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Dive into the research topics where Tom J. Brown is active.

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Featured researches published by Tom J. Brown.


Journal of Marketing | 1997

The Company and the Product: Corporate Associations and Consumer Product Responses

Tom J. Brown; Peter A. Dacin

Although brand theorists suggest that what a person knows about a company (i.e., corporate associations) can influence perceptions of the companys products, little systematic research on these eff...


Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science | 2005

Spreading the word: Investigating antecedents of consumers’ positive word-of-mouth intentions and behaviors in a retailing context

Tom J. Brown; Thomas E. Barry; Peter A. Dacin; Richard F. Gunst

Empirical studies investigating the antecedents of positive word of mouth (WOM) typically focus on the direct effects of consumers’ satisfaction and dissatisfaction with previous purchasing experiences. The authors develop and test a more comprehensive model of the antecedents of positive. WOM (both intentions and behaviors), including consumer identification and commitment. Specifically, they hypothesize and test commitment as a mediator and moderator of satisfaction on positive WOM and commitment as a mediator of identification on WOM. Using data obtained from customers of a retailer offering both products and services, they find support for all hypothesized relationships with WOM intentions and/or WOM behaviors as the dependent variable. The authors conclude with a discussion of their findings and implications for both marketing theory and practice.


Journal of Marketing | 2004

Internal Benefits of Service-Worker Customer Orientation: Job Satisfaction, Commitment, and Organizational Citizenship Behaviors

D. Todd Donavan; Tom J. Brown; John C. Mowen

Implementation of the marketing concept in service firms is accomplished through individual service employees and their interactions with customers. Although prior research has established a link between service-worker customer orientation and performance outcomes, little research has addressed other potentially important outcomes of customer orientation. Drawing from the literature on person–situation interaction and fit theory, the authors develop and test a model that explains how service-worker customer orientation affects several important job responses, including perceived job fit, job satisfaction, commitment to the firm, and organizational citizenship behaviors. Across three field studies in two distinct services industries, the results indicate that the positive influence of customer orientation on certain job responses is stronger for service workers who spend more time in direct contact with customers than for workers who spend less time with customers. The authors discuss the implications of the results for services marketing managers and researchers.


Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science | 2006

Identity, Intended Image, Construed Image, and Reputation: An Interdisciplinary Framework and Suggested Terminology

Tom J. Brown; Peter A. Dacin; Michael G. Pratt; David A. Whetten

Many scholars across various academic disciplines are investigating the following questions: What do individuals know or believe about an organization? How does a focal organization (and/or other interested entity) develop, use, and/or change this information? and How do individuals respond to what they know or believe about an organization? Cross-disciplinary research that centers on these questions is desirable and could be enhanced if researchers identify and develop consistent terminology for framing these questions. The authors work toward that end by identifying four central ‘viewpoints’ of an organization and proposing labels to represent each of these viewpoints:identity, intended image, construed image, andreputation.


Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science | 2005

Re-examining salesperson goal orientations: Personality influencers, customer orientation, and work satisfaction

Eric G. Harris; John C. Mowen; Tom J. Brown

Several scholars have noted the importance of relationship marketing and the critical role that salesperson knowledge plays in the formation of buyer-seller relationships. However, research on salesperson learning motivations has been relatively scarce compared with research on firm-level learning orientations. One promising stream of research in this area is salesperson goal orientation. Drawing from previous work in control theory, the authors extend previous research in this area by proposing relationships between personality influencers, goal orientations, customer/selling orientation, and overall work satisfaction. Their hypotheses are tested using data obtained from a sample of 190 real estate agents. The results provide support for their hypothesized model. Specifically, learning orientation is shown to positively influence customer orientation, while performance orientation is shown to positively influence selling orientation.


Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science | 2003

On the Trait Antecedents and Outcomes of Service Worker Job Resourcefulness: A Hierarchical Model Approach

Jane W. Licata; John C. Mowen; Eric G. Harris; Tom J. Brown

In a series of three studies, a four-level hierarchical model of personality was employed to identify the antecedents and three validating criteria of a newly developed trait labeledjob resourcefulness (JR). JR is defined as an enduring disposition to garner scarce resources and overcome obstacles in pursuit of job-related goals. Across three service contexts, JR was shown to predict customer orientation, self-rated performance, and supervisor-rated performance. The results also revealed that the hierarchical model accounted for more variance in performance ratings than one version of the 5-Factor Model of personality. Results are discussed in terms of their implications for selecting high-performing service employees.


Journal of Personal Selling and Sales Management | 2009

Leadership propensity and sales performance among sales personnel and managers in a speciality retail store setting

Karen E. Flaherty; John C. Mowen; Tom J. Brown; Gregory Marshall

We propose that specialty store managers, as well as outside sales personnel attached to the store, have selling responsibilities. In addition, we propose that sales personnel, as well as store managers, should have a propensity for leadership, which reflects an individual’s enduring disposition to exhibit leadership within the context of his or her organizational roles. In two studies, we develop a new individual difference measure of propensity to lead and investigate its nomological validity within a specialty retail store environment. As predicted, leadership propensity was predictive of self-rated sales performance and a proclivity to identify prospects through cold calls to close sales, to reveal customer orientation, and to exhibit organizational citizenship behavior. We found that propensity to lead did not differ between salespeople and retail store managers, but we found that the respondent’s role moderated the relationship between propensity to lead and supervisor performance ratings. Study limitations and managerial implications of this heretofore unidentified trait of salespeople are discussed.


Journal of Business Research | 2008

Social versus psychological brand community: The role of psychological sense of brand community

Brad D. Carlson; Tracy A. Suter; Tom J. Brown


Journal of Marketing | 2012

How and When Does Customer Orientation Influence Frontline Employee Job Outcomes? A Meta-Analytic Evaluation

Alex R. Zablah; George R. Franke; Tom J. Brown; Darrell E. Bartholomew


Journal of Applied Psychology | 2009

Employee Customer Orientation in Context: How the Environment Moderates the Influence of Customer Orientation on Performance Outcomes

Jerry W. Grizzle; Alex R. Zablah; Tom J. Brown; John C. Mowen; James M. Lee

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Cees van Riel

Erasmus University Rotterdam

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Mignon van Halderen

Erasmus University Rotterdam

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Eric G. Harris

Pittsburg State University

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Guido Berens

Erasmus University Rotterdam

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Mamta Bhatt

Erasmus University Rotterdam

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Alex R. Zablah

Oklahoma State University–Stillwater

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Jin Ho Jung

College of Business Administration

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Andrew B. Artis

University of South Florida

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