Cultural values and personal selling: a comparison of Australian and Hong Kong retailers’ promotion preferences
Fam, Kim-Shyan; Merrilees, Bill
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Cite this item:
Fam, K.-S., & Merrilees, B. (1998). Cultural values and personal selling: a comparison of Australian and Hong Kong retailers’ promotion preferences. International Marketing Review, 15(4), 246–256. doi:10.1108/02651339810227533
Permanent link to OUR Archive version:
http://hdl.handle.net/10523/1238
Abstract:
This paper compares the promotional practices and perceptions between two countries of disparate cultural backgrounds, namely Australia and Hong Kong. The paper argues that the preference for a particular promotional tool is influenced by the degree of cultural orientation as measured by Hofstede’s collectivism index. The central hypothesis is that countries with a higher score on the collectivism index are likely to favour personal selling promotion tools than will countries with a lower score. This hypothesis is tested with two separate samples of clothing and shoe retailers from Australia and Hong Kong. The hypothesis is supported from the statistical results.
Date:
1998
ISSN:
0265-1335
Keywords:
Australia; Hong Kong; national cultures; personal selling; promotion; retailing
Research Type:
Journal Article
Notes:
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