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1 – 10 of 859Erik L. Olson and Hans Mathias Thjømøe
The purpose of this paper is to compare the relative performance of TV sponsorships with the industry standard 30‐second TV spot advertising on achieving common communication…
Abstract
Purpose
The purpose of this paper is to compare the relative performance of TV sponsorships with the industry standard 30‐second TV spot advertising on achieving common communication goals.
Design/methodology/approach
The two media are tested with an experiment using realistic stimuli and target market representative samples and employing six brands as both TV sponsors and TV advertisers.
Findings
Ten seconds of TV sponsoring works almost equally as well as 30‐second spots across all measures and brands. While the outright performance differs by type of brand (i.e. high fit versus lower fit, known versus unknown), the relative performance between media does not vary.
Research limitations/implications
The stimuli only gave subjects a brief exposure to each medium. The six stimuli brands, four effect measures, and the Norwegian sample may also not be representative for all types of TV sponsoring/advertising contexts.
Practical implications
Marketing managers can use the results to better allocate their communication spending between TV spot advertising and TV sponsorships, by determining which medium offers better value in achieving communication goals.
Originality/value
To the authors' knowledge, the comparison is the most realistic and controlled experiment in this area, with high levels of internal and external validity.
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Erik L. Olson and Hans Mathias Thjømøe
This paper seeks to use branding literature to understand the rise and fall of GM's brands.
Abstract
Purpose
This paper seeks to use branding literature to understand the rise and fall of GM's brands.
Design/methodology/approach
The approach takes the form of presenting a case analysis using secondary sources covering GM's brands and products, managerial leadership, and market and financial performance throughout its 100‐year history.
Findings
During much of its first 50 years, GM was led by engineers who pioneered professional brand management, and through intelligent allocation of resources created one of the world's strongest portfolio of brands. Government anti‐trust hearings shifted GM to a cost‐cutting orientation during its second 50 years that had a negative impact on the GM brands and brought the current financial problems.
Research limitations/implications
This is a case study of only one firm, but parallels are drawn with other firms that have had similar brand issues.
Practical implications
Firms with multiple brands need top management leadership to ensure that each brand has a unique mission with minimal overlap and adequate resources for product development, innovation, and communications to achieve its mission. If the mission or resources disappear, non‐core brands need to be terminated. Governments that wish to support well managed firms with strong brands need to be careful in using anti‐trust actions, and should not force firms to make products that are not desired by customers.
Originality/value
The paper takes a novel approach to evaluating the current state of General Motors by examining the factors that led to chronic mismanagement of its brands, which in turn has reduced brand equity, market share, and profits, and that have magnified GM's problems with labor and legacy costs, productivity, and product mix.
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Imoh Antai and Hans Olson
Although the supply chain (SC) competition concept has emerged during the past decade as the way firms will compete in future, there is scant academic research on actual…
Abstract
Purpose
Although the supply chain (SC) competition concept has emerged during the past decade as the way firms will compete in future, there is scant academic research on actual mechanisms through which such competition can occur. The purpose of this paper is to proposes interaction as the means by which competition between supply chains may be undertaken.
Design/methodology/approach
The paper investigates a Swedish logistics center via case study methodology to develop the idea of interaction for SC vs SC competition.
Findings
Results suggest that interaction points along organizations ' supply chains may present enough breadth to assume a role in determining how SC vs SC competition may be played out in reality.
Research limitations/implications
Interaction, as proposed here, implies an emphasis on all points at which supply chains meet to request goods and services, including various points where such supply chains converge, e.g. service providers, original equipment manufacturers, etc.
Originality/value
Most studies dealing with competition between supply chains fall short of exploring the link between theory and corresponding practice of this evolving competition mode. Such a link is provided with the use of logistics centers.
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Until recently, little research has been directed at the measurement of the impact of governmental support on the firm. The major focus of this article is on the methodological…
Abstract
Until recently, little research has been directed at the measurement of the impact of governmental support on the firm. The major focus of this article is on the methodological and measurement issues that appear to have a confounding effect and may account for broad equivocality of the findings in many of the studies. An evaluation paradigm is developed and applied to the research reviewed. The article concludes with a synthesis of the issues and provides specific directions for future research.
The purpose of this paper is to narrate the history of General Motors' (GM's) success in its first 50 years, and describe the causes of its decline after government anti‐trust…
Abstract
Purpose
The purpose of this paper is to narrate the history of General Motors' (GM's) success in its first 50 years, and describe the causes of its decline after government anti‐trust hearings.
Design/methodology/approach
The paper provides an historical analysis of GM through secondary sources.
Findings
GM was forced to abandon the very management principles it had developed and pioneered because of government legislation, leading to brand‐killing initiatives.
Research limitations/implications
This case study is of one firm only, but draws parallels with other potential firms.
Practical implications
This paper should serve as a warning to all industrial and commercial giants that threaten a monopoly, including IT firms like IBM and Microsoft.
Social implications
This paper addresses the negative effects of government regulation in a profit‐making environment, and will affect investors and consumers.
Originality/value
The paper clearly describes sound management principles in relation to brand management, and traces the history of a car company that is currently facing financial difficulties.
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Present day literature on the general topic of export planning for international markets appears to be a repetition of standard works. It does not seem to be geared to the needs…
Abstract
Present day literature on the general topic of export planning for international markets appears to be a repetition of standard works. It does not seem to be geared to the needs of managers of small exporting manufacturing concerns. The small businessman needs ways of analysing export markets, the potential exportability of his product, and, equally important, tools for predicting which products are likely to be threatened by import competition, and the appropriate marketing strategies to use in exporting.
Gary A. Knight and Roger J. Calantone
There is much research suggesting that the image consumers hold about a product’s country of origin can influence their purchase decision, but little empirical work has focused on…
Abstract
There is much research suggesting that the image consumers hold about a product’s country of origin can influence their purchase decision, but little empirical work has focused on the underlying cognitive processing. A flexible model is devised and tested to represent country image processing, using data from large samples of US and Japanese consumers. In addition to strongly supporting the validity of the model, results suggest that country image cognitive processing is significantly more complex than previously thought, and that culture appears to play an important role in purchase decisions. The flexible model represents a substantive improvement in the depiction of cognitive processing regarding country‐of‐origin image.
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P.S. Han, Olson and R.L. Johnston
In conventional boundary element formulations, the singularities of the fundamental solution are usually located on the problem boundary. This leads to difficulties in evaluating…
Abstract
In conventional boundary element formulations, the singularities of the fundamental solution are usually located on the problem boundary. This leads to difficulties in evaluating solution quantities on or near the boundary. A method is presented for locating the singularities on an auxiliary boundary outside the problem domain and having this auxiliary boundary location determined automatically via a Galerkin criterion. This automatic generation of the auxiliary boundary results in a highly accurate, adaptive but non‐linear method. The number of singularities can be significantly reduced compared to conventional boundary element formulations which usually require the same number of singularities as the number of boundary elements used. The method is illustrated with three examples involving Laplace's equation in two dimensions. Excellent numerical results are obtained in all cases using only a few singularities.
Dev Jani and Heesup Han
This study attempts to answer the following questions: can the Big Five factors (BFF) of personality facilitate a social comparison (SC) of hotel guests? Can the BFF explain the…
Abstract
Purpose
This study attempts to answer the following questions: can the Big Five factors (BFF) of personality facilitate a social comparison (SC) of hotel guests? Can the BFF explain the emotional responses of hotel guests? Do SC and consumption emotions mediate the influence of personality on hotel guests' levels of satisfaction?
Design/methodology/approach
Data from a survey of hotel guests, which yielded an effective sample of 564, was subjected to a series of multiple regression analyses. The Baron and Kenny approach was employed to test mediating impacts.
Findings
The five factors of personality explain significant variations in consumption emotions and SCs of hotel guests. Apart from consumption emotions, SC was found to influence hotel guests' satisfaction significantly. Further, greater guest satisfaction was a partial mediator of the effect of positive consumption emotion on revisit and word-of-mouth intentions but constituted only a partial mediator of negative consumption emotions on word-of-mouth.
Research limitations/implications
The results offer managerial insights into marketing strategies, design, and operational and human-resource management.
Originality/value
Few studies have integrated personality and customers' consumption emotions with satisfaction and behavioral intentions. This research gap has been compounded by a lack of research on SCs that might further explain personality-customer responses and behavioral intentions. This study fills this gap by reporting on a survey of hotel guests that provided data on these relationships. Theoretically, the findings justify the value of personality and SCs in hotel settings.
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Poppy Arsil, Hoa Le Dang, Rumpoko Wicaksono and Afik Hardanto
The research objective is to explore consumers' (those of ethnic origin and non-ethnic origin) motivation for choosing ethnic food.
Abstract
Purpose
The research objective is to explore consumers' (those of ethnic origin and non-ethnic origin) motivation for choosing ethnic food.
Design/methodology/approach
A total of 120 respondents were approached at Padang restaurants in Jakarta, and personal interviews were conducted using soft laddering techniques linking to means-end chain (MEC) analysis. The associations among attributes, consequences and values were mapped into a graphical hierarchy to depict the cognitive structure of consuming ethnic food.
Findings
The unique and spicy taste of Padang food, as well as preferences for the cuisine, was identified as the determinants of consumption of Padang food. In addition, the Minang people still considered the food's origin and tradition when consuming it. “Financial security” and “happiness” were identified as the desired values that consumers want to achieve.
Research limitations/implications
The extent to which acculturation affects consumers' decision-making on consuming ethnic food has not been significantly investigated.
Practical implications
Padang food can be promoted by highlighting its traditions and unique, spicy taste. These are key messages to attract consumers of Padang ethnic food.
Originality/value
The paper presents an original motivations and cognitive structures for eating Padang food.
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