Publication | Closed Access
Marketing's contribution to the implementation of business strategy: an empirical analysis
368
Citations
58
References
2001
Year
Customer SatisfactionBrand StrategyStrategic PracticePerformance ImplicationsSmall Business MarketingCorporate StrategyHistory Of MarketingManagementGlobal MarketingSuperior PerformanceBrand ManagementEmpirical AnalysisSales ManagementStrategyStrategic ManagementMarketingService StrategyPositioning (Marketing)BusinessBusiness StrategyMarketing ManagementMarket PositioningMarketing InsightsMarketing Strategy
Abstract This paper describes a study that assesses the performance implications of matching marketing strategy to business strategy. In order to conduct this study we first reviewed the literature on marketing strategy to identify its key dimensions. We then conducted a survey of 1000 senior marketing executives about the strategic marketing practices adopted in their respective firms or business units, and developed scales to describe 11 strategic marketing activities. We next performed a K‐means cluster analysis using these scales to develop a taxonomy of marketing strategy types consisting of: Aggressive Marketers, Mass Marketers, Marketing Minimizers, and Value Marketers. We then observed that superior performance at the firm or SBU level was achieved when specific marketing strategy types were matched with appropriate Miles and Snow (1978) business strategy types. Copyright © 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1