236 research outputs found
La prise en compte de la durabilité dans les stratégies marketing des PME : apports et limites
This paper examines how SME managers in the agro-food sector include sustainable development into their marketing strategy. We focus on the link between sustainable development and performance, the impact of environmental factors on their practices and the limits that they perceive when trying to include sustainability into their marketing strategy. More than a marketing strength, sustainability appears as important for the people who work in the SME. However, there are some limits. ...French Abstract : Nous examinons dans cet article comment des directeurs de PME agroalimentaires à fort ancrage territorial s’approprient la notion de développement durable et l’expriment dans leurs stratégies marketing. Nous examinons successivement leur vision du lien entre développement durable et performance, l’impact des caractéristiques environnementales sur leurs pratiques et les limites qu’ils perçoivent à cette volonté d’intégrer la durabilité dans leur stratégie au moment de sa mise en œuvre. Au-delà de l’argument commercial, la durabilité apparaît comme un levier intéressant du projet d’entreprise et de la mobilisation des salariés. Néanmoins, la démarche comporte aussi des limites.SUSTAINABILITY; MARKETING STRATEGY; FOOD SECTOR; SMALL FIRMS
The effects of loyalty programs on customer satisfaction, trust, and loyalty toward high- and low-end fashion retailers
This study examines the differential effects of the benefits customers receive from a loyalty program (LP) on satisfaction with the LP, trust in the LP, and store loyalty for high- and low-end fashion retailers. With survey data from U.S. LP subscribers, the study tests the relationships using multiple regressions and analysis of covariance. The results show that symbolic benefits are more important for high-end fashion store consumers' satisfaction with the LP; conversely, utilitarian benefits increase consumers' satisfaction with the LP more in low-end fashion retailing, whereas hedonic benefits increase consumers' satisfaction with the LP in both types of retailers. All benefits in both types of retailers affect trust in the LP. Finally, satisfaction with and trust in the LP are important drivers of loyalty to the retailer. The findings have important implications on how managers of high- and low-end fashion retailing can effectively design their LP rewards to maximize loyalty
Re-assessing the influence of mental intangibility on consumer decision making
The present paper explores the influence of mental intangibility on the size of the consideration set, both on tangible products and services. This research also examines the moderating effect of purchase involvement and objective knowledge on the set. Two experimental studies were conducted to examine these relations. Overall, the results indicate that mental intangibility positively influences the size of the consideration set, regardless of the offering type (product or service). This effect is stronger in low levels of knowledge. Consumer involvement does not seem to have a moderating effect on this relation. This study’s implications and recommendations for future research are also discussed
New insights into emotion valence and loyalty intentions in relational exchanges
This research examines how emotion valence and future intentions arising from relational exchangeswithaservicefirmdependonaconsumer'slevelofgoalattainmentandlocusofcausality (firm vs. self) of relational outcomes. Drawing on the theories of goal-directed behavior and agency of causation, this study hypothesizes that levels of goal attainment and locus of causality influence the generation of positive emotions (gratitude), negative emotions (grudge and guilt), relational mediators (trust and commitment), and subsequent future intentions to remain loyal to the firm. Based on a controlled experiment with 284 subjects in a consumer-determined relationshipsetting,theresearchfindsthatemotionvalenceandfutureloyaltyintentionsarecontingent upon the fulfillment of relational objectives of individual consumers and the agency of causation for the outcome of the relational exchanges. In doing so, this study delineates the conditioning mechanism that directs how emotion valence influences behavioral intentions. The study contributes to the consumer behavior and services marketing literatures on consumption-based emotionsandhassignificantpracticeimplicationsforrelationalbehaviors
Feeding the rural tourism strategy? Food and notions of place and identity
The humble rural cuisine has now been thrust at the forefront of economic
development strategies. This conceptual paper is a contribution to a growing critical
awareness of the operations of the food industry and helps to foster a critical understanding
of how, if at all, local food and its associated culture can help sustain rural tourism
particularly and rural communities generally. It is inspired by literature about the
international political economy of food and the many experiences of local food development,
and is aware of the contrast between the structure of the industry and the hopes associated
with its practice on the ground. The paper thus argues that, beyond the glamour and hype,
there are those who gain, as well as those who lose, from the current food fad. While it
explains the causes of the contemporary craze with food, the paper also interrogates the
naı¨ve expectations often placed in food as a motor of rural development, and as the panacea
for struggling rural communities. The empirical data on which this chapter is based are
drawn from 18 short chapters explaining the history of various “traditional dishes” from the
islands of the broad North Atlantic that feature in a recent food publication.peer-reviewe
The relationship between consumer ethnocentrism, cosmopolitanism and product country image among younger generation consumers: the moderating role of country development status
Although the differences between developed and developing countries have been extensively studied in the context of globalization strategies, few studies have so far been conducted on the relationship between country development status and the possession by countries of a favorable (or unfavorable) product country image (PCI). Moreover, the results of such studies to date have been inconclusive. The purpose of this paper is to investigate the moderating role of country developmental status on PCI coupled with two antecedents of PCI, namely consumer ethnocentrism and cosmopolitanism. The paper also distinguishes between the PCI of the home and foreign country images of respondents. We test a new model that incorporates these constructs with a sample of 2655 younger generation consumers. The results show that country development status moderates some relationships but does not moderate others. These findings have significant implications for international companies from both developed and developing countries when developing global strategy
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Exploring the impact of social axioms on firm reputation: a stakeholder perspective
This study proposes a model of how deeply held beliefs, known as ‘social axioms, moderate the interaction between reputation, its causes and consequences with stakeholders. It contributes to the stakeholder relational field of reputation theory by explaining why the same organizational stimuli lead to different individual stakeholder responses. The study provides a shift in reputation research from organizational-level stimuli as the root causes of stakeholder responses to exploring the interaction between individual beliefs and organizational stimuli in determining reputational consequences. Building on a conceptual model that incorporates product/service quality and social responsibility as key reputational dimensions, the authors test empirically for moderating influences, in the form of social axioms, between reputation-related antecedents and consequences, using component-based structural equation modelling (n = 204). In several model paths, significant differences are found between responses of individuals identified as either high or low on social cynicism, fate control and religiosity. The results suggest that stakeholder responses to reputation-related stimuli can be systematically predicted as a function of the interactions between the deeply held beliefs of individuals and these stimuli. The authors offer recommendations on how strategic reputation management can be approached within and across stakeholder groups at a time when firms grapple with effective management of diverse stakeholder expectations
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