广告强度与企业绩效:企业年龄和文化传播方式的影响

IF 4.8 3区 管理学 Q1 BUSINESS International Marketing Review Pub Date : 2022-12-28 DOI:10.1108/imr-12-2021-0355
A. Semenov, Arilova A. Randrianasolo
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引用次数: 1

摘要

目的广告强度被视为允许企业创造竞争优势的资源(无形资产观)或建立广告资源的投资(投资费用观)。目前的研究支持投资费用观点。作者通过研究企业年龄(知识的代表)在广告强度和表现之间的关系中的调节作用,以及文化传播风格对这种调节的影响来做到这一点。设计/方法/方法从多个来源收集次要数据。以来自10个国家的262家公司为样本(149家公司来自高背景文化,113家公司来自低背景文化),使用普通最小二乘法估计回归系数以检验假设。使用两阶段最小二乘估计的工具变量方法来解决内生性偏差。不包括重点公司的平均行业广告强度被用作工具变量。研究结果表明,公司年龄显著调节广告强度/业绩关系,但这种调节仅在高背景文化中显著。这些发现意味着,处于高背景文化中的公司必须持续投资于广告支出,而处于低背景文化的公司可能不需要这样做来提高业绩。实际含义这项研究的结果深入了解了广告支出是否能提高业绩的争论,并为国际营销经理提供了一个更清晰的画面,让他们了解如何在各自的市场中投资广告。创意/价值大多数关于广告强度/表现联系的研究完全依赖于基于资源的观点。作者利用多理论视角对这种关系进行了细致的理解。此外,作者应用投资费用观来考察广告强度是建立广告资源的投资,而不是资源。这种投资必须与知识相结合,才能正确利用投资开发广告资源。此外,作者发现,与低背景文化中的公司相比,向高背景文化中扩张的公司必须投入更多的精力来发展广告能力,以正确利用广告资源。
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Advertising intensity and firm performance: the influences of firm age and cultural communication styles
PurposeAdvertising intensity is treated either as a resource that allows firms to create competitive advantages (intangible asset view) or as an investment to build advertising resource (investment expense view). This current research supports the investment expense view. The authors do so by examining the moderating role of firm age (a proxy for knowledge) in the relationship between advertising intensity and performance as well as the influence of cultural communication styles on this moderation.Design/methodology/approachSecondary data were collected from multiple sources. With a sample of 262 companies from 10 countries (149 firms from high-context cultures and 113 firms from low-context cultures), ordinary least squares was used to estimate the regression coefficients to test the hypotheses. An instrumental variable approach with two-stage least squares estimates was used to address an endogeneity bias. Average industry advertising intensity excluding the focal firm was used as an instrumental variable.FindingsThe findings demonstrate that firm age significantly moderates the advertising intensity/performance relationship, but this moderation is only significant in high-context cultures. These findings imply that firms within high-context cultures must continually invest in advertising expenditures, while firms in low-context cultures may not need to do so to increase performance.Practical implicationsThe results of this study provide insight into the debate of whether advertising expenditures boost performance, as well as provide international marketing managers with a clearer picture on how to invest in advertising within their respective markets.Originality/valueA majority of the studies that examine the advertising intensity/performance link rely solely on the resource-based view. The authors utilize a multi-theoretical perspective to provide a fine-grained understanding of this relationship. Moreover, the authors apply the investment expense view to examine advertising intensity as an investment to build advertising resources, rather than a resource. This investment must be incorporated with the knowledge to properly employ the investment to develop advertising resources. Further, the authors find that firms expanding into high-context cultures must devote more effort into developing advertising capabilities to properly employ advertising resources than firms in low-context cultures.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
8.70
自引率
12.00%
发文量
55
期刊介绍: International Marketing Review (IMR) is a journal that has, as its core remit, the goal of publishing research that pushes back the boundaries of international marketing knowledge. IMR does this by publishing novel research ideas, and by publishing papers that add substance to, question the basic assumptions of, reframe, or otherwise shape what we think we know within in the international marketing field. IMR is pluralistic, publishing papers that are conceptual, quantitative-empirical, or qualitative-empirical. At IMR, we aim to be a journal that recognizes great papers and great research ideas, and works hard with authors to nurture those ideas through to publication. We aim to be a journal that is proactive in developing the research agenda in international marketing, by identifying critical research issues, and promoting research within those areas. Finally, IMR is a journal that is comfortable exploring, and that fosters the exploration of, the interfaces and overlaps between international marketing and other business disciplines. Where no interfaces or overlaps exist, IMR will be a journal that is ready to create them. IMR’s definition of international marketing is purposefully broad and includes, although is not restricted to: -International market entry decisions and relationships; -Export marketing and supply chain issues; -International retailing; -International channel management; -Consumer ethnocentrism, country and product image and origin effects; -Cultural considerations in international marketing; -International marketing strategy; -Aspects of international marketing management such as international branding, advertising and new product development.
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