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Marketing Book

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One more time – what is marketing? 11<br />

competition is strongly associated with most<br />

West European economies, and also with Japan<br />

and the ‘tiger’ economies of South East Asia,<br />

most of which have achieved a consistently<br />

better economic performance than the USA and<br />

UK since 1950.<br />

The essential difference between the Anglo-<br />

Saxon/marketing management approach and<br />

the Alpine/Germanic style of competition is<br />

that the former takes a short-term, zero-sum<br />

adversarial view based on one-off transactions<br />

while the later adopts a long-term perspective<br />

which promotes win–win relationships.<br />

Relationship marketing<br />

According to Möller and Halinen-Kaila (1997)<br />

relationship marketing or RM was the ‘hot<br />

topic’ of the marketing discipline during the<br />

1990s, but ‘the rhetoric is often characterized<br />

more by elegance than by rigorous examination<br />

of the actual contents’ (p. 2/3). The debate<br />

raises at least four critical questions:<br />

1 Will RM replace the traditional marketing<br />

management school?<br />

2 Will RM make marketing management theory<br />

obsolete?<br />

3 Is RM a completely new theory, or does it<br />

derive from older traditions?<br />

4 Do we need different theories of RM<br />

depending on the type of exchange<br />

relationships?<br />

Möller and Halinen-Kaila seek to answer<br />

these questions. In doing so they stress the need<br />

to look back as well as forward and link new<br />

ideas with existing knowledge. They see the<br />

current interest in RM as deriving from four<br />

basic sources – marketing channels, businessto-business<br />

marketing (interorganizational<br />

marketing), services marketing and direct and<br />

database marketing (consumer marketing).<br />

The dominant marketing management<br />

paradigm founded on the manipulation of the<br />

mix began to be questioned in the 1970s as it<br />

provided an inadequate explanation of the<br />

marketing of services. Such a challenge was<br />

unsurprising given that services had become<br />

the largest sector in the advanced industrial<br />

economies. Specifically, services marketing<br />

calls for recognition of both buyer and seller in<br />

the exchange process. Developments in information<br />

technology during the 1980s made it<br />

possible to both model and operationalize<br />

individual relationships through the use of<br />

databases.<br />

However, the different research approaches<br />

are derived from different perspectives<br />

and conceptual frames of reference and provide<br />

only partial explanations which have yet to be<br />

synthesized and integrated into a holistic metatheory.<br />

Metatheory is derived from meta analysis<br />

which follows one of two closely related<br />

approaches – profiling or typology development.<br />

The latter tends to be abstract, the former<br />

descriptive, and it is this procedure which is<br />

followed by Möller and Halinen-Kaila who<br />

develop a detailed comparison matrix in which<br />

they examine the four traditions specified<br />

earlier across a number of dimensions, as<br />

illustrated in Table 1.1. While the authors<br />

acknowledge that such a matrix glosses over<br />

many details, none the less it provides useful<br />

generalization of the ways in which the different<br />

research traditions handle exchange relationships.<br />

To reduce the complexity of their<br />

comparison matrix with its four traditions, the<br />

authors collapse these into two categories –<br />

consumer and interorganizational relationships<br />

– and summarize their salient characteristics as<br />

in Table 1.1.<br />

Although relationships are recognized as<br />

existing on a continuum in terms of closeness/involvement<br />

of the parties, the definition<br />

of the two categories is seen as helpful in<br />

‘anchoring’ the ends of this continuum. This<br />

distinction is reinforced when one considers<br />

the different viewpoint or perspective taken<br />

in terms of the underlying assumptions on<br />

which consumer and interorganizational relationships<br />

have been evaluated – the former

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