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Working Papers | 1996

An Empirical Investigation into the Effects of Country of Origin on Consumer Product Preference in India

Mukherjee Avinandan

With increasing cross-border trade and globalization of markets, country of origin effect is assuming importance in the domain of cross-national consumer behaviour. Country of origin effect refers to consumers general perceptions of quality for products having brand names associated with a particular country. The objective of this paper is to understand the effect of country of origin on consumers in India in their preference for products. The paper looks at two distinct effects of country of origin-foreign brands made in their respective countries and foreign brands made in India. This study is in the context of a typical developing country like India on the throes of economic liberalization. Methodologically, this research involved multiple-cue study, i.e., product descriptions ofrered to respondents involved not only country of origin, but other cues as well. The research design involved a two-stage procedure, and ordinal data was fed into conjoint analysis to determine the effect of country of origin. The findings show that country of origin effect on consumer product evaluation in India is product-specitic. The effect was found to be stronger for television than for wrist watch or car. Also, between the three countries, Japan is preferred for television, while Indian products are preferred for car and wrist watch. Possible reasons have been explored along with implications for researchers, marketing practitioners, and public policy makers in developing countries.

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Working Papers | 1996

Farmers Innovations for Sustainable Resource Management and Conservation of Biological Diversity

Anil K. Gupta and Suthar Jitendra

The agricultural transformation during green revolution is no more green in most developing countries. The declining productivity of inputs clearly points to the non-sustainable nature of current growth processes. While there is rethinking going on in the formal research system itself, the informal research system managed by innovative and creative farmers, pastoralists, artisans, fishermen and women has been undergoing a silent revolution. In this paper this creativity at grassroots level is discussed as a source of healing the sick soils, souls and spirits. The paper discusses how blending between formal and informal science can stem the tide of non-sustainable growth and provide a more eco-friendly and eco-ethical path to future sustenance. We narrate in part one of the paper the diagnoses of the problem. What can formal science do and cannot in the context of meeting challenge of sustainable natural resource use. In part two we discuss the context in which farmers' innovations emerge and evolve at individual as well as collective level. In part three the problem of knowledge erosion is discussed and the case of Honey Bee network is presented which aims at stemming this erosion. In present some suggestions for rewarding creativity and some lesions for rethinking the mainstream technology generation and diffusion systems.

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Working Papers | 1996

A Reconsideration of the Additive Choice Function

Lahiri Somdeb

The purpose of this paper is to provide axiomatic characterizations of the additive and weighted additive choice functions which are now defined over the entire domain of convex, compact, comprehensive choice problems.

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Working Papers | 1996

Effective Corporate Response to Liberalisation: The Indian Case

Khandwalla P N

In most developing societies there has been a decisive shift towards economic liberalization, that is, towards deregulation and globalization of the economy. Liberalisation has two majhor consequences for the corporate world: intensification of competition and increase in growth opportunities. Increasing competition subjects competing corporations to many partially conflicting pressures, such as the need for sharper awareness of market developments and competitive moves of rivals, greater compulsion to cut costs, to respond to special needs of customers, quicker responses to the moves of rivals and the demands of customers, better coordination between various management functions, greater decentralization to meet effectively local contingencies, greater resourcefulness and innovativeness, greater access to diverse expertise, etc. Greater growth opportunities cannot be seized without increased entrepreneurial spirit. These pressures require a complex organizational response which is partly systematic and partly strategic. The systematic response needs to be the greater deployment of uncertainty coping, differentiation, and integration mechanisms. The strategic response requires clearer conceptualization of a short term strategy based on core competencies and a longer term strategy based on learning and adaptive capacity. The deployment of appropriate systemic and strategic mechanisms consequent on liberalization should lead to greater efficiency, better product quality, more innovation, faster growth, and greater profitability. However, in several countries liberalization does not appear to have produced the hoped for results, possibly because of institutional barriers to effective corporate response. In India, however, several indicators suggest that the corporate response to liberalization has, by and large, been quite satisfactory, as judged by corporate growth rates, increased profitability, greater quality consciousness, increased exports, etc. Available evidence suggests that both systematic and strategic responses tend to be in the expected direction. The reasons for the better corporate response to liberalization in India as compared to such countries as Russia are explored. Some management challenges for coping with liberalization, such as institutionalizing effective management styles and policies indicated by recent studies, are described.

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Working Papers | 1996

Some Aspects of Internationalization by Larger Indian Firms: Evidence from Ten Case Studies*

Chaudhari Shekhar, Shah Nayana, and Mukherjee Avinandan

The success of India's recent economic reform programme hinges crucially, among other things, on the level of internationalization of Indian firms. However, in the global market, Indian products rank low on critical factors like quality, delivery, and technology. Indian firms face a daunting task because of a variety of handicaps; lack of state of the art technology, capital, international marketing expertise, access to distribution channels, and international perspective in strategy formulation and risk taking ability to explore international markets. Given this gloomy scenario it is heartening to note from case studies published in business journals the many faceted exploits of some larger Indian firms in international markets. Companies like Core Parenterals, Arvind Mills, Ranbaxy Laboratories, ITC, Hindustan Lever, Dabur, Lupin Laboratories, and some others have often been in the news. With the belief that an exploration of the characteristics of large Indian firms which are focusing on internationalization as a significant asect of their overall strategies we undertook a content analysis of enterprise case studies published in business journals. This paper identifies the key characteristics of selected firms' internationalization efforts and presents an explanatory conceptual framework.

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Working Papers | 1996

Indicators as Indigenous Ecological Knowledge: "Lamp Posts", "Crossroads" and "Turning Points"

Anil K. Gupta and Suthar Jitendra

Boundaries of most natural systems are fuzzy and thus amenable to contraction and expansion over time and space due to interaction of various natural and human variables. Fuzzy boundaries often require homeostatic indicators of thereshold values so that changes conform to system properties and goals. The homeostatic indicators are kind of buffer solutions which do not tell us precise moments of change but suggest the range within which a change may take place. Indicators are also like thumb rules which guide and regulate our relationship with nature within and outside. Nature within refers to our tendencies to internalize external shocks through various psychological, spiritual and social responses. The stresses produced by these emotions become evident through various indicators that we can experience and feel in day to day life. The nature without or outside is what we perceive through categories that we inherit as well as create or recreate. These categories also require indicators so that we can make sense of changes in these categories and accordingly deal with them. In this paper, I deal with the theoretical as well as empirical aspects of ecological knowledge system which incorporates indicators as `lamp posts', `crossroads' and `turning points'.

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Working Papers | 1996

Some Remarks on Properties for Choice Functions

Lahiri Somdeb

Working Papers | 1996

Strategies of Technology Intensive Firms

Ramachandran K

This working paper summarises the findings of a study of 46 high-technology venture capital funded firms. The focus of the study was on the decision orientation of entrepreneurs on various strategy related dimensions. It was found that most of the entrepreneurs are successful and they are driven by technology orientation. They have entered virgin areas with strong technology focus especially in niche markets. Their core strength is technology which they try to preserve through continuous upgradation. They have woven their financial, personnel and marketing strategies around the technology strategy. Most of them have very high levels of product market clarity, and are dynamic in terms of adjustment to the changing competitive environment.

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Working Papers | 1996

Strategies for Internationalization: Some Indian Case Studies

Korwar Ashok

This paper presents a framework in which to understand the internationalization strategies of Indian firms. Drawing upon the experiences of twenty firms, we postulate that firm strategies may be best understood as responses to certain strategic challenges, with the firms drawing upon certain competitive advantages. These challenges and advantages are specifically identified. This framework appears to work well even where the firms differ in age, maturity, or size of international business. Cases studied are drawn from several Indian industries, and cover the period 1991 through 1995.

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Working Papers | 1996

Choosing Product Features through Users Response: Solar Cookers

Girja Sharan and Naik Gopal

IIMA