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Managing Market Attention

Cognition and Strategy

ISBN: 978-1-78441-946-2, eISBN: 978-1-78441-945-5

Publication date: 19 August 2015

Abstract

We return to the problem that motivated the original behavioral theory of the firm, price adjustment, but from the standpoint of post-Carnegie School perspectives on cognition, attention, and routines. Whereas work in the Carnegie School tradition has tended to develop models of firms in opposition to economic theory, we seek to understand how economic ideas are used to shape decision processes. Using a combination of interview, observational, and archival data gathered at a large manufacturing firm that produced parts to maintain machinery, we develop a behaviorally plausible story of how organizations shape price adjustment. We follow three successive waves of managers seeking to improve the pricing routines through shifting attentional perspective, managing attentional engagement, and structuring attentional execution. We demonstrate how managers redesign routines to shape cognition and attention, thereby developing greater coherence in the market representations of the sales force. Our findings show how reshaping cognition and attention in pricing routines can improve organizational intelligence in pricing decisions. Economists treat markets as the ideal – the best that can be imagined – and organizations as second-best options – the best that can be achieved, but our findings invert the story, suggesting that in modern market economies, organizations and routines are essential to making the price system work.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

Acknowledgments

We benefitted from the very helpful anonymous reviewer comments and from the editorial advice of William Ocasio and Giovanni Gavetti during the review process. A previous version of this chapter was presented in the “(Re-)Assembling Routines” subtheme at the 27th Annual EGOS Colloquium in Gothenburg, Sweden, July, 2011. We thank subtheme organizers Luciana D’Adderio, Martha Feldman, and Kasja Lindberg, our discussant, Carlo Salvato, and the subtheme participants for very helpful comments and encouragement. We thank the anonymous members of the firm for the generous gift of their time and Mark Ritson, Daniel Levy, and Shantanu Dutta for their help in data gathering and interpretation. All remaining errors are our own.

Citation

Zbaracki, M.J. and Bergen, M. (2015), "Managing Market Attention", Cognition and Strategy (Advances in Strategic Management, Vol. 32), Emerald Group Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 371-405. https://doi.org/10.1108/S0742-332220150000032012

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2015 Emerald Group Publishing Limited