Transfer of Marketing Knowledge Within Business-Nonprofit Collaborations

被引:12
|
作者
Bennett, Roger [1 ]
Mousley, Wendy [2 ,3 ]
Ali-Choudhury, Rehnuma [4 ,5 ]
机构
[1] London Metropolitan Univ, Mkt, London, England
[2] London Metropolitan Univ, Dept Business, London, England
[3] London Metropolitan Univ, Serv Sector Management, London, England
[4] London Metropolitan Univ, Dept Business, Mkt, London, England
[5] London Metropolitan Univ, Serv Sector Management, Mkt, London, England
关键词
Marketing knowledge; technology transfer; knowhow; business-nonprofit collaborations; cause-related marketing;
D O I
10.1080/10495140802165352
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
Companies often develop collaborative joint ventures with nonprofits, and sometimes help their nonprofit partners with the marketing activities associated with these projects. Often, the assistance furnished is embodied in a transfer of knowledge from a firm to a nonprofit and involves knowledge about marketing techniques, strategies and methods. This article presents the results of a survey concerning the extents, natures and effectiveness of marketing knowledge transfers taking place between 291 UK enterprises and their nonprofit partner organisations. The survey covered the knowledge transfer methods that companies employed, the scope of the knowledge communicated, the factors that encouraged or impeded marketing knowledge transfer, and the considerations that determined which partner completed most of the marketing tasks associated with a project. It emerged that knowledge transfers occurred mainly through face-to-face communications, though with little formal teamworking. Both the extent and the effectiveness of transfers depended on the degree of marketing knowledge within the nonprofit partner, on levels of knowledge specificity and project complexity, and on the financial importance of the collaboration. The extent of knowledge transfer was additionally influenced by cultural and organisational distance. Similar considerations affected commercial partners' decisions to do most of the marketing work required by a collaboration. Such decisions were especially likely if anti-marketing bias existed within the nonprofit organisation and if the nonprofit's staff knew little about marketing.
引用
收藏
页码:37 / 70
页数:34
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