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Understanding Influence of Marketing Thought on Practice: an Analysis of Business Journals Using Textual and Latent Dirichlet Allocation (LDA) Analysis
Several calls have been made to understand the influence of marketing thought on practice (Rust et al. J Mark 68:76–89, 11 ). Practice includes practitioners who mostly use concepts and frameworks (general practice) and who mostly use quantitative models (quantitative practice). This paper compares...
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Published in: | Customer needs and solutions 2018-12, Vol.5 (3-4), p.146-161 |
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Main Authors: | , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | Several calls have been made to understand the influence of marketing thought on practice (Rust et al. J Mark 68:76–89,
11
). Practice includes practitioners who mostly use concepts and frameworks (general practice) and who mostly use quantitative models (quantitative practice). This paper compares the relative influence of marketing thought compared to other disciplines and uncovers seminal marketing thoughts that have influenced both general and quantitative practice. Using topic modeling procedures on 94 years of
Harvard Business Review
, 46 years of
Sloan Management Review
, and 47 years of
Management Science
, this paper illuminates the evolution of the influence of marketing thought over time. Despite marketing’s slow start, it has an increasing influence on both general and quantitative practice. Foundational topics in marketing such as
product
,
promotion
,
place
,
consumers
, and
marketing research methods
have influenced both general and quantitative practice. Surprisingly,
price
has not influenced practice.
Marketing Communications
is increasingly influential while
Channel Management
,
Product/Service Management
, and surprisingly
Customer Relationships
have lost their early influence to practice. General practitioners find
Marketing Environment
and
Business Models
increasingly influential while quantitative practitioners find
Social Influence
and
Metrics
increasingly influential. Quantitative practice has kept up to speed with marketing thought that influence general practice. |
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ISSN: | 2196-291X 2196-2928 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s40547-018-0089-z |