Spontaneity and international marketing performance
Spontaneity and international marketing performance
Purpose- The purpose of this paper is to ascertain how today’s international marketers can perform better on the global scene by harnessing spontaneity.
Design/methodology/approach - The authors draw on contingency theory to develop a model of the spontaneity – international marketing performance relationship, and identify three potential moderators, namely, strategic planning, centralization, and market dynamism. The authors test the model via structural equation modeling with survey data from 197 UK exporters.
Findings- The results indicate that spontaneity is beneficial to exporters in terms of enhancing profit performance. In addition, greater centralization and strategic planning strengthen the positive effects of spontaneity. However, market dynamism mitigates the positive effect of spontaneity on export performance (when customer needs are volatile, spontaneous decisions do not function as well in terms of ensuring success).
Practical implications - Learning to be spontaneous when making export decisions appears to result in favorable outcomes for the export function. To harness spontaneity, export managers should look to develop company heuristics (increase centralization and strategic planning). Finally, if operating in dynamic export market environments, the role of spontaneity is weaker, so more conventional decision-making approaches should be adopted.
Originality/value - The international marketing environment typically requires decisions to be flexible and fast. In this context, spontaneity could enable accelerated and responsive decision-making, allowing international marketers to realize superior performance. Yet, there is a lack of research on decision-making spontaneity and its potential for international marketing performance enhancement.
671-690
Souchon, Anne L.
4120c264-acc0-438b-982e-976330b3743c
Hughes, Paul
a8347c46-d2e9-4435-9380-4853c290f77e
Farrell, Andrew
9e84f894-53b6-4025-8038-4890e1f1548a
Nemkova, Ekaterina
bd179570-8602-4834-8742-d95d34768b0c
Oliveira, Joao
75a8069a-be3a-4e05-9044-045f411f953c
2016
Souchon, Anne L.
4120c264-acc0-438b-982e-976330b3743c
Hughes, Paul
a8347c46-d2e9-4435-9380-4853c290f77e
Farrell, Andrew
9e84f894-53b6-4025-8038-4890e1f1548a
Nemkova, Ekaterina
bd179570-8602-4834-8742-d95d34768b0c
Oliveira, Joao
75a8069a-be3a-4e05-9044-045f411f953c
Souchon, Anne L., Hughes, Paul, Farrell, Andrew, Nemkova, Ekaterina and Oliveira, Joao
(2016)
Spontaneity and international marketing performance.
International Marketing Review, 33 (5), .
(doi:10.1108/IMR-06-2014-0199).
Abstract
Purpose- The purpose of this paper is to ascertain how today’s international marketers can perform better on the global scene by harnessing spontaneity.
Design/methodology/approach - The authors draw on contingency theory to develop a model of the spontaneity – international marketing performance relationship, and identify three potential moderators, namely, strategic planning, centralization, and market dynamism. The authors test the model via structural equation modeling with survey data from 197 UK exporters.
Findings- The results indicate that spontaneity is beneficial to exporters in terms of enhancing profit performance. In addition, greater centralization and strategic planning strengthen the positive effects of spontaneity. However, market dynamism mitigates the positive effect of spontaneity on export performance (when customer needs are volatile, spontaneous decisions do not function as well in terms of ensuring success).
Practical implications - Learning to be spontaneous when making export decisions appears to result in favorable outcomes for the export function. To harness spontaneity, export managers should look to develop company heuristics (increase centralization and strategic planning). Finally, if operating in dynamic export market environments, the role of spontaneity is weaker, so more conventional decision-making approaches should be adopted.
Originality/value - The international marketing environment typically requires decisions to be flexible and fast. In this context, spontaneity could enable accelerated and responsive decision-making, allowing international marketers to realize superior performance. Yet, there is a lack of research on decision-making spontaneity and its potential for international marketing performance enhancement.
Text
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- Accepted Manuscript
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 20 March 2016
e-pub ahead of print date: 12 September 2016
Published date: 2016
Organisations:
Digital and Data Driven Marketing
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 394247
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/394247
ISSN: 0265-1335
PURE UUID: 98c240ca-e7af-48f1-8134-cbe7be0765bf
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Date deposited: 13 May 2016 08:31
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 05:34
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Contributors
Author:
Anne L. Souchon
Author:
Paul Hughes
Author:
Andrew Farrell
Author:
Ekaterina Nemkova
Author:
Joao Oliveira
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