23 research outputs found
Digital supply chain management in the videogames industry: a systematic literature review
As industries mature, they rely more heavily on supply chain management (SCM) to ensure effective operations leading to greater levels of organisational performance. SCM has been widely covered in many industrial areas and, in line with other burgeoning sectors such as Tourism, an industry focus provides the opportunity to look in-depth at the context-based factors that affect SCM. Developments in digital distribution and rapid technological innovations have resulted in an increased focus on Digital Supply Chains (DSCs), which bring about significant changes to how consumers, customers, suppliers, and manufacturers interact, affecting supply chain design and processes. Through a systematic review of the Videogames Industry Supply Chain Management literature, which serves as a pertinent contextual example of a DSC, we look at how supply chains are affected by structural, market and technological change, such as increased platformisation, disintermediation and the proliferation of digital distribution. We distil these findings into a new research agenda, which identifies themes in line with extant DSC research, provides a series of relevant practice recommendations and identifies opportunities for future research
The Impact of Value Congruence on Consumer-Service Brand Relationships
Contains fulltext :
68654.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)By integrating results from literature pertaining to social psychology, organizational behavior, and relationship marketing, the
authors develop and test a model that explains how value congruence affects the key components of consumer-brand
relationship quality and outcomes, including satisfaction, trust, affective commitment, and loyalty. Using structural equation
modeling, they test the model with data from a survey of 1,037 consumers of clothing stores and banks in the Netherlands. The
results show that value congruence has significant direct, positive effects on satisfaction, trust, affective commitment, and
loyalty. Furthermore, value congruence indirectly influences loyalty through satisfaction, trust, and affective commitment. The
authors discuss the implications of these findings for marketing theory and practice.19 p