands
across a set of attributes and attribute performances across a set of brands. A model is presented that addresses the roles
of the relevancy of information, attribute-relationship schemata, and consumers’ product category experience on the accuracy
of their brand attribute ratings. Study participants were provided either with relevant or irrelevant attribute information
for various automobile brands and later asked to rate the attribute performances of brands. The results indicate that the
provision of relevant information in the judgment environment increases brand and attribute rating accuracy but does not favorably
affect consumers’ brand attribute-relationship schemata. Rather, consumers’ product experience was directly related to their
attribute-relationship schemata, which in turn were related to improved accuracy of brand and attribute ratings.
Kevin Mason is an associate professor of marketing at Arkansas Tech University. His research interests include consumer information processing
and choice strategies. He has published in theJournal of Marketing Theory and Practice, Journal of Consumer Marketing, Central Business Review, Journal for the Association
of Marketing Educators, andInternational Advances in Economics Research.
Thomas Jensen is professor and Wal-Mart lecturer in retailing in the Department of Marketing and Transportation at the University of Arkansas.
His research interests include consumer information processing, advertising and price perceptions, and retail image and patronage.
His work has been published in theJournal of Consumer Research, Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, Psychology and Marketing, Personality and Social
Psychology Bulletin, Journal of Retailing, Journal of Business Research, and other journals.
Scot Burton is professor and Wal-Mart chairholder in marketing, Department of Marketing and Transportation, University of Arkansas. His
research interests include public policy and consumer welfare concerns, survey research measurement issues, and consumer price
and promotion perceptions. His work has been published in theJournal of Marketing, Journal of Marketing Research, Journal of Consumer Research, Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science,
Public Opinion Quarterly, Journal of Applied Psychology, Journal of Public Policy & Marketing, Journal of Retailing, and other journals.
Dave Roach is a professor of management at Arkansas Tech University. His research interests include information processing, judgmental
accuracy, and organization change. He has published inHuman Relations, Journal of Applied Psychology, International Journal of Computer Integrated Manufacturing, Journal of Information
Technology Management, Journal of Consumer Marketing, Central Business Review, andJournal for the Association of Marketing Educators. 相似文献
19.
Hyokjin Kwak Anupam Jaju Trina Larsen 《Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science》2006,34(3):367-385
Consumer ethnocentrism is an important concept that is used to understand international marketing phenomena. In this article,
the authors conduct two empirical studies. Using consumer data from the United States, South Korea, and India (three diverse
cultural and economic environments), they explore six hypotheses. In Stage 1, the results suggest that across all three countries,
consumer ethnocentrism provokes negative attitudes toward both foreign advertisements and foreign products. The authors identify
a set of consumer variables (i.e., consumers’ global mind-set) that may mediate consumers’ unfavorable attitudes toward foreign
advertisements and products derived by consumer ethnocentrism. In Stage 2, the authors find that consumer ethnocentrism dampens
consumers’ online consumption activities on a foreign Web site. Finally, the authors find that marketers’ e-mail communications
to foreign consumers mediate consumer ethnocentrism in online environments.
Hyokjin Kwak (hkwak@drexel.edu) is an assistant professor of marketing at Drexel University. His research interests include advertising
effects, consumer communications, and strategic marketing. He has publications in theJournal of Consumer Psychology, theJournal of Advertising Research, theJournal of Current Issues and Research in Advertising, theJournal of Consumer Marketing, and other marketing journals.
Anupam Jaju (ajaju@gmu.edu) is an assistant professor of marketing in the School of Management at George Mason University. His main research
interests are in marketing strategy, marketing-technology interface, and international marketing. His work has been published
in theJournal of International Management, Marketing Theory, andMarketing Education Review.
Trina Larsen Andras (published as Trina Larsen, larsent@ drexel.edu) is a professor and the head of the Marketing Department at Drexel University.
Her research has been published in many of the major professional journals in her field, includingHarvard Business Review, theColumbia Journal of World Business, International Marketing Review, Industrial Marketing Management, Management International
Review, theJournal of Global Marketing, and theJournal of International Marketing, among others. Her research is focused on international marketing, specifically, cross-cultural behavioral and relationship
issues in international marketing management. 相似文献
20.
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