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Marketing meets Web 2.0, social media, and creative consumers: Implications for international marketing strategy

by: Pierre R. Berthon, Leyland F. Pitt, Kirk Plangger, Daniel Shapiro
Business Horizons, Vol. 55, No. 3. (May 2012), pp. 261-271, doi:10.1016/j.bushor.2012.01.007  Key: citeulike:10423325

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Abstract

The 21st century has brought both opportunities and challenges in our global, boundaryless world. Importantly, managers face a dynamic and interconnected international environment. As such, 21st century managers need to consider the many opportunities and threats that Web 2.0, social media, and creative consumers present and the resulting respective shifts in loci of activity, power, and value. To help managers understand this new dispensation, we propose five axioms: (1) social media are always a function of the technology, culture, and government of a particular country or context; (2) local events rarely remain local; (3) global events are likely to be (re)interpreted locally; (4) creative consumers’ actions and creations are also dependent on technology, culture, and government; and (5) technology is historically dependent. At the heart of these axioms is the managerial recommendation to continually stay up to date on technology, customers, and social media. To implement this managerial recommendation, marketers must truly engage customers, embrace technology, limit the power of bureaucracy, train and invest in their employees, and inform senior management about the opportunities of social media.


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