The Impacts of Marketing Capabilities on Business Performance in the Case of Selected Manufacturing firms in Ethiopia: The Mediating Role of Sustainable Competitive Advantage (Published)
This study investigates the relationship between marketing capabilities, sustainable competitive advantage, and business performance within selected manufacturing firms in Ethiopia. Its primary objective was to explore the mediating role of competitive advantage between marketing capabilities and business performance. A total of 280 questionnaires were distributed, with 219 completed responses, yielding an 84% response rate. Participants were selected using purposive sampling. The study tested 20 hypotheses related to various marketing capability dimensions, including Market Sensing, Specialized Marketing Capabilities, Architectural Marketing Capability, and Dynamic Marketing Capabilities. A quantitative research methodology, using survey data, was employed to test these hypotheses. The findings revealed that several marketing capabilities, including Market Information Scanning, Pricing Capability, Channel Management Capability, and Customer Relationship Marketing, significantly impact business performance. Moreover, competitive advantage was found to mediate the relationship between marketing capabilities and business performance. These results emphasize the importance for manufacturing firms to prioritize the development of specific marketing capabilities to enhance performance and achieve sustainable growth in competitive markets. However, the study also found that Market Information Interpretation, Product Management Capability, Market Learning Capabilities, and Capability Enhancement did not significantly affect business performance, contrary to previous studies both locally and globally. The study’s focus on manufacturing firms in Ethiopia limits the generalizability of its findings to firms in different industries or of varying sizes. Future research should explore the influence of firm size on the mediating effect of competitive advantage and further investigate under-explored constructs such as Market Information Interpretation and Product Management Capability. These insights can inform policymakers and practitioners in developing strategies tailored to the unique challenges faced by firms in emerging economies.
Keywords: Business Performance, marketing capability, sustainable competitive advantage
Effects of Digital Marketing and Service Quality Towards Business Performance That Is Mediated by Competitiveness (Published)
The research aimed to analyze effects of digital marketing and service quality towards business performance with competitiveness as a mediating variable. The research sample involved 114 people of meatball-culinary micro entrepreneurs in Malang City, East Java Province, Indonesia. The sampling technique applied purposive sampling. Research data analysis was done with some steps including frequency distribution, validity and reliability tests, path analysis method with SPSS software and for mediation test with sobel test. The research results showed: first, that digital marketing had significant effect on business performance with the mediation of competitiveness and the partial mediation model. Second, service quality had a significant effect on business performance with the mediation of competitiveness and the full mediation model. Results of the Sobel test proved that competitiveness was the right mediating variable for digital marketing and service quality influenced business performance. The research results practically contributed ideas to meatball-culinary micro-entrepreneurs in implementing digital marketing, service quality, competitiveness and business performance.
Keywords: Business Performance, Competitiveness, Digital Marketing, Service Quality
Customer Management: Creating a Sense-Making Framework for Developing Economies (Published)
The aim of the study was to gain an understanding of why most organizations fail in the effective management of the customer despite the fact that it is well accepted and understood that the customer is an integral part of the business and the reason business exists. Although various strategies have been implemented such as, customer service, customer experience, and customer relationship management, the phenomenon remains a challenge. Many reasons could be attributed to the failure of implementing customer management strategies, including a lack of a holistic approach, insufficient buy-in first from leadership and followed by employees, short-term focus instead of long-term, and budget constraints. Though customer management frameworks that advocate for a customer centric approach exist, which is holistic in nature and incorporate a systems’ thinking perspective, the frameworks tend to take a western viewpoint or a developed economy paradigm. The assumption seems to be that the frameworks will work and be effective anywhere without being context specific. Subsequently, the study aimed to establish if the customer management phenomenon should not be context specific for it to yield better results. As a progression from this base, the ultimate objective of the research was to create a customer management framework for a specific context, i.e. a developing economy. The Research Methodology assumed was qualitative, and Grounded Theory was the general methodology applied for generating new theory. Data collection methods adopted were: documents, one-on-one in-depth interviews, and an online questionnaire. The sample and population were individuals from a developing economic (Africa), specifically South Africa and Zimbabwe. The research findings established that there are some general customer management principles that are similar and hold true across different socio-economic environments; however, the level of understanding and execution of these principles is fundamentally different. It can be concluded that a customer centric model specifically for a developing world is appropriate to a degree since market conditions and political, social, and economic conditions are different. Recommendations of the study include creating a sense-making customer management framework for a developing economy that is based on a systems thinking paradigm and that takes into consideration external factors such as politics, social, and the economic environment. The framework must be easy to understand and not require huge financial resources or investment to implement and sustain because the developing world (generally) tends to lack capital.
Keywords: Business Performance, Customer Centricity, Customer Management, Socio-Economic Environment