PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

UT Arlington marketing study shows ethnically diverse workforce may improve customer experience

Future of business depends on diversity

2013-12-16
(Press-News.org) Contact information: Herb Booth
hbooth@uta.edu
817-272-7075
University of Texas at Arlington
UT Arlington marketing study shows ethnically diverse workforce may improve customer experience Future of business depends on diversity

Service-oriented businesses that want to succeed with minority customers should consider hiring frontline employees who represent those ethnic groups, particularly when the business caters to Hispanics or Asians, a recent UT Arlington study contends.

The paper, "Shared ethnicity effects on service encounters: A study across three U.S. subcultures," was authored by Elten Briggs, associate professor of marketing, and Detra Montoya, clinical associate professor of marketing at Arizona State University's W.P. Carey School of Business. It was published in the Journal of Business Research.

The researchers analyzed the influence of shared ethnicity on consumer behavior using an experiment and a survey. The experiment focused on 112 Hispanic customers of a financial services firm in a major U.S. metropolitan area. The survey asked 285 Asians, Hispanics and Caucasians in a major U.S. city about marketplace experiences that could be attributed to their ethnicity.

The team said that members of Asian and Hispanic cultures are more "collectivist" in the way that they emphasize the social self and connectedness to others than members of Western cultures. For this reason, they may be more susceptible to the effects of shared ethnicity in the marketplace.

"The study showed that culture plays an important role in the interaction between businesses and customers," said Briggs, who joined the UT Arlington in 2006. "Customers may feel like they have some common ground with the service representative or sales person if there is a shared ethnicity."

The influence of culture on interactions between contact employees and customers is becoming an ever-important consideration as marketplaces worldwide continue to diversify. Though recent research emphasizes the drawbacks of individual cultural differences, such as marketplace discrimination (Baker et al., 2008, Crockett et al., 2003 and Harris et al., 2005), this research largely overlooks potentially positive effects of congruency between contact employees and customers of services.

Rachel Croson, dean of the UT Arlington College of Business, said Briggs' research points to the fact that the future of business is multi-cultural.

"The future of business will involve an increasing diversity of the customer base of many firms, both within the U.S. and internationally. The businesses that succeed will be those that understand how to customize the experience they give these customers," Croson said. "Dr. Briggs' work identifies how to do this effectively, and will have important implications for both the practice and theory of marketing."

Briggs said he hopes his research will help businesses improve marketing outreach.

"The study shows that if I work for a service or sales company, my company should reflect the audience I am seeking," Briggs said. "When customers share the same ethnicity with their salesman or customer service agent, they generally have a more favorable perception of the business."

Briggs noted that with Asian and Hispanic customers, the relationship between customers and agents was even tighter because they often were linked through a common language.

The experiment demonstrated that expectations among Hispanic customers increased when they thought their customer service or sales representative would be of the same ethnicity, which increases the chances of the customer patronizing the business. Hispanic and Asian survey respondents reported having better retail and service experiences with employees of the same ethnicity, often perceiving that they were receiving preferential treatment from the employee.



INFORMATION:

The University of Texas at Arlington is a comprehensive research institution of more than 33,300 students and more than 2,200 faculty members in the epicenter of North Texas. Visit http://www.uta.edu for more information.



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Pollination, land degradation: Top priorities for assessment by new UN intergovernmental body

2013-12-16
PUBLIC RELEASE DATE: 14-Dec-2013 [ | E-mail ] var addthis_pub="eurekalert"; var addthis_options = "favorites, delicious, digg, facebook, twitter, google, newsvine, reddit, slashdot, stumbleupon, buzz, more" Share Contact: Terry Collins tc@tca.tc 416-878-8712 Intergovernmental Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services Pollination, land degradation: Top priorities for assessment by new UN intergovernmental body Nations approve first work plan, budget for Intergovernmental Platform for Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services Antalya, Turkey, December ...

Climate change threatens genetic diversity, future of world's caribou

2013-12-16
Climate change threatens genetic diversity, future of world's caribou Caribou in southern and eastern Canada may disappear from most of their current range in 60 years if climate change takes the toll on their habitat that scientists predict in a paper appearing ...

Timing is everything in new nanotechnology for medicine, security and research

2013-12-16
Timing is everything in new nanotechnology for medicine, security and research WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. - Researchers working to advance imaging useful to medicine and security are capitalizing on the same phenomenon behind the lingering "ghost" image that appeared ...

Nuclei in wrong place may be cause, not result, of inherited muscle diseases

2013-12-16
PUBLIC RELEASE DATE: 16-Dec-2013 [ | E-mail ] var addthis_pub="eurekalert"; var addthis_options = "favorites, delicious, digg, facebook, twitter, google, newsvine, reddit, slashdot, stumbleupon, buzz, more" Share Contact: Cathy Yarbrough cyarbrough@ascb.org 858-243-1814 John Fleischman jfleischman@ascb.org American Society for Cell Biology Nuclei in wrong place may be cause, not result, of inherited muscle diseases Sunday Driver gene implicated as necessary regulator of nuclear positioning in muscle tissue cells Incorrectly positioned nuclei ...

Mothers see their youngest as shorter than they are

2013-12-16
Mothers see their youngest as shorter than they are Many parents say when their second child is born that their first child suddenly appears to have grown overnight. Now, researchers reporting in the Cell Press journal Current Biology on December 16 have an explanation: until ...

JCI early table of contents for Dec. 16, 2013

2013-12-16
JCI early table of contents for Dec. 16, 2013 A mouse model to evaluate potential age-promoting compounds While there are well-established mouse models to identify cancer-causing agents, similar models are not available to readily test and identify age-promoting ...

A mouse model to evaluate potential age-promoting compounds

2013-12-16
A mouse model to evaluate potential age-promoting compounds While there are well-established mouse models to identify cancer-causing agents, similar models are not available to readily test and identify age-promoting agents. Recently, a mouse strain ...

Hybrid protein deregulates complement in dense deposit disease

2013-12-16
Hybrid protein deregulates complement in dense deposit disease Dense deposit disease is a rare congenital disorder that is associated with complement dysfunction and often results in end stage renal disease within 10 years of the initial diagnosis. A ...

Fruit fly studies help scientists swat aggressive relapsing leukemia

2013-12-16
Fruit fly studies help scientists swat aggressive relapsing leukemia CINCINNATI – Using genetic information initially uncovered in fruit fly studies, scientists have developed a unique therapeutic strategy that stops an aggressive and ...

Aging cells unravel their DNA

2013-12-16
Aging cells unravel their DNA Senescent cells, which are metabolically active but no longer capable of dividing, contribute to aging, and senescence is a key mechanism for preventing the spread of cancer cells. A study in The Journal of Cell Biology ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Light-activated ink developed to remotely control cardiac tissue to repair the heart

EMBARGOED: Dana-Farber investigators pinpoint keys to cell therapy response for leukemia

Surgeon preference factors into survival outcomes analyses for multi- and single-arterial bypass grafting

Study points to South America – not Mexico – as birthplace of Irish potato famine pathogen

VR subway experiment highlights role of sound in disrupting balance for people with inner ear disorder

Evolution without sex: How mites have survived for millions of years

U. of I. team develops weight loss app that tracks fiber, protein content in meals

Progress and challenges in brain implants

City-level sugar-sweetened beverage taxes and changes in adult BMI

Duration in immigration detention and health harms

COVID-19 pandemic and racial and ethnic disparities in long-term nursing home stay or death following hospital discharge

Specific types of liver immune cells are required to deal with injury

How human activity has shaped Brazil Nut forests’ past and future

Doctors test a new way to help people quit fentanyl 

Long read sequencing reveals more genetic information while cutting time and cost of rare disease diagnoses

AAAS and ASU launch mission-driven collaborative to strengthen scientific enterprise

Medicaid-insured heart transplant patients face higher risk of post-transplant complications

Revolutionizing ammonia synthesis: New iron-based catalyst surpasses century-old benchmark

A groundbreaking approach: Researchers at The University of Texas at San Antonio chart the future of neuromorphic computing

Long COVID, Italian scientists discovered the molecular ‘fingerprint’ of the condition in children's blood

Battery-powered electric vehicles now match petrol and diesel counterparts for longevity

MIT method enables protein labeling of tens of millions of densely packed cells in organ-scale tissues

Calculating error-free more easily with two codes

Dissolving clusters of cancer cells to prevent metastases

A therapeutic HPV vaccine could eliminate precancerous cervical lesions

Myth busted: Healthy habits take longer than 21 days to set in

Development of next-generation one-component epoxy with high-temperature stability and flame retardancy

Scaling up neuromorphic computing for more efficient and effective AI everywhere and anytime

Make it worth Weyl: engineering the first semimetallic Weyl quantum crystal

Exercise improves brain function, possibly reducing dementia risk

[Press-News.org] UT Arlington marketing study shows ethnically diverse workforce may improve customer experience
Future of business depends on diversity