TITEL
Industrial marketing communication: a (r)evolutionary journey from marketplace to marketspace
FöRFATTARE
Foster, Tim
INSTITUTION
Industriell ekonomi och samhällsvetenskap / Industriell marknadsföring och e-handel
SAMMANFATTNING
This thesis looks back over a ca 10-year period, 1994 – 2005, on the use of
marketing communication tools in industrial markets. The year 1994 is
significant in two ways: First, it was the year I was hired as a doctoral
student at Luleå University of Technology in Sweden. The year is also
significant as it is around this time (1994-95) that the Internet became
commercialized and openly available for use beyond simple, point-and-click
information retrieval. This decade-long journey was broken into two parts:
The first part explored the entire industrial marketing communication
toolbox, where both personal and non-personal tools, as well as the emerging
Internet were used for industrial sellers to provide information, as compared
to what industrial buyers were using to obtain information. The second part
looked at the Internet as a marketing communication tool onto itself.
The first part of the study (1994 – 1998), resulted in a Licentiate thesis
entitled "Industrial Marketing Communication: An Empirical Investigation on
the Use of Marketing Communication Tools" (Foster, 1998). It is provided
here synoptically as Study A. In Study A, industrial sellers and buyers were
investigated as to how they utilized all of the marketing communication tools
within the industrial marketing communication toolbox. It was found that
there was still a heavy reliance on personal, non-commercial forms of
marketing communication, primarily personal selling. The non-personal forms
of marketing communication, or the "tools" within the compartments of
advertising, sales promotion, public relations, and direct marketing, were
also utilized, but not in the same way or to the same degree. The Internet
was seen neither as a purely personal nor as only a non-personal form of
communication, so it was given its own "compartment" in the toolbox, as
highlighted in Study A’s conceptual framework as an additional (new)
"industrial cyber space" (or area) within the toolbox. Although being
utilized at the time by industrial sellers and buyers, primarily via tools
such as websites and to a certain degree e-mail, the Internet was considered
a little-used but potentially valuable "marketing communication tool of the
future." It was this finding that became the foundation and the invitation to
investigate the Internet as a marketing communication tool onto itself in
"the future." This became the focus of the next phase of the study.
The second part of this study picked up where the first part left off and
took place during the years 1999 – 2005. It started with looking at the
literature on the use of the Internet in industrial (B2B) markets, and more
specifically at the use of websites as industrial marketing communication
tools. This in turn became the foundation for Study B in this doctoral
thesis, "The Internet as an Industrial Marketing Communication Tool." For
various reasons, chief among them the flexibility with investigating the area
at a time when so much was changing and at such a rapid pace, an article
format was chosen over continuing on with the monograph format used in
presenting Study A. Around this time Jones (1999) explained that not only
should the Internet continue to be a focus of our respective scholarly
research efforts, but it should also be used as a tool to conduct that
research. From this, it became of interest to focus Study B on these two
areas: The Internet as a focus of my research (i.e. the AREA focusing on its
use as an industrial marketing communication tool), as well as a tool used in
conducting the research itself (i.e. the APPROACH to the research).
Therefore, the first two articles in Study B look empirically at the use of
the Internet as a marketing communication tool in an industrial setting. The
third article focuses on how the Internet was used as a tool in conducting
this research. The fourth article looks back longitudinally over the entire
10-year period, from Study A through Study B, discussing the findings from
both the area of research as well as the approach.
Overall, it was found that this research area focusing on the use of
industrial marketing communication tools is actually becoming revolutionized
in terms of how industrial sellers and buyers, and potentially other
stakeholders in the industrial value chain, communicate and interact with one
another. More specifically, technology seems to be affecting these
relationships in new and exciting ways. It is suggested that what this
10-year journey has produced is the idea that we are in the midst of a
"perfect storm" of revolutions within industrial marketing communication
research, where both the respective focus of our research as well as the ways
in which we go about doing it are caught up and mixed together within areas
that will inspire us to continue to do more research, if we can keep up.
ISSN 1402-1544 / ISRN LTU-DT--06/56--SE / NR 2006:56
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