An Empirical Study on the Rating of Import Sources of Industrial Products

This study looks at the purchasing of imported industrial products among managers in a newly industrializing country (NIC). The authors propose that the industrial marketing requirements to buyers in an NIC, given their mix of environmental and organizational conditions, are different from those in...

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Main Authors: CHANG, Dae Ryun, Kim, Ik-Tae
Format: text
Language:English
Published: Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University 1995
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Online Access:https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/lkcsb_research/2927
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spelling sg-smu-ink.lkcsb_research-39262010-10-18T02:36:04Z An Empirical Study on the Rating of Import Sources of Industrial Products CHANG, Dae Ryun Kim, Ik-Tae This study looks at the purchasing of imported industrial products among managers in a newly industrializing country (NIC). The authors propose that the industrial marketing requirements to buyers in an NIC, given their mix of environmental and organizational conditions, are different from those in advanced nations. South Korea, in addition to being a representative NIC, is interesting from the standpoint that there is a heavy import dependence on Japan. The results of a survey of South Korean companies importing industrial products in key representative industries suggest that the strong ratings for Japanese industrial products are based not only on stronger overall quality, but also on their higher orientation toward intangible factors such as communication, technical assistance, and reliability. Moreover, many of the Japanese sources have “localized” their product to compete with the domestic suppliers as well. These results suggest that in order to improve their performance, other foreign suppliers must compete on dual fronts; a product-related dimension as well as a more service-related dimension. Other possible avenues for improvement can be found by examining differences in supplier ratings based on organizational and situational influences. This study shows that buyers in smaller and newer companies tend to be more open to non-Japanese products. The findings also suggest that certain technology-transfer modes may be more conducive to generating better supplier ratings. Overall, the variability of country ratings across situational factors strongly indicates that more conceptualization and theory building is needed in the international industrial marketing area 1995-01-01T08:00:00Z text https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/lkcsb_research/2927 info:doi/10.1016/0148-2963(94)00007-2 Research Collection Lee Kong Chian School Of Business eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University International Business
institution Singapore Management University
building SMU Libraries
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider SMU Libraries
collection InK@SMU
language English
topic International Business
spellingShingle International Business
CHANG, Dae Ryun
Kim, Ik-Tae
An Empirical Study on the Rating of Import Sources of Industrial Products
description This study looks at the purchasing of imported industrial products among managers in a newly industrializing country (NIC). The authors propose that the industrial marketing requirements to buyers in an NIC, given their mix of environmental and organizational conditions, are different from those in advanced nations. South Korea, in addition to being a representative NIC, is interesting from the standpoint that there is a heavy import dependence on Japan. The results of a survey of South Korean companies importing industrial products in key representative industries suggest that the strong ratings for Japanese industrial products are based not only on stronger overall quality, but also on their higher orientation toward intangible factors such as communication, technical assistance, and reliability. Moreover, many of the Japanese sources have “localized” their product to compete with the domestic suppliers as well. These results suggest that in order to improve their performance, other foreign suppliers must compete on dual fronts; a product-related dimension as well as a more service-related dimension. Other possible avenues for improvement can be found by examining differences in supplier ratings based on organizational and situational influences. This study shows that buyers in smaller and newer companies tend to be more open to non-Japanese products. The findings also suggest that certain technology-transfer modes may be more conducive to generating better supplier ratings. Overall, the variability of country ratings across situational factors strongly indicates that more conceptualization and theory building is needed in the international industrial marketing area
format text
author CHANG, Dae Ryun
Kim, Ik-Tae
author_facet CHANG, Dae Ryun
Kim, Ik-Tae
author_sort CHANG, Dae Ryun
title An Empirical Study on the Rating of Import Sources of Industrial Products
title_short An Empirical Study on the Rating of Import Sources of Industrial Products
title_full An Empirical Study on the Rating of Import Sources of Industrial Products
title_fullStr An Empirical Study on the Rating of Import Sources of Industrial Products
title_full_unstemmed An Empirical Study on the Rating of Import Sources of Industrial Products
title_sort empirical study on the rating of import sources of industrial products
publisher Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University
publishDate 1995
url https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/lkcsb_research/2927
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