Seeks to identify the dimensions which are relevant in the shaping of strategies for international marketing; it thereby addresses business managers. Considers the extent to which the marketing mix can be standardized in various different configurations of international marketing. Presents seven postulations about international (and global) marketing and about the standardizability of the marketing mix; as regards the latter, it points to the vast differences in international standardizability between the various product (or service) categories. Offers a hypothesis about the reason for the huge differences in the internationalizability of products, labelled the “duration of usage” symptom. Ends by pointing out that occasionally there is scope for a “cross‐cultural leap” for products with unpromising antecedents within the hypothesis of the duration of usage symptom.
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1 February 2000
Review Article|
February 01 2000
Culture‐sensitive adaptation or global standardization – the duration‐of‐usage hypothesis Available to Purchase
Martin van Mesdag
Martin van Mesdag
Halliday Associates, Essex, UK
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 1758-6763
Print ISSN: 0265-1335
© MCB UP Limited
2000
International Marketing Review (2000) 17 (1): 74–84.
Citation
van Mesdag M (2000), "Culture‐sensitive adaptation or global standardization – the duration‐of‐usage hypothesis". International Marketing Review, Vol. 17 No. 1 pp. 74–84, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/02651330010314722
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