TY - JOUR
T1 - Re-imagining the country-of-origin effect
T2 - a promulgation approach
AU - Andéhn, Mikael
AU - L’espoir Decosta, Jean Noel Patrick
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2018, Emerald Publishing Limited.
PY - 2018/12/7
Y1 - 2018/12/7
N2 - Purpose: The country-of-origin effect (COO) has, as a research domain, suffered from several theoretical and methodological problems and tendencies including an incomplete conceptualization of its constituent components. The purpose of this study is to first problematize the concept in extant literature and to consequently propose a reconceptualization of the concept. Design/methodology/approach: As part of lateral promulgation, the authors use theoretical and methodological ideas from other disciplines such as psychology, ethnography and geography to problematize the present conceptualization of COO in extant literature to reveal research possibilities relevant to, but underrepresented or absent in, COO research. Findings: This study identifies several central theoretical and methodological problems and reveals that (1) COO is not necessarily linear and alternative modes of engagement with consumption need to be considered; (2) many of these problems can be addressed by alternative methodologies; and (3) COO operates at the level of symbolic orders that require a further engagement with the role of place in human experience. Research/limitations/implications: The findings suggest that in future research, field experiments be considered to resolve some of the methodological artefacts that have hampered past research; qualitative methods be applied to uncover unexpected uses of place association beyond being mere quality proxies; and alternative areas of relevance, such as macro-level trade and exports from emerging economies, be entertained. Originality Value: The study’s approach to problematizing and refining extant knowledge enable it to promulgate new knowledge and research directions for a research area that has historically suffered from a tendency to be self-referential.
AB - Purpose: The country-of-origin effect (COO) has, as a research domain, suffered from several theoretical and methodological problems and tendencies including an incomplete conceptualization of its constituent components. The purpose of this study is to first problematize the concept in extant literature and to consequently propose a reconceptualization of the concept. Design/methodology/approach: As part of lateral promulgation, the authors use theoretical and methodological ideas from other disciplines such as psychology, ethnography and geography to problematize the present conceptualization of COO in extant literature to reveal research possibilities relevant to, but underrepresented or absent in, COO research. Findings: This study identifies several central theoretical and methodological problems and reveals that (1) COO is not necessarily linear and alternative modes of engagement with consumption need to be considered; (2) many of these problems can be addressed by alternative methodologies; and (3) COO operates at the level of symbolic orders that require a further engagement with the role of place in human experience. Research/limitations/implications: The findings suggest that in future research, field experiments be considered to resolve some of the methodological artefacts that have hampered past research; qualitative methods be applied to uncover unexpected uses of place association beyond being mere quality proxies; and alternative areas of relevance, such as macro-level trade and exports from emerging economies, be entertained. Originality Value: The study’s approach to problematizing and refining extant knowledge enable it to promulgate new knowledge and research directions for a research area that has historically suffered from a tendency to be self-referential.
KW - Branding
KW - Country image
KW - Country-of-origin effect
KW - Place mythology
KW - Product geography
KW - Product origin
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85058048299&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1108/JPBM-11-2017-1666
DO - 10.1108/JPBM-11-2017-1666
M3 - Article
SN - 1061-0421
VL - 27
SP - 884
EP - 896
JO - Journal of Product and Brand Management
JF - Journal of Product and Brand Management
IS - 7
ER -