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Featured researches published by Peter Mathias Fischer.


Global Fashion Management Conference | 2018

“A DANGER FORESEEN IS A DANGER AVOIDED.”: HOW THE SOURCE OF AN IDEA INFLUENCES MANAGERS’ EVALUATION BEHAVIOR IN OPEN INNOVATION

Laura Braun; Peter Mathias Fischer; Sven Reinecke

The present research deals with the influence of managers’ construal level and anticipatory regret behavior on evaluations of customers’ and employees’ ideas in innovation contexts. While prior research focused on positive outcomes of open innovation, we provide theory and evidence to suggest that managers’ avoidance behavior in idea evaluation processes can result in negative side effects for the assessment of employees’ ideas. We conducted an experiment with 113 managers to reveal that top managers tend to higher creativity ratings of ideas from customers in comparison to identical ideas from employees. Lower level managers showed no difference in their creativity evaluations, but differentiated their feasibility rating in favor for customers’ ideas, whereas top managers did not. Our findings contribute to existing managerial decision making research and provide initial evidence on negative outcomes of open innovation for managers’ evaluation of employees’ ideas.


Bridging Asia and the World: Globalization of Marketing & Management Theory and Practice. | 2014

The Role of Product Ethnicity in Home Country Bias

Peter Mathias Fischer; Katharina Zeugner-Roth

Research on country-of-origin (COO) effects, or the impact that stereotyped perceptions about nations have on product evaluations and purchase intentions (Nebenzahl, Jaffe, and Lampert 1997), has been heralded as one of the most widely researched topics in international marketing. Whereas the vast majority of studies focused on the general image of a country that triggers the COO effect (Roth and Diamantopoulos 2009; Usunier and Cestre 2007), in light of recent criticisms (e.g., Samiee 2010; 2011; Usunier 2006; 2011), latest literature takes on a narrower perspective by arguing that a company can primarily benefit from the COO effect if consumers believe that the country is a prototypical origin of products in that category (e.g., Switzerland for watches, France for fashion, Germany for engineering). This concept is also referred to as product ethnicity, or the extent of product-country matches (Roth and Romeo 1992; Tseng and Balabanis 2011; Usunier and Cestre 2007). Apart from country characteristics, recent research suggests to consider consumer characteristics at the same time (Josiassen 2011; Riefler, Diamantopoulos, and Siguaw 2012). Indeed, some scholars even argue that COO only matters for certain consumer segments such as ethnocentric consumers (Samiee 2010; 2011). For ethnocentric consumers, knowing the origin of the products they purchase is important because not buying domestic is considered as inappropriate because it causes harm to the domestic economy (Shimp and Sharma 1987). This research aims to clarify how product ethnicity as a form of typicality influences and interacts with consumer ethnocentrism on preferences for domestic products. A controlled experiment with data drawn from a representative US household panel indicates that COO does matter, but, as expected, is contingent on both product typicality and consumer ethnocentrism. Based on realistic choices among several rental car options with varying degrees of typicality, we find that product typicality moderates the impact of consumer ethnocentrism on preferences towards domestic such that domestic country bias will be particularly strong when foreign products have a higher typicality. Furthermore, consumers prefer foreign products with a high typicality over foreign products with a low typicality if they are not ethnocentric. While such behaviour is rational, consumer ethnocentrism eventually neutralizes and even reverses the influence of foreign typicality on consumers’ preferences in that highly ethnocentric consumers rather choose foreign products of lower typicality than foreign products of higher typicality. The main contribution of our paper is three-fold. On the theoretical front, our paper extends research on home country bias and product ethnicity by offering insights related to the boundary conditions of COO effects, in light of special consumer segments such as ethnocentric consumers. On the methodological front, we offer an innovative way of analyzing COO effects that can overcome many criticisms raised on extant COO research. We thus offer a solution to Samiee’s (2009) call for more research using ecologically appropriate designs when analyzing COO effects. Finally, our paper has clear managerial implications. More concretely, our findings imply that also firms originating from countries with a favorable origin have to be careful when actively marketing their origin abroad, as they might be rejected by certain consumer segments.


Marketing Letters | 2017

Disentangling Country-of-Origin Effects: The Interplay of Product Ethnicity, National Identity, and Consumer Ethnocentrism

Peter Mathias Fischer; Katharina Zeugner-Roth


WiSt - Wirtschaftswissenschaftliches Studium | 2009

Die van Westendorp-Methode: Ein zu Unrecht vernachlässigtes Verfahren zur Ermittlung der Zahlungsbereitschaft?

Sven Reinecke; Silke Mühlmeier; Peter Mathias Fischer


Marketing Review St. Gallen | 2009

Swiss made vs. Made in Germany — Kaufentscheidung nach Herkunftsland

Sven Reinecke; Stephan Feige; Peter Mathias Fischer


Archive | 2008

Swissness Worldwide 2013 : Internationale Studie zur Wahrnehmung der Marke Schweiz

Stephan Feige; Benita Brockdorff; Karsten Sausen; Peter Mathias Fischer; Urs Jaermann; Sven Reinecke


Archive | 2016

Too Much of a Good Thing? How Big Data Changes Managerial Decision Making in Marketing

Christoph Wortmann; Peter Mathias Fischer; Sven Reinecke


Archive | 2013

Sponsoring-Controlling: Empirische Ergebnisse offenbaren Defizite

Robert Hohenauer; Peter Mathias Fischer; Sven Reinecke


Controlling & Management | 2008

Aktuelle Herausforderungen für das Preiscontrolling

Sven Reinecke; Peter Mathias Fischer; Silke Mühlmeier


Archive | 2018

Managerial Decision Making in OpenInnovation: The Effect of IndividualHierarchy Level on the Evaluation ofCustomers’ and Employees’ Ideas

Laura Braun; Peter Mathias Fischer; Sven Reinecke

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Sven Reinecke

University of St. Gallen

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Walter Herzog

University of St. Gallen

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Karsten Sausen

University of St. Gallen

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