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Discovering a Rosetta Stone for Firm-Side Authenticity:An Empirical Investigation


Affiliations
1 Franz Center for Leadership, Entrepreneurship and Innovation, Pamplin School of Business, University of Portland, United States
2 Strategy and Entrepreneurship, University of Portland, United States
     

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While most academic research has considered authenticity from the consumer's perspective, this paper proposes and tests a new empirical operationalisation of Beverland's (2005) widely cited proposition that firm-side authenticity is"…partly true and partly rhetorical" (p. 1008). Our study presents a model based on the Competitive Advantage (CA) that results from congruence between the partly true aspects of the firm's internal culture, resources, and capabilities measured as Innovation Capacity (IC),alongside Corporate Identity Management (CIM) as the organisation's partly rhetorical outwardly-directed corporate branding and marketing promotions activities. Our findings are interpreted through a four-quadrant 'Rosetta Stone' framework for evaluating firm-side authenticity across organisational contexts and environments describing how high-IC/ high-CIM (i.e., Authentic) firms create differentiation from low-IC/ low-CIM Inauthentic organisations and low-IC/ high-CIM Faux Imitators competitors who attempt to compensate for their lack of IC through increased investments in CIM.

Keywords

Corporate Identity Management, Innovation Capacity, Corporate Branding, Authenticity, Marketing Strategy, Corporate Communications.
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  • Discovering a Rosetta Stone for Firm-Side Authenticity:An Empirical Investigation

Abstract Views: 256  |  PDF Views: 0

Authors

Ian Parkman
Franz Center for Leadership, Entrepreneurship and Innovation, Pamplin School of Business, University of Portland, United States
Samuel Holloway
Strategy and Entrepreneurship, University of Portland, United States

Abstract


While most academic research has considered authenticity from the consumer's perspective, this paper proposes and tests a new empirical operationalisation of Beverland's (2005) widely cited proposition that firm-side authenticity is"…partly true and partly rhetorical" (p. 1008). Our study presents a model based on the Competitive Advantage (CA) that results from congruence between the partly true aspects of the firm's internal culture, resources, and capabilities measured as Innovation Capacity (IC),alongside Corporate Identity Management (CIM) as the organisation's partly rhetorical outwardly-directed corporate branding and marketing promotions activities. Our findings are interpreted through a four-quadrant 'Rosetta Stone' framework for evaluating firm-side authenticity across organisational contexts and environments describing how high-IC/ high-CIM (i.e., Authentic) firms create differentiation from low-IC/ low-CIM Inauthentic organisations and low-IC/ high-CIM Faux Imitators competitors who attempt to compensate for their lack of IC through increased investments in CIM.

Keywords


Corporate Identity Management, Innovation Capacity, Corporate Branding, Authenticity, Marketing Strategy, Corporate Communications.