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Dive into the research topics where Anne Stringfellow is active.

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Featured researches published by Anne Stringfellow.


Journal of Product Innovation Management | 2003

Antecedents and Consequences of Goal Incongruity on New Product Development in Five Countries: A Marketing View

Jinhong Xie; Michael Song; Anne Stringfellow

This article examines an important challenge to effective cross-functional integration: goal incongruity among marketing, research and development (RD and (2) factors that facilitate the formation of such goals. We give special attention to the effect of national culture on the formation of common goals. Data collected from marketing managers in 1,083 firms in five culturally distinct areas—-the United States, Great Britain, Japan, Hong Kong (a special administrative region of China), and mainland China—are used to test the hypothesized relationships. Our results underscore the importance of people-side issues, and of national culture, in cross-functional integration. Perceived goal incongruity among marketing, R&D, and manufacturing impairs all three components of cross-functional integration. In United States and British firms, goal incongruity generally is attributed to motivational factors and in Japan and Hong Kong to facilitative factors. Finally, our results show that the two types of managerially controllable variables interact. For example, joint rewards and job rotation strengthen each others tendency to reduce goal incongruity in all five samples. This suggests that job rotation promotes the development of joint goals more effectively when it is accompanied by a joint reward system.


Journal of International Marketing | 2010

Cross-Cultural Differences in the Effect of Received Word-of-Mouth Referral in Relational Service Exchange

Jan H. Schumann; Florian v. Wangenheim; Anne Stringfellow; Zhilin Yang; Vera Blazevic; Sandra Praxmarer; G. Shainesh; Marcin Komor; Randall Shannon; F. Jimenez

Because of suggested beneficial effects of word-of-mouth (WOM) referral, service companies have invested large amounts of money in customer referral programs as well as programs aimed at fostering positive communication among their existing customers. The question of cross-cultural differences in the effectiveness of WOM has recently gained increased prominence. The authors contribute to research on this topic by proposing a positive effect of received WOM on service quality perceptions among existing customers. Moreover, they predict that cultural values moderate this effect. They test the model on 1910 bank customers in 11 countries. The results show that received WOM has a positive effect on customer service quality perceptions. Furthermore, received WOM has a stronger effect on the evaluation of customers in high-uncertainty-avoidance than in low-uncertainty-avoidance cultures. No other cultural value is a significant moderator. The results imply that received WOM is also important to existing customers and that managers should adjust their strategy of referral marketing to match their target groups uncertainty-avoidance level.


Journal of Service Research | 2010

Drivers of Trust in Relational Service Exchange: Understanding the Importance of Cross-Cultural Differences

Jan H. Schumann; Florian v. Wangenheim; Anne Stringfellow; Zhilin Yang; Sandra Praxmarer; F. Jimenez; Vera Blazevic; Randall Shannon; G. Shainesh; Marcin Komor

Customer trust is of vital importance for relationship marketing in services. Service providers increasingly market their services globally, yet few researchers have addressed differences in customer trust across cultures. Our research fills this void by proposing a model, based on existing trust literature, that suggests the overall feeling of trust in the service provider depends on customers’ beliefs about service providers’ ability, benevolence, predictability, and integrity. The model, tested in a banking context with data from 2,284 customers in 11 countries, explains trust well across culturally diverse countries. The results of a hierarchical linear model, however, show that customers differ in the way they build trust in their service provider across cultures. Moderating effects of the cultural values of the target group largely explain this variation. Only the effect of ability on trust is robust across countries. Global service firms should consider all four trust drivers when striving to build trust. The emphasis they put on each of these trust drivers, however, should differ across countries. When applying these principles to the design of marketing activities or market segmentation, marketing managers should collect data on the cultural values of their specific target groups in particular countries or cultural milieus.


Journal of Operations Management | 2008

Invisible costs in offshoring services work

Anne Stringfellow; Mary B. Teagarden; Winter Nie


Management Science | 1998

Interfunctional conflict, conflict resolution styles, and new product success: a four-culture comparison

Jinhong Xie; X. Michael Song; Anne Stringfellow


Journal of Retailing | 2004

Managing conflict to improve the effectiveness of retail networks

Kevin D. Bradford; Anne Stringfellow; Barton A. Weitz


Journal of Operations Management | 2005

The service volunteer – loyalty chain: an exploratory study of charitable not-for-profit service organizations

Priscilla S. Wisner; Anne Stringfellow; William E. Youngdahl; Lenore Parker


Business Horizons | 2004

CRM: Profiting from understanding customer needs

Anne Stringfellow; Winter Nie; David E. Bowen


Journal of Product Innovation Management | 2012

New venture performance in China, Japan, and the United States: The impact of formalized market information processes

Tomoko Kawakami; Douglas L. MacLachlan; Anne Stringfellow


Journal of Customer Behaviour | 2009

Mass-customised products. Are they bought for uniqueness or to overcome problems with standard products?

Stefan Michel; Michael Kreuzer; Richard Kühn; Anne Stringfellow; Jan H. Schumann

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Zhilin Yang

City University of Hong Kong

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G. Shainesh

Indian Institute of Management Bangalore

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Jinhong Xie

University of Washington

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Winter Nie

Arizona State University

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