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Global retailers' CSR initiatives during COVID-19 crisis: a cross-cultural examination

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Global retailers' CSR initiatives during COVID-19 crisis: a cross-cultural examination. / Ahmad, Wasim; Battisti, Enrico; Akhtar, Naeem et al.
In: International Marketing Review, Vol. 40, No. 5, 12.12.2023, p. 1054-1070.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Ahmad, W, Battisti, E, Akhtar, N, Ahmad, MI & Rehman, RU 2023, 'Global retailers' CSR initiatives during COVID-19 crisis: a cross-cultural examination', International Marketing Review, vol. 40, no. 5, pp. 1054-1070. https://doi.org/10.1108/IMR-12-2021-0362

APA

Ahmad, W., Battisti, E., Akhtar, N., Ahmad, M. I., & Rehman, R. U. (2023). Global retailers' CSR initiatives during COVID-19 crisis: a cross-cultural examination. International Marketing Review, 40(5), 1054-1070. https://doi.org/10.1108/IMR-12-2021-0362

Vancouver

Ahmad W, Battisti E, Akhtar N, Ahmad MI, Rehman RU. Global retailers' CSR initiatives during COVID-19 crisis: a cross-cultural examination. International Marketing Review. 2023 Dec 12;40(5):1054-1070. Epub 2023 Feb 14. doi: 10.1108/IMR-12-2021-0362

Author

Ahmad, Wasim ; Battisti, Enrico ; Akhtar, Naeem et al. / Global retailers' CSR initiatives during COVID-19 crisis : a cross-cultural examination. In: International Marketing Review. 2023 ; Vol. 40, No. 5. pp. 1054-1070.

Bibtex

@article{aa9fa3422a86431da7717a6231867b49,
title = "Global retailers' CSR initiatives during COVID-19 crisis: a cross-cultural examination",
abstract = "Purpose: This study develops a conceptual framework to examine (1) whether global retailers' CSR actions in the form of in-kind charitable contribution affect consumers' attribution of CSR to intrinsic motives, (2) whether consumers' attribution of CSR to intrinsic motives affects brand-self connection and (3) whether the cultural factors of self-transcendence and conservation moderate the relationship between consumers' attribution of CSR to intrinsic motives and brand-self connection. Design/methodology/approach: Data are collected from two culturally diverse countries, the US and China, each of which managed the pandemic in different ways. Before hypothesis testing, the invariance of measures is established. To measure differences between the groups, a multi-group analysis is conducted. Findings: Global retailers' in-kind charitable contribution is a significant drivers of consumers' attribution of CSR to intrinsic motives, and attribution of CSR to intrinsic motives has a positive effect on consumer brand-self connection. Both of the cultural values, self-transcendence and conservation, moderate the relationship between attribution of CSR to intrinsic motives and brand-self connection. Self-transcendence is a strong moderator in China, whereas conservation moderates strongly in the US. All of the relationships differ significantly between the groups (US versus China). Originality/value: To the best of our knowledge, this is the first study to investigate empirically the role of in-kind charitable contribution in creating an attribution of CSR to intrinsic motives that eventually leads to strong brand-self connection in the COVID-19 context. The study provides novel insights into how consumer behavior differs across two significantly different cultures with regard to COVID-19-related CSR. The findings help international marketers manage uncertainties and crisis and to design their CSR-based marketing programs and develop positioning strategies across cultures.",
keywords = "Corporate social responsibility (CSR), COVID-19, Cross-cultural, Global retail brands, Intrinsic attributions",
author = "Wasim Ahmad and Enrico Battisti and Naeem Akhtar and Ahmad, {Muhammad Ishfaq} and Rehman, {Ramiz Ur}",
year = "2023",
month = dec,
day = "12",
doi = "10.1108/IMR-12-2021-0362",
language = "English",
volume = "40",
pages = "1054--1070",
journal = "International Marketing Review",
issn = "0265-1335",
publisher = "Emerald Group Publishing Ltd.",
number = "5",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Global retailers' CSR initiatives during COVID-19 crisis

T2 - a cross-cultural examination

AU - Ahmad, Wasim

AU - Battisti, Enrico

AU - Akhtar, Naeem

AU - Ahmad, Muhammad Ishfaq

AU - Rehman, Ramiz Ur

PY - 2023/12/12

Y1 - 2023/12/12

N2 - Purpose: This study develops a conceptual framework to examine (1) whether global retailers' CSR actions in the form of in-kind charitable contribution affect consumers' attribution of CSR to intrinsic motives, (2) whether consumers' attribution of CSR to intrinsic motives affects brand-self connection and (3) whether the cultural factors of self-transcendence and conservation moderate the relationship between consumers' attribution of CSR to intrinsic motives and brand-self connection. Design/methodology/approach: Data are collected from two culturally diverse countries, the US and China, each of which managed the pandemic in different ways. Before hypothesis testing, the invariance of measures is established. To measure differences between the groups, a multi-group analysis is conducted. Findings: Global retailers' in-kind charitable contribution is a significant drivers of consumers' attribution of CSR to intrinsic motives, and attribution of CSR to intrinsic motives has a positive effect on consumer brand-self connection. Both of the cultural values, self-transcendence and conservation, moderate the relationship between attribution of CSR to intrinsic motives and brand-self connection. Self-transcendence is a strong moderator in China, whereas conservation moderates strongly in the US. All of the relationships differ significantly between the groups (US versus China). Originality/value: To the best of our knowledge, this is the first study to investigate empirically the role of in-kind charitable contribution in creating an attribution of CSR to intrinsic motives that eventually leads to strong brand-self connection in the COVID-19 context. The study provides novel insights into how consumer behavior differs across two significantly different cultures with regard to COVID-19-related CSR. The findings help international marketers manage uncertainties and crisis and to design their CSR-based marketing programs and develop positioning strategies across cultures.

AB - Purpose: This study develops a conceptual framework to examine (1) whether global retailers' CSR actions in the form of in-kind charitable contribution affect consumers' attribution of CSR to intrinsic motives, (2) whether consumers' attribution of CSR to intrinsic motives affects brand-self connection and (3) whether the cultural factors of self-transcendence and conservation moderate the relationship between consumers' attribution of CSR to intrinsic motives and brand-self connection. Design/methodology/approach: Data are collected from two culturally diverse countries, the US and China, each of which managed the pandemic in different ways. Before hypothesis testing, the invariance of measures is established. To measure differences between the groups, a multi-group analysis is conducted. Findings: Global retailers' in-kind charitable contribution is a significant drivers of consumers' attribution of CSR to intrinsic motives, and attribution of CSR to intrinsic motives has a positive effect on consumer brand-self connection. Both of the cultural values, self-transcendence and conservation, moderate the relationship between attribution of CSR to intrinsic motives and brand-self connection. Self-transcendence is a strong moderator in China, whereas conservation moderates strongly in the US. All of the relationships differ significantly between the groups (US versus China). Originality/value: To the best of our knowledge, this is the first study to investigate empirically the role of in-kind charitable contribution in creating an attribution of CSR to intrinsic motives that eventually leads to strong brand-self connection in the COVID-19 context. The study provides novel insights into how consumer behavior differs across two significantly different cultures with regard to COVID-19-related CSR. The findings help international marketers manage uncertainties and crisis and to design their CSR-based marketing programs and develop positioning strategies across cultures.

KW - Corporate social responsibility (CSR)

KW - COVID-19

KW - Cross-cultural

KW - Global retail brands

KW - Intrinsic attributions

U2 - 10.1108/IMR-12-2021-0362

DO - 10.1108/IMR-12-2021-0362

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:85147572123

VL - 40

SP - 1054

EP - 1070

JO - International Marketing Review

JF - International Marketing Review

SN - 0265-1335

IS - 5

ER -