TY - CHAP
T1 - RESOURCE-BASED COMMITMENT TO A CUSTOMER-CENTERED STRATEGY
AU - Anderson, Mark
AU - Khan, Shahid
AU - Mashruwala, Raj
AU - Yu, Zhimin
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 by Emerald Publishing Limited.
PY - 2023/10/24
Y1 - 2023/10/24
N2 - To create and sustain a resource-based competitive advantage, managersac quire and develop specialized resources as they grow their firms. The authors argue that an important part of committing to a resource-based strategy is a willing ness to keep spending on specialized resources during periods when sales and profits are down. The authors seek to validate this conjecture by examining whether such resource-based commitment to a customer-centered strategy results in improved customer satisfaction. The authors use the stickiness of selling, general, and administrative (SG&A) expenses to capture this commitment empirically. The authors first document that future customer satisfaction is positively associated with SG&A cost stickiness, consistent with the premise that the retention of specialized SG&A resources during low demand periods helps firms to build and maintain relationships with customers over time. Next, the authors test whether expected future benefits of customer satisfaction are enhanced when SG&A cost stickiness is higher. The authors find that the positive relation between Tobin’s Q and customer satisfaction is positively moderated by SG&A cost stickiness. Finally, the authors test whether earnings persistence, a quality of earnings associated with sustained performance overtime, is positively associated with the interaction between customer satisfaction and SG&A cost stickiness. The authors find that it is. Their evidence supporting these predictions is consistent with the conjecture that resource-based commitment reflected in cost stickiness is an important dimension of creating and sustaining a resource-based competitive advantage.
AB - To create and sustain a resource-based competitive advantage, managersac quire and develop specialized resources as they grow their firms. The authors argue that an important part of committing to a resource-based strategy is a willing ness to keep spending on specialized resources during periods when sales and profits are down. The authors seek to validate this conjecture by examining whether such resource-based commitment to a customer-centered strategy results in improved customer satisfaction. The authors use the stickiness of selling, general, and administrative (SG&A) expenses to capture this commitment empirically. The authors first document that future customer satisfaction is positively associated with SG&A cost stickiness, consistent with the premise that the retention of specialized SG&A resources during low demand periods helps firms to build and maintain relationships with customers over time. Next, the authors test whether expected future benefits of customer satisfaction are enhanced when SG&A cost stickiness is higher. The authors find that the positive relation between Tobin’s Q and customer satisfaction is positively moderated by SG&A cost stickiness. Finally, the authors test whether earnings persistence, a quality of earnings associated with sustained performance overtime, is positively associated with the interaction between customer satisfaction and SG&A cost stickiness. The authors find that it is. Their evidence supporting these predictions is consistent with the conjecture that resource-based commitment reflected in cost stickiness is an important dimension of creating and sustaining a resource-based competitive advantage.
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U2 - 10.1108/S1474-787120230000035007
DO - 10.1108/S1474-787120230000035007
M3 - Chapter
AN - SCOPUS:85198755782
T3 - Advances in Management Accounting
SP - 159
EP - 180
BT - Advances in Management Accounting
PB - Emerald Publishing
ER -