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  4. Does culture matter? Corporate reputation and sustainable satisfaction in the Chinese and German banking sector
 
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Does culture matter? Corporate reputation and sustainable satisfaction in the Chinese and German banking sector

Citation Link: https://doi.org/10.15480/882.8842
Publikationstyp
Journal Article
Date Issued
2024-03
Sprache
English
Author(s)
Damberg, Svenja 
Personalwirtschaft und Arbeitsorganisation W-9  
Liu, Yide  
Ringle, Christian M.  orcid-logo
Management und Entscheidungswissenschaften W-9  
TORE-DOI
10.15480/882.8842
TORE-URI
https://hdl.handle.net/11420/44272
Journal
Journal of marketing analytics  
Volume
12
Issue
1
Start Page
6
End Page
24
Citation
Journal of Marketing Analytics 12 (1): 6-24 (2024)
Publisher DOI
10.1057/s41270-023-00259-x
Scopus ID
2-s2.0-85175839613
Publisher
Palgrave Macmillan
Corporate reputation is important for all types of banks across the world, despite these countries differing culturally. Building on an extended corporate reputation model, we identify the key drivers of customer-based reputation and sustainable customer satisfaction in two culturally different countries, namely China and Germany. We also consider two reputation dimensions—perceived competence and likeability—and their effects on the target construct. Empirical data from 625 German and 734 Chinese commercial bank customers allow us to estimate the corporate reputation model with the partial least squares structural equation modeling (PLS-SEM) method, and by substantiating the relationships by means of a necessary condition analysis (NCA) and a predictive power analysis. By comparing the two countries’ results, we identify their cultural differences. Overall, we confirm the model’s relevance for the two cultures, finding that banks’ perceived attractiveness is the most important driver of both cultures’ customer-perceived bank reputation. By means of an importance-performance map analysis, we identify a large overlap between the two cultures’ set of important constructs, likeability’s much greater importance in Germany, and the perceived quality construct’s relevance in both countries. We contribute to research and scientific knowledge about corporate reputation models by identifying the similarities in and differences between two countries’ markets with respect to the banking sector, all of which have implications for international banks’ management.
Subjects
Commercial banks
Customer-perceived reputation
PLS-SEM
Sustainable satisfaction
DDC Class
380: Commerce, Communications, Transport
Publication version
publishedVersion
Lizenz
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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