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Market orientation, competitive advantage, and performance: A demand-based perspective

Abstract (Summary)

This study assesses how customer value affects a firm's market orientation and consequently, competitive advantage and organizational performance in a service industry - the global hotel industry. The findings show that if a firm perceives its customers as valuing service, the firm is more likely to adopt both a customer and a competitor orientation; if the firm thinks its customers are price sensitive, the firm tends to develop a competitor orientation. Moreover, the greater a firm's customer orientation, the more the firm is able to develop a competitive advantage based on innovation and market differentiation. In contrast, a competitor orientation has a negative effect on a firm's market differentiation advantage. Finally, innovation and market differentiation advantages lead to greater market performance (e.g., perceived quality, customer satisfaction) and in turn, higher financial performance (e.g., profit, market share). [PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]

Indexing (document details)

Subjects:Hotels & motels,  Market orientation,  Competitive advantage,  Innovations,  Consumer behavior,  Studies
Classification Codes8380 Hotels & restaurants,  7100 Market research,  9130 Experiment/theoretical treatment
Author(s):Kevin Zheng Zhou,  James R Brown,  Chekitan S Dev
Document types:Feature
Publication title:Journal of Business Research. New York: Nov 2009. Vol. 62, Iss. 11;  pg. 1063
Source type:Periodical
ISSN:01482963
ProQuest document ID:1858572671
Document URL:

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