Giving voters what they want? Party orientation perceptions and preferences in the British electorate
Giving voters what they want? Party orientation perceptions and preferences in the British electorate
Some of the most important propositions in the political marketing literature hinge on assumptions about the electorate. In particular, voters are presumed to react in different ways to different orientations or postures. Yet there are theoretical reasons for questioning some of these assumptions, and certainly they have seldom been empirically tested. Here, we focus on one prominent example of political marketing research: Lees-Marshment's orientations' model. We investigate how the public reacts to product and market orientation, whether they see a trade-off between the two (a point in dispute among political marketing scholars), and whether partisans differ from non-partisan voters by being more inclined to value product over market orientation. Evidence from two mass sample surveys of the British public (both conducted online by YouGov) demonstrates important heterogeneity within the electorate, casts doubt on the core assumptions underlying some political marketing arguments and raises broader questions about what voters are looking for in a party.
market orientation, party identification, political marketing, product orientation
89-104
Johns, Robert
02861bc9-b704-49b1-bbc7-cf1c1e9b7a35
Brandenburg, Heinz
083c9392-6f13-49c7-8938-d7e8d5c67c33
January 2014
Johns, Robert
02861bc9-b704-49b1-bbc7-cf1c1e9b7a35
Brandenburg, Heinz
083c9392-6f13-49c7-8938-d7e8d5c67c33
Johns, Robert and Brandenburg, Heinz
(2014)
Giving voters what they want? Party orientation perceptions and preferences in the British electorate.
Party Politics, 20 (1), .
(doi:10.1177/1354068811436040).
Abstract
Some of the most important propositions in the political marketing literature hinge on assumptions about the electorate. In particular, voters are presumed to react in different ways to different orientations or postures. Yet there are theoretical reasons for questioning some of these assumptions, and certainly they have seldom been empirically tested. Here, we focus on one prominent example of political marketing research: Lees-Marshment's orientations' model. We investigate how the public reacts to product and market orientation, whether they see a trade-off between the two (a point in dispute among political marketing scholars), and whether partisans differ from non-partisan voters by being more inclined to value product over market orientation. Evidence from two mass sample surveys of the British public (both conducted online by YouGov) demonstrates important heterogeneity within the electorate, casts doubt on the core assumptions underlying some political marketing arguments and raises broader questions about what voters are looking for in a party.
This record has no associated files available for download.
More information
e-pub ahead of print date: 22 February 2012
Published date: January 2014
Keywords:
market orientation, party identification, political marketing, product orientation
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 489721
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/489721
ISSN: 1354-0688
PURE UUID: b24da1ad-0d83-4ebf-96e8-347bd7dce746
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 30 Apr 2024 17:04
Last modified: 01 May 2024 02:10
Export record
Altmetrics
Contributors
Author:
Robert Johns
Author:
Heinz Brandenburg
Download statistics
Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.
View more statistics