Dynamic marketing capabilities: antecedents and outcomes
thesis
posted on 2016-12-20, 04:48authored byReza Kachouie
The competitive
environment within which organizations operate is evolving faster than ever,
prompting organizations to change to keep up with the environmental changes.
The dynamic capabilities (DCs) view seeks to answer how organizations attain
and sustain competitive advantage in changing environments. In the past two
decades, there has been a proliferation of research in the DCs domain; yet much
remains to be investigated regarding the antecedents and outcomes of DCs. The
term “dynamic marketing capabilities” (DMCs) refers to a subset of DCs with the
emphasis on customer value. This research studies four DMCs: proactive market
orientation, agility, opportunity creation, and value innovation.
The development of DCs may be triggered by the necessity to
reconfigure resources in dynamic environments or by managers’ decisions to
change the current way of doing things in an attempt to improve performance.
Therefore, environmental dynamism and dynamic managerial capabilities are
antecedents of DCs. To achieve competitive advantage, organizations can employ
two distinct but complementary strategies. First, they can match environmental
demands by reconfiguring and renewing their organizational resource base.
Second, they can create market turbulence. Therefore, these two strategies act
as mediators between DMCs and organizational outcomes.
A conceptual framework is developed in order to examine the
relationship between DMCs, their antecedents, and outcomes. A sample of 270
usable responses was obtained from top and senior managers working in
Australia. After ensuring the constructs’ reliability and validity, the
hypotheses were tested by means of hierarchical regression analysis and
structural equation modeling.
The results indicate that environmental dynamism and dynamic
managerial capabilities positively affect the studied DMCs; however, the effect
of dynamic managerial capabilities is stronger. Moreover, DMCs have a positive
impact on operational marketing capabilities and induced market turbulence;
these in turn positively affect organizational outcomes. The multi-mediation
tests confirmed that operational marketing capabilities and induced market
turbulence mediate the effect of DMCs on organizational outcomes.
This study contributes to and extends the knowledge of DCs by
proposing an integrative conceptual framework, explaining the antecedents of
DMCs and the mechanism by which DMCs are linked to organizational outcomes. The
findings re-emphasize the need for DCs in dynamic environments and highlight
the critical role of dynamic managerial capabilities. Another contribution is
that the study incorporates the element of induced market turbulence, hitherto
missing in the literature pertaining to DMCs. This study also emphasizes that
operational marketing capabilities mediate the relationship between DMCs and
organizational performance. Moreover, four distinct DMCs (i.e., proactive market
orientation, agility, opportunity creation, and value innovation) are
identified, and scales are developed and validated to measure them. The
findings suggest that these DMCs perform as anticipated.
This research provides several insights for managers
regarding DCs and how to apply them to organizations. The results of this study
demonstrate that it is necessary for organizations to invest in developing
DMCs, not to achieve performance improvement directly, but to optimize their
operational marketing capability configuration. This, in turn, improves
organizational outcomes. Moreover, managers are encouraged to invest in the
development of DCs as a strategic rather than tactical approach. Another
implication is that in ambiguous environments, organizations need to not only
adapt to the environment, but also to employ strategies of environment
constructing.