Methodological issues in cross‐cultural marketing research
- 1 October 1996
- journal article
- Published by Emerald Publishing in International Marketing Review
- Vol. 13 (5) , 7-43
- https://doi.org/10.1108/02651339610131379
Abstract
Notes that methodological problems are hampering the growth of cross‐cultural marketing research and presents a review of methodological issues to address these problems. Organizes these issues around a six‐step framework which includes elements such as problem definition, the development of an approach and research design formulation. Notes that the marketing research problem can be defined by comparing the phenomenon or behaviour in separate cultural contexts and eliminating the influence of the self‐reference criterion. Discusses issues in data analysis such as treatment of outliers and standardization of data. Concludes with an interpretation of results and report presentation.Keywords
This publication has 96 references indexed in Scilit:
- Consumer acculturation processes and cultural conflictJournal of Business Research, 1995
- Administration of Questionnaires for Collecting Quantitative Data in International Marketing ResearchJournal of Global Marketing, 1991
- The Perceived Risk-Brand Loyalty Relationship:Journal of Global Marketing, 1990
- Validity and Structural Reliability of Multidimensional ScalingJournal of Marketing Research, 1987
- Analyzing Marketing Research Data with Incomplete Information on the Dependent VariableJournal of Marketing Research, 1987
- An Approach to the Measurement of Consumer Preferences Using Limited InformationJournal of Marketing Research, 1986
- Alternative Questionnaire Formats for Country Image StudiesJournal of Marketing Research, 1984
- The Use of Linear Logit Models in Marketing ResearchJournal of Marketing Research, 1984
- Country-of-Origin Effects on Product EvaluationsJournal of International Business Studies, 1982
- Construct Validity: A Review of Basic Issues and Marketing PracticesJournal of Marketing Research, 1981