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Japanese CEOs cross-cultural management of customer value orientation in India

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Japanese CEOs cross-cultural management of customer value orientation in India. / Ashta, A.; Stokes, P.J.; Smith, S.M. et al.
In: Management Decision, Vol. 59, No. 10, 06.09.2021, p. 2355-2368.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Ashta, A, Stokes, PJ, Smith, SM & Hughes, P 2021, 'Japanese CEOs cross-cultural management of customer value orientation in India', Management Decision, vol. 59, no. 10, pp. 2355-2368. https://doi.org/10.1108/MD-06-2020-0776

APA

Ashta, A., Stokes, P. J., Smith, S. M., & Hughes, P. (2021). Japanese CEOs cross-cultural management of customer value orientation in India. Management Decision, 59(10), 2355-2368. https://doi.org/10.1108/MD-06-2020-0776

Vancouver

Ashta A, Stokes PJ, Smith SM, Hughes P. Japanese CEOs cross-cultural management of customer value orientation in India. Management Decision. 2021 Sept 6;59(10):2355-2368. Epub 2021 Jan 13. doi: 10.1108/MD-06-2020-0776

Author

Ashta, A. ; Stokes, P.J. ; Smith, S.M. et al. / Japanese CEOs cross-cultural management of customer value orientation in India. In: Management Decision. 2021 ; Vol. 59, No. 10. pp. 2355-2368.

Bibtex

@article{befbc3588ac54529a7c261f039c45b02,
title = "Japanese CEOs cross-cultural management of customer value orientation in India",
abstract = "Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to develop understanding of cross-cultural issues relating to the experience and implications of an elite grouping of Japanese CEOs customer value orientations (CVOs) within Japanese firms operating in India. The paper underlines that there is a propensity for East-West comparisons and in contrast the argument contributes to the under-examined area of research on East Asian/South Asian comparative studies. Design/methodology/approach: Semi-structured interviews were employed to generate narratives that provided rich and novel insights into the lived experience of Japanese CEOs working in Indian contexts and in relation to CVO. An inductive framework was employed in order to develop a more in-depth understanding of Japanese CEO CVO in Indo-Japanese empirical settings. Findings: The data analysis identified a number of shared themes that influence CVO practice in the Indo-Japanese context. The findings develop an awareness of cross-cultural management's (CCM) in relation to the under-explored area of the Indo-Japanese dyad. Research limitations/implications: The paper develops CCM perspectives towards a more in-depth conceptualization of Japanese CEO perceptions on CVO practice in India. This is also of potential relevance to wider foreign investors not only Japanese businesses. The sample respondents – Japanese CEOS working in India – constitute a small and elite group. The lead author, having experience as a CEO of a Japanese firm was able to use convenience sampling to access this difficult to access group. In addition, also stemming from the convenience aspect, all the respondents were in the manufacturing sector. The study was deliberately targeted and narrowly focussed for this reason and does not claim automatic wide generalizability to other employee strata or industry; however, other sectors and employees may recognize resonance. This identified gap provides space for future studies in varying regional, national and sector contexts. Practical implications: The paper identifies implications for CCM training and Indo-Japanese business organization design. Social implications: Use and acceptance of the enhanced research paradigm could support diversity in research and knowledge production with implications for research, teaching and future policymakers. Originality/value: The cross-cultural study is original in that it contributes to CCM literature by providing a rare Indo-Japanese (sic East Asian: South Asian) comparative study. It provides an uncommon granular appreciation of the interaction of these cultures in relation to CVO. In addition, it secures rare data from an elite Japanese CEOs of manufacturing sector businesses.",
keywords = "Cross-cultural management, Customer value orientation, India, Japan",
author = "A. Ashta and P.J. Stokes and S.M. Smith and P. Hughes",
year = "2021",
month = sep,
day = "6",
doi = "10.1108/MD-06-2020-0776",
language = "English",
volume = "59",
pages = "2355--2368",
journal = "Management Decision",
issn = "0025-1747",
publisher = "Emerald Group Publishing Ltd.",
number = "10",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Japanese CEOs cross-cultural management of customer value orientation in India

AU - Ashta, A.

AU - Stokes, P.J.

AU - Smith, S.M.

AU - Hughes, P.

PY - 2021/9/6

Y1 - 2021/9/6

N2 - Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to develop understanding of cross-cultural issues relating to the experience and implications of an elite grouping of Japanese CEOs customer value orientations (CVOs) within Japanese firms operating in India. The paper underlines that there is a propensity for East-West comparisons and in contrast the argument contributes to the under-examined area of research on East Asian/South Asian comparative studies. Design/methodology/approach: Semi-structured interviews were employed to generate narratives that provided rich and novel insights into the lived experience of Japanese CEOs working in Indian contexts and in relation to CVO. An inductive framework was employed in order to develop a more in-depth understanding of Japanese CEO CVO in Indo-Japanese empirical settings. Findings: The data analysis identified a number of shared themes that influence CVO practice in the Indo-Japanese context. The findings develop an awareness of cross-cultural management's (CCM) in relation to the under-explored area of the Indo-Japanese dyad. Research limitations/implications: The paper develops CCM perspectives towards a more in-depth conceptualization of Japanese CEO perceptions on CVO practice in India. This is also of potential relevance to wider foreign investors not only Japanese businesses. The sample respondents – Japanese CEOS working in India – constitute a small and elite group. The lead author, having experience as a CEO of a Japanese firm was able to use convenience sampling to access this difficult to access group. In addition, also stemming from the convenience aspect, all the respondents were in the manufacturing sector. The study was deliberately targeted and narrowly focussed for this reason and does not claim automatic wide generalizability to other employee strata or industry; however, other sectors and employees may recognize resonance. This identified gap provides space for future studies in varying regional, national and sector contexts. Practical implications: The paper identifies implications for CCM training and Indo-Japanese business organization design. Social implications: Use and acceptance of the enhanced research paradigm could support diversity in research and knowledge production with implications for research, teaching and future policymakers. Originality/value: The cross-cultural study is original in that it contributes to CCM literature by providing a rare Indo-Japanese (sic East Asian: South Asian) comparative study. It provides an uncommon granular appreciation of the interaction of these cultures in relation to CVO. In addition, it secures rare data from an elite Japanese CEOs of manufacturing sector businesses.

AB - Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to develop understanding of cross-cultural issues relating to the experience and implications of an elite grouping of Japanese CEOs customer value orientations (CVOs) within Japanese firms operating in India. The paper underlines that there is a propensity for East-West comparisons and in contrast the argument contributes to the under-examined area of research on East Asian/South Asian comparative studies. Design/methodology/approach: Semi-structured interviews were employed to generate narratives that provided rich and novel insights into the lived experience of Japanese CEOs working in Indian contexts and in relation to CVO. An inductive framework was employed in order to develop a more in-depth understanding of Japanese CEO CVO in Indo-Japanese empirical settings. Findings: The data analysis identified a number of shared themes that influence CVO practice in the Indo-Japanese context. The findings develop an awareness of cross-cultural management's (CCM) in relation to the under-explored area of the Indo-Japanese dyad. Research limitations/implications: The paper develops CCM perspectives towards a more in-depth conceptualization of Japanese CEO perceptions on CVO practice in India. This is also of potential relevance to wider foreign investors not only Japanese businesses. The sample respondents – Japanese CEOS working in India – constitute a small and elite group. The lead author, having experience as a CEO of a Japanese firm was able to use convenience sampling to access this difficult to access group. In addition, also stemming from the convenience aspect, all the respondents were in the manufacturing sector. The study was deliberately targeted and narrowly focussed for this reason and does not claim automatic wide generalizability to other employee strata or industry; however, other sectors and employees may recognize resonance. This identified gap provides space for future studies in varying regional, national and sector contexts. Practical implications: The paper identifies implications for CCM training and Indo-Japanese business organization design. Social implications: Use and acceptance of the enhanced research paradigm could support diversity in research and knowledge production with implications for research, teaching and future policymakers. Originality/value: The cross-cultural study is original in that it contributes to CCM literature by providing a rare Indo-Japanese (sic East Asian: South Asian) comparative study. It provides an uncommon granular appreciation of the interaction of these cultures in relation to CVO. In addition, it secures rare data from an elite Japanese CEOs of manufacturing sector businesses.

KW - Cross-cultural management

KW - Customer value orientation

KW - India

KW - Japan

U2 - 10.1108/MD-06-2020-0776

DO - 10.1108/MD-06-2020-0776

M3 - Journal article

VL - 59

SP - 2355

EP - 2368

JO - Management Decision

JF - Management Decision

SN - 0025-1747

IS - 10

ER -