The role of power distance in the application of relationship marketing orientation to the internal business environment
Rachel Shuk Yee Cheung and
Guilherme D. Pires
Global Business and Economics Review, 2015, vol. 17, issue 3, 330-343
Abstract:
This paper examines managerial perceptions of the role of power distance as a moderator of the perceived impact of the targeting of employees with relational strategies on perceived business performance. The study examines data collected from managers in selected industries in Hong Kong, a country identified by Hofstede (1984) as characterised by high power-distance. The rationale for the application of RMO theory to businesses' internal environment, or IRMO, is discussed using the virtuous cycle conceptualisation and marketing orientation theory. Discussion of the link between IRMO adoption and business performance suggests that justification for IRMO adoption may depend on organisational structure, with particular prominence for cultural aspects associated with power-distance conditions. A view of power-distance as a moderator in the adoption of IRMO strategies is justified. It is concluded that power-distance holds a moderating effect on managerial perceptions of the impact of trust, one of six dimensions that were examined, on business performance. This finding suggests that businesses considering the adoption of IRMO may benefit from examining how success may depend on managing power distance within the firm.
Keywords: power distance; internal relationship marketing; relationship marketing orientation; IRMO; business performance; Hong Kong; virtuous cycle; organisational structure; organisational culture; trust. (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2015
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:ids:gbusec:v:17:y:2015:i:3:p:330-343
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