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Is diffusion of marketing competence necessary for a market orientation? A comparative investigation of marketing managers and their defining traits

James M Loveland (Marketing Department, Xavier University, Cincinatti, Ohio, United States)
Scott A Thompson (Department of Marketing, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia, United States)
John W Lounsbury (Department of Psychology, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Tennessee, United States)
Danilo Dantas (Service de l'Enseignement de Marketing, HEC Montreal, Montreal, Canada)

Marketing Intelligence & Planning

ISSN: 0263-4503

Article publication date: 5 May 2015

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Abstract

Purpose

Increasingly, scholars and analysts are urging firms to transition from a model in which marketing is a discrete function to a diffused approach in which marketing is everyone’s job. Prior research has examined differences in firm level performance. However, this firm level focus has overlooked what effects this transition might have on the managers who perform the marketing role. The purpose of this paper is to investigate manager level consequences of transitioning between these approaches by evaluating differences in person-environment (P-E) fit between marketers and non-marketers.

Design/methodology/approach

The authors identify core marketing functions and relevant personality traits of marketing managers, based on the marketing literature. The authors then compare personality and career satisfaction data from 465 marketing managers against a larger, general employment sample of 3,100 employees. Finally, the authors examine the relationship of career satisfaction to each of these traits and investigate how these relationships differ across the two groups.

Findings

The authors find important differences between marketers and non-marketers. Most importantly, the authors found that the relationships between personality and career satisfaction were significantly different for traits suggested by the research literature as important to the marketing function. In particular, customer orientation, visionary leadership, optimism, and assertiveness were all associated with higher career satisfaction for the marketing sample than for the general sample.

Originality/value

This paper is among the first to examine manager level differences relevant to transitioning between firm level marketing approaches. For firms considering adopting the “everyone is a marketer” diffused approach, the findings reveal pitfalls that can lead to reduced career satisfaction, reduced manager performance, and increased turnover. As a result, the performance of firms that have already adopted a diffused approach may be misleading for those firms who have not. At a minimum, firms contemplating a transition to a diffused approach should conduct an assessment of P-E fit similar to that illustrated in this paper to assess the potential risks.

Keywords

Citation

Loveland, J.M., Thompson, S.A., Lounsbury, J.W. and Dantas, D. (2015), "Is diffusion of marketing competence necessary for a market orientation? A comparative investigation of marketing managers and their defining traits", Marketing Intelligence & Planning, Vol. 33 No. 3, pp. 469-484. https://doi.org/10.1108/MIP-10-2013-0168

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2015, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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