2011
DOI: 10.1509/jm.75.1.16
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Is Market Orientation a Source of Sustainable Competitive Advantage or Simply the Cost of Competing?

Abstract: The authors use panel data constructed from the responses of repeatedly surveyed top managers at 261 companies regarding their firm's market orientation, along with objective performance measures, to investigate the influence of market orientation on performance for a nine-year period from 1997 to 2005. The authors measure market orientation in 1997, 2001, and 2005 and estimate it in the interval between these measurement periods. The analyses indicate that market orientation has a positive effect on business… Show more

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Cited by 350 publications
(400 citation statements)
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References 53 publications
(75 reference statements)
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“…The result that a customer focus does not impact on a firm's profitability can be due to the fact that being customer oriented has become a necessity, rather than a competitive advantage, which is in part echoing the argument provided by Kumar et al (2011). This implies that being overly customer-oriented can be detrimental to a firm's profitability since it might require unnecessary capital investments in order to fulfill customer needs.…”
Section: The Effects Of Market-and Relationship-oriented Behaviorsmentioning
confidence: 98%
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“…The result that a customer focus does not impact on a firm's profitability can be due to the fact that being customer oriented has become a necessity, rather than a competitive advantage, which is in part echoing the argument provided by Kumar et al (2011). This implies that being overly customer-oriented can be detrimental to a firm's profitability since it might require unnecessary capital investments in order to fulfill customer needs.…”
Section: The Effects Of Market-and Relationship-oriented Behaviorsmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…However, empirical evidence also suggests that these behaviors are moderated by contextual factors (e.g., Cadogan, Kuivalainen, & Sundqvist, 2009;Ellis, 2006;Kirca, Jayachandran, & Bearden, 2005), or have no influence on firm performance (e.g., Grewal & Tansuhaj, 2001). A longitudinal study by Kumar, Jones, Venkatesan, and Leone (2011) provides evidence that market oriented-behaviors have recently become a prerequisite, rather than a competitive advantage, for any firm to compete in the market place. Furthermore, being market-oriented could be a mere 'self-portrait' rather than a true representation of a market-centric approach (Deshpandé, Farley, & Webster, 1993).…”
Section: Nomological Model Developmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Environmental munificence and dynamism (Slater & Narver, 1994;Egeren & O'Connor, 1998;Song & Parry, 2009;Kumar et al, 2011) Environmental munificence (1) A high level of price competition is in our industry (R) (2) A high level of competition is in the quality of products/services in our industry (R) (3) Any product or service distinguishing one competitor from the rest can be matched readily by other competitors (R) Minimum 1, maximum 5, M ¼ 3.233, SD ¼ 0.875, Composite Reliability ¼ 0.895, AVE ¼ 0.743 Environmental dynamism (1) Technology changes quickly (2) Actions of competitors are unpredictable (3) Products and service changes quickly (4) Products and services are unpredictable Minimum 1, maximum 5, M ¼ 3.836, SD ¼ 0.930, Composite Reliability ¼ 0.900, AVE ¼ 0.693 The Activities of MA (Kotler et al, 1977) Rate the extent to which the following activities are used by your firm to gather information about its business environment. Business (task) environment audits (BEAs) (1) Industrial competitive analysis (2) Market analysis (3) Customer needs and opinions (4) Customer attributes, habits, and interests (5) Customer satisfaction of products and services Minimum 1, maximum 5, M ¼ 2.387, SD ¼ 1.674, Composite Reliability ¼ 0.946, AVE ¼ 0.777 Rate the extent to which the following evaluations are implemented by your firm to ensure the effectiveness of its marketing information system and function.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Market orientation (MO) seems to be a key concept to adequately respond to an ever changing and turbulent environment MO involves the generation of market intelligence, dissemination of the intelligence across departments and organization wide responsiveness to it (Kohli and Jaworski 1990). MO has been an essential concept for the marketing discipline for both service and manufacturing industries; consequently many authors have empirically studied its relation to short and long term performance (Tsiotsou 2010) and have confirmed its value as a source of sustainable competitive advantage (Kumar et al 2011).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%