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Dive into the research topics where K. Sivakumar is active.

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Featured researches published by K. Sivakumar.


Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science | 2004

Innovation Generation in Supply Chain Relationships: A Conceptual Model and Research Propositions

Subroto Roy; K. Sivakumar; Ian Wilkinson

Innovation generation has increasingly been recognized as an outcome of interaction between a firm and various outside entities. According to this view, supplier involvement and alliances are routes to innovation generation. Despite this realization, there is a dearth of research, both conceptual and empirical, focusing on innovation generation in buyer-seller relationships in supply chains. In an attempt to fill this void, this article develops a conceptual model of innovation generation in buyer-seller relationships in upstream supply chains. The authors propose that innovation generation in supply chain relationships, both incremental and radical, is a consequence of interactions between buyers and sellers. They also delineate factors internal and external to the relationship that moderate the link between interaction and innovation generation. Finally, the authors discuss managerial implications of their research and offer guidelines for future empirical research.


International Marketing Review | 2004

International market entry mode strategies of manufacturing firms and service firms

Ikechi Ekeledo; K. Sivakumar

This research has two major purposes: developing and testing a resource‐based framework for entry mode choice and ascertaining the extent to which the determinants of foreign market entry mode choice in the manufacturing sector apply to foreign market entry mode choice in the non‐separable service sector. Using mail survey data collected from top‐level managers of US firms that had been engaged in international business, the article tests a number of research hypotheses concerning foreign market entry mode choice in the manufacturing and service sectors. The managerial and research implications of the findings are delineated and directions for future research are offered.


Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science | 1998

Foreign Market Entry Mode Choice of Service Firms: A Contingency Perspective

Ikechi Ekeledo; K. Sivakumar

Research on how service firms choose their initial mode of operation in foreign markets appears to have led to two contradictory conclusions. Findings from one group of studies suggest that factors determining entry mode choice by manufacturing firms are generalizable to service firms. Findings from another group of studies contradict that view. The authors reconcile the two views by means of a classification scheme that allows some services to be grouped with manufactured goods in terms of entry mode choice. A conceptual model of factors affecting the entry mode choice of service firms is proposed, research propositions are developed, and managerial implications and future research directions are discussed.


Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science | 2001

Instituting the marketing concept in a multinational setting: The role of national culture

Cheryl Nakata; K. Sivakumar

A growing concern among international marketing managers is how to increase the market orientation and thereby performance of their transnational organizations. This study broaches this issue by investigating how the marketing concept, the heart of the market orientation, may be established in a multinational setting and the effects of national culture on that process. From a wide array of literature, the authors construct a theoretical framework and propositions on how global organizations may transform this philosophy from an abstract platitude to an operational reality. Their findings suggest that the process consists of complex, interdependent steps—interpretation, adoption, and implementation of the marketing concept. Cultural values shape interpretation and facilitate or impede adoption and implementation. The overall framework and findings can be used to guide institutionalization of the marketing concept across the organizational span, in particular by anticipating culture-based reactions from international subsidiaries.


Journal of Marketing | 1997

Quality tier competition: How price change influences brand choice and category choice

K. Sivakumar; S. P. Raj

The authors demonstrate that competition among brands in different quality tiers can be asymmetric both in brand choice (“what”) and in category choice (“whether”). They also investigate how compet...


Journal of Business Research | 2004

Flow and Internet shopping behavior: A conceptual model and research propositions

Donnavieve Smith; K. Sivakumar

Abstract Researchers have acknowledged that flow is a useful construct for explaining consumer behavior in the context of computer-mediated environments. However, the issue of how flow can actually facilitate particular Internet shopping behaviors has not been adequately investigated. This article will explore conditions under which different dimensions of flow facilitate different aspects of Internet shopping behaviors (browsing, one-time purchases, and repeat purchases) and how this relationship is moderated by consumer-related factors (perceived risk, willingness to buy, consumer self-confidence), the nature of the product (goods vs. service), and the nature of the purchase occasion (planned vs. impulse). We offer managerial implications and future research directions resulting from our research.


Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science | 2006

The relationship of learning and memory with organizational performance: The moderating role of turbulence

Sangphet Hanvanich; K. Sivakumar; G. Tomas M. Hult

Extensive research has documented how firms’ learning orientation and memory are related to organizational performance. The objective of this study is to examine the moderating role of turbulence on the relationships between firms’ learning orientation and memory and their organizational performance and innovativeness. The study also provides insight into the differential relationships of firms’ learning orientation and memory to their performance and innovativeness. Using survey data collected from 200 supply management professionals, the results suggest that the extent to which learning and memory are associated with organizational performance is contingent on the level of environmental turbulence. Specifically, under low environmental turbulence, learning orientation and organizational memory appear to be related to performance and innovativeness; however, under high environmental turbulence, only learning orientation is a useful predictor.


Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science | 2005

Globalization, Marketing Resources, and Performance: Evidence from China

Xueming Luo; K. Sivakumar; Sandra S. Liu

Two important areas are underexplored in the relationship between marketing resources and performance. First, the subject has been primarily investigated in the context of Western countries, and inadequate attention has been given to emerging economies. Second, despite the recent growth in globalization, the moderating role of globalization on the link between marketing resources and performance has not been investigated. Addressing these important gaps, this article focuses on an emerging economy (China) and explores the moderating effect of globalization on this link. Specifically, the authors develop several hypotheses highlighting the moderating role of globalization activities (global product sourcing, global market seeking, and global partnership) on the link between marketing resources (market orientation, entrepreneurial orientation, and innovative capability) and firm performance. The findings of the moderating role of globalization provide several important implications for marketing theory development and managerial practice.


International Marketing Review | 1997

Emerging market conditions and their impact on first mover advantages

Cheryl Nakata; K. Sivakumar

Reports that, with sluggish growth in the developed markets of the world and increasing globalization, companies are turning to newly emerging markets for business expansion. Therefore, understanding entry strategies in emerging markets is likely to become an increasingly important issue for academic researchers and marketing practitioners. First movers are generally thought to garner fairly robust advantages over later entrants; however, the degree to which these advantages prevail in emerging markets is not known. Examines, by means of a literature review, the effects of emerging market conditions on first mover advantages. Advances several research propositions, based on the findings, presents a conceptual model, and identifies directions for further research.


Decision Sciences | 2004

A Mathematical Model of Service Failure and Recovery Strategies

Zhen Zhu; K. Sivakumar; A. Parasuraman

Understanding the nature of service failures and their impact on customer responses and designing cost-effective recovery strategies have been recognized as important issues by both service researchers and practitioners. We first propose a conceptual framework of service failure and recovery strategies. We then transform it into a mathematical model to assist managers in deciding on appropriate resource allocations for outcome and process recovery strategies based on customer risk profiles and the firms cost structures. Based on this mathematical model we derive optimal recovery strategies, conduct sensitivity analyses of the optimal solutions for different model parameters, and illustrate them through numerical examples. We conclude with a discussion of managerial implications and directions for future research.

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Cheryl Nakata

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Subroto Roy

University of New Haven

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Donnavieve Smith

Northern Illinois University

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Ikechi Ekeledo

Northeastern Illinois University

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Prashant Malaviya

University of Illinois at Chicago

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