Managerial biases and their differential impacts on marketing behaviour under different situations : a study using strategy simulation data.

Research generally assumes that human biases produce a uniform (usually negative) effect on managerial behaviour regardless of the circumstances. However, it is possible that biases have different degrees and directions of effects under different circumstances. Knowing the differential impacts of bi...

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Main Authors: Goh, May San., Le, Thi Lan Huong., Zhuo, Jiepeng.
Other Authors: Lim, Lewis Kui Suen
Format: Final Year Project
Published: 2008
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/9110
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-91102023-05-19T05:45:00Z Managerial biases and their differential impacts on marketing behaviour under different situations : a study using strategy simulation data. Goh, May San. Le, Thi Lan Huong. Zhuo, Jiepeng. Lim, Lewis Kui Suen Nanyang Business School DRNTU::Business::Marketing Research generally assumes that human biases produce a uniform (usually negative) effect on managerial behaviour regardless of the circumstances. However, it is possible that biases have different degrees and directions of effects under different circumstances. Knowing the differential impacts of biases in different situations is important because managers need to recognize their own biased tendencies and better predict the behaviours of their competitors who operate in either similar or different situations. Therefore, we undertake this study to examine the effects of biases on managers’ marketing behaviours under different circumstances. Specifically, we investigate five major biases (namely, Wrong Shoe, Sales Volume Illusion, Price Cutting Momentum, Magnified Expectation of Loss, and Risk Aversion) and three marketing behaviours (namely, Market Aggressiveness, Price Reactivity, and Firm Innovation) in four different situations - high and low revenue market conditions as well as market leader and market follower positions. We obtained behavioural and survey data from CESIM, a strategy simulation game, to test the various effects. Our findings show different directions of relationships between biases and behaviours across the different conditions. Interestingly, the results also suggest a significantly positive relationship, instead of a commonly believed negative relationship between certain firms’ behaviours and some biases. We draw implications of these findings for managerial practice. 2008-09-24T07:28:42Z 2008-09-24T07:28:42Z 2008 2008 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/9110 Nanyang Technological University application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
topic DRNTU::Business::Marketing
spellingShingle DRNTU::Business::Marketing
Goh, May San.
Le, Thi Lan Huong.
Zhuo, Jiepeng.
Managerial biases and their differential impacts on marketing behaviour under different situations : a study using strategy simulation data.
description Research generally assumes that human biases produce a uniform (usually negative) effect on managerial behaviour regardless of the circumstances. However, it is possible that biases have different degrees and directions of effects under different circumstances. Knowing the differential impacts of biases in different situations is important because managers need to recognize their own biased tendencies and better predict the behaviours of their competitors who operate in either similar or different situations. Therefore, we undertake this study to examine the effects of biases on managers’ marketing behaviours under different circumstances. Specifically, we investigate five major biases (namely, Wrong Shoe, Sales Volume Illusion, Price Cutting Momentum, Magnified Expectation of Loss, and Risk Aversion) and three marketing behaviours (namely, Market Aggressiveness, Price Reactivity, and Firm Innovation) in four different situations - high and low revenue market conditions as well as market leader and market follower positions. We obtained behavioural and survey data from CESIM, a strategy simulation game, to test the various effects. Our findings show different directions of relationships between biases and behaviours across the different conditions. Interestingly, the results also suggest a significantly positive relationship, instead of a commonly believed negative relationship between certain firms’ behaviours and some biases. We draw implications of these findings for managerial practice.
author2 Lim, Lewis Kui Suen
author_facet Lim, Lewis Kui Suen
Goh, May San.
Le, Thi Lan Huong.
Zhuo, Jiepeng.
format Final Year Project
author Goh, May San.
Le, Thi Lan Huong.
Zhuo, Jiepeng.
author_sort Goh, May San.
title Managerial biases and their differential impacts on marketing behaviour under different situations : a study using strategy simulation data.
title_short Managerial biases and their differential impacts on marketing behaviour under different situations : a study using strategy simulation data.
title_full Managerial biases and their differential impacts on marketing behaviour under different situations : a study using strategy simulation data.
title_fullStr Managerial biases and their differential impacts on marketing behaviour under different situations : a study using strategy simulation data.
title_full_unstemmed Managerial biases and their differential impacts on marketing behaviour under different situations : a study using strategy simulation data.
title_sort managerial biases and their differential impacts on marketing behaviour under different situations : a study using strategy simulation data.
publishDate 2008
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/9110
_version_ 1770567199334858752