Skip to main content
Research Interests:
Research Interests:
Research Interests:
Research Interests:
Download (.pdf)
Research Interests:
Download (.pdf)
Download (.pdf)
Both health care practice and academe recognize that organizations should modify their business practices to adopt cocreative behaviors and a service-dominant orientation. However, research has provided little understanding of the... more
Both health care practice and academe recognize that organizations should modify their business practices to adopt cocreative behaviors and a service-dominant orientation. However, research has provided little understanding of the organizational culture that supports and facilitates cocreation. Contemporary organizational culture models are constrained from explaining cocreation, as they differentiate between an internal and external focus and do not acknowledge the interconnectedness of all actors across traditional organizational boundaries. This research conceptualizes organizational culture from a service-dominant perspective and provides a framework for a cocreation culture type. It utilizes two case studies in the health care industry, inclusive of 10 in-depth interviews and six focus groups, to conduct a systematic inductive approach to concept development. The findings reveal that a cocreation culture comprises five core cocreation behaviors: coproduction, codevelopment, coadvocacy, colearning, and cogovernance. Additionally, a series of supportive cocreation behaviors stimulate the interactive nature of cocreation: dialogue, shared market intelligence, mutual capability development, and shared decision-making. These behaviors are underpinned by organizational values of mutual respect, empowerment, and mutual trust. Health care practitioners are encouraged to create opportunities for customers to participate in cocreation activities related to their own treatment plans, ongoing strategic planning, and promotion and governance of the organization.
Research Interests:
Download (.pdf)
Research Interests:
Download (.pdf)
Research Interests:
Download (.pdf)
Research Interests:
Download (.pdf)
Download (.pdf)
Reputation is critical for institutions wishing to attract and retain students in today's competitive higher education setting. Drawing on the resource based view and configuration theory, this research proposes that Higher Education... more
Reputation is critical for institutions wishing to attract and retain students in today's competitive higher education setting. Drawing on the resource based view and configuration theory, this research proposes that Higher Education Institutions (HEIs) need to understand not only the impact of independent resources but of resource configurations when seeking to achieve a strong, positive reputation. Utilizing fuzzy set qualitative comparative analysis (fsQCA), the paper provides insight into different configurations of resources that HEIs can utilize to build their reputation within their domestic and international student cohorts. Specifically, the results of a survey of current students at an Australian university distinguish nine diverse resource configurations leading to HEI reputation for domestic students. Reputation in the international cohort, on the other hand, is associated with six configurations, centered around learning support and campus life. Theoretical and managerial implications for HEIs are provided leading to directions for future research.
Download (.pdf)
Download (.pdf)
Download (.pdf)
Download (.pdf)
Download (.pdf)
Download (.pdf)
Download (.pdf)
Download (.pdf)
Download (.pdf)
A large-scale mail survey of some 200 Australian subsidiaries of multinational organizations aimed to identify a possible relationship between organizational size-related variables and the degree of centralization enforced by the... more
A large-scale mail survey of some 200 Australian subsidiaries of multinational organizations aimed to identify a possible relationship between organizational size-related variables and the degree of centralization enforced by the multinational in relation to marketing decision making. The findings—that size and centralization are not correlated for each marketing mix variable—enhance previous literature on this issue, whose studies combined all marketing
Download (.pdf)
Research Interests:
Research Interests:
Download (.pdf)
Research Interests:
Research Interests:
Download (.docx)