Article ID: | iaor19942157 |
Country: | United States |
Volume: | 40 |
Issue: | 1 |
Start Page Number: | 111 |
End Page Number: | 122 |
Publication Date: | Jan 1994 |
Journal: | Management Science |
Authors: | Farley John U., Lehmann Donald R. |
Keywords: | behaviour, OR in a regioncountry, marketing |
International differences in general, and cultural differences in particular, exert profound influence on what people buy. In modeling market response, highly visible international differences in purchase behavior seem to lead to an assumption by management scientists that there are large parallel international differences in market response to such things as price and advertising. In an interpretive review of market response models, the authors do find international differences in response parameters, but they also find that parameter differences due to cross-national factors tend to be smaller than differences related to technical characteristics of the model or to product/market specifics. The authors suggest two new intermediate categories of generalizability between the extremes of ‘everything is the same’ and ‘everything is different.’ They also argue that one promising approach to international generalization is through appropriate statistical adjustment of parameters from existing models.