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

The importance of brand strength when designing group and individual sales incentives in brand-managed retail sales settings

News from the Journal of Marketing

2024-08-27
(Press-News.org) Researchers from Wake Forest University and University of California-Riverside published a new Journal of Marketing article that examines the dynamic BMR retail context and investigates the sales incentives there.

The study, forthcoming in the Journal of Marketing, is titled “Group or Individual Sales Incentives? What is Best for Brand-Managed Retail Sales Operations?” and is authored by Wenshu Zhang, Jia Li, and Subramanian Balachander.

Should a brand adopt group or individual sales incentives for its retail sales force? Could differences in brand strength or brand equity affect how brands incentivize their sales force?

This new Journal of Marketing study offers a compelling reason for considering brand strength when designing sales incentives in brand-managed retail (BMR) sales settings.

A BMR setting may be a store-within-a-store (SWAS), such as the cosmetics counters in most major U.S. department stores, or a brand-managed standalone store such as Aveda or Gap. Such BMR settings are typically staffed by the brand rather than the retailer, with the brand also having autonomy over inventory and pricing decisions for its products. Although BMR has been historically more prevalent in Europe and Asia than in the U.S., brands are adding SWAS offerings everywhere to reach new customers and to offer additional touchpoints for customers.

This study explores this dynamic retail context and investigates the sales incentives used in a variety of BMR settings. The researchers uncover a significant variability in the use of individual and group sales incentives by brands in these settings. Some brands opt for individual incentives to motivate salespeople based on performance, others lean towards group incentives, and a portion adopt a combination of both approaches. Zhang explains that “this diversity in incentive structures prompted us to explore the underlying factors driving incentive choices by brands.”

The literature shows that among other factors, brand strength and sales incentives affect the selling effectiveness of retail salespersons. This led the researchers to conjecture that the differences in incentive choices by brands may be tied to the strength of those brands.

The Secret to Designing Incentives The study uses a theoretical principal-agent model to investigate how brand strength may influence the relative profitability of different types of incentives. The model assumes a BMR setting with salespersons serving a mix of consumers, including some who might be repeat buyers ready to purchase and others who are uninformed about the brand’s value proposition and need to be sold by the salesperson.

“When designing incentives, a firm would ideally like to offer incentives only for selling to the uninformed consumer because this sale requires salesperson effort. While firms cannot usually observe whether a sale made by an individual salesperson was to an uninformed consumer, it has better information on whether the group as a whole sold to the uninformed consumer because the group output in this case would be higher than otherwise,” says Li. Balachander adds, “our analysis suggests that this information advantage of group incentives is more potent for weaker brands, resulting in the main finding that weaker brands may be more profitable with group incentives. Conversely, we find that stronger brands would be better off with individual salesperson incentives.”

An important qualification to these theoretical results is that they apply to somewhat established brands and not to very weak brands. For example, Clarins and Estee Lauder are both established cosmetic brands, but Clarins ranks lower than Estee Lauder in many brand equity rankings and may benefit from using group incentives in its BMR operations, while Estee Lauder may benefit less.

Lessons for Marketing Managers The study’s findings underscore the efficiency implications of aligning sales incentives with brand strength. Below are tips to help Chief Marketing Officers make better decisions about individual and group incentives.

Managers of BMR sales operations need to determine whether their brand falls on the weak or strong end of the spectrum. This empirical question is to be answered by data, which could be from brand equity metrics such as the revenue premium or from consumer surveys that measure their knowledge, attitude, and emotional connection towards the brand. This can help managers form a judgement about the strength of their brand and the best sales incentives for the brand. A combination of individual and group incentives can sometimes be better than having just one type of incentive, although not so much for weaker brands, which may find that offering a group incentive alone is best. It is important to adopt a holistic approach when devising marketing strategies. For instance, when a brand allocates substantial resources over time to elevate its brand image, it is imperative for managers to evaluate potential adjustments to the compensation structures of their customer-facing BMR employees. Full article and author contact information available at: https://doi.org/10.1177/00222429241249424

About the Journal of Marketing 

The Journal of Marketing develops and disseminates knowledge about real-world marketing questions useful to scholars, educators, managers, policy makers, consumers, and other societal stakeholders around the world. Published by the American Marketing Association since its founding in 1936, JM has played a significant role in shaping the content and boundaries of the marketing discipline. Shrihari (Hari) Sridhar (Joe Foster ’56 Chair in Business Leadership, Professor of Marketing at Mays Business School, Texas A&M University) serves as the current Editor in Chief.
https://www.ama.org/jm

About the American Marketing Association (AMA)

As the leading global professional marketing association, the AMA is the essential community for marketers. From students and practitioners to executives and academics, we aim to elevate the profession, deepen knowledge, and make a lasting impact. The AMA is home to five premiere scholarly journals including: Journal of Marketing, Journal of Marketing Research, Journal of Public Policy and Marketing, Journal of International Marketing, and Journal of Interactive Marketing. Our industry-leading training events and conferences define future forward practices, while our professional development and PCM® professional certification advance knowledge. With 70 chapters and a presence on 350 college campuses across North America, the AMA fosters a vibrant community of marketers. The association’s philanthropic arm, the AMA’s Foundation, is inspiring a more diverse industry and ensuring marketing research impacts public good. 

AMA views marketing as the activity, set of institutions, and processes for creating, communicating, delivering, and exchanging offerings that have value for customers, clients, partners, and society at large. You can learn more about AMA’s learning programs and certifications, conferences and events, and scholarly journals at AMA.org. 

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Discovery gives answers to parents of children with rare disease

Discovery gives answers to parents of children with rare disease
2024-08-27
Shortly after Kelly Cervantes’ daughter Adelaide was born, she started having terrible seizures. Doctors were unable to give her a solution, or even a cause. “We never had an overarching diagnosis for her, which was extraordinarily frustrating and isolating,” she says. “If we did, we could join groups or talk to people who had various symptoms in common. We also had no idea what her prognosis looked like, or if we could have other children.” Over time her condition worsened and sadly she died five days before her fourth birthday. “She ...

UT Health San Antonio School of Dentistry names director of Center for Pain Therapeutics and Addiction Research

2024-08-27
SAN ANTONIO, Aug. 27, 2024 – Kenneth M. Hargreaves, DDS, PhD, professor of endodontics at the School of Dentistry of The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio (UT Health San Antonio), has been named inaugural director of the school’s Center for Pain Therapeutics and Addiction Research. Hargreaves, who chaired the Department of Endodontics at the school for 26 years, is a world-renowned expert in pain research and has served as principal or co-principal investigator on numerous National Institutes of Health, Department of Defense and foundation-funded projects totaling more than $139 million. Just recently, his research proposal, ...

Researchers develop affordable, rapid blood test for brain cancer

Researchers develop affordable, rapid blood test for brain cancer
2024-08-27
Researchers at the University of Notre Dame have developed a novel, automated device capable of diagnosing glioblastoma, a fast-growing and incurable brain cancer, in less than an hour. The average glioblastoma patient survives 12-18 months after diagnosis. The crux of the diagnostic is a biochip that uses electrokinetic technology to detect biomarkers, or active Epidermal Growth Factor Receptors (EGFRs), which are overexpressed in certain cancers such as glioblastoma and found in extracellular vesicles. “Extracellular vesicles or exosomes are unique ...

NREL advances method for recyclable wind turbine blades

2024-08-27
Researchers at the U.S. Department of Energy’s National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) see a realistic path forward to the manufacture of bio-derivable wind blades that can be chemically recycled and the components reused, ending the practice of old blades winding up in landfills at the end of their useful life. The findings are published in the new issue of the journal Science. The new resin, which is made of materials produced using bio-derivable resources, performs on par with the current industry standard of blades made from a thermoset resin and outperforms certain thermoplastic resins intended to be recyclable. The researchers built a prototype 9-meter blade to ...

Atomic resolution of the broad-spectrum antiviral drug cascade to facilitate the design of antiviral drugs

Atomic resolution of the broad-spectrum antiviral drug cascade to facilitate the design of antiviral drugs
2024-08-27
Atomic resolution of the broad-spectrum antiviral drug cascade to facilitate the design of antiviral drugs   In your coverage, please use this URL to provide access to the freely available paper in PLOS Biology:   http://journals.plos.org/plosbiology/article?id=10.1371/journal.pbio.3002743 Article Title: The activation cascade of the broad-spectrum antiviral bemnifosbuvir characterized at atomic resolution Author Countries: France, United States, Germany Funding: see manuscript END ...

This new technique for studying cell receptors could have sweeping implications for drug development

This new technique for studying cell receptors could have sweeping implications for drug development
2024-08-27
One in every three FDA-approved drugs targets a single superfamily of receptors dotting the surfaces of human cells. From beta blockers to antihistamines, these essential, life-saving medications trigger winding biochemical pathways, via these receptors, to ultimately prevent a heart attack, or stop an allergic reaction in its tracks. But scientists have learned that their story is much more complicated than initially believed—a number of these drugs are in fact targeting a complex composed of one receptor and one associated protein. Now, a ...

Bringing environmental justice to disadvantaged communities

2024-08-27
COLUMBUS, Ohio – Not all communities in the United States face the same risks for environmental problems such as air pollution, noise and wastewater.  But how can federal agencies fairly identify which areas deserve the most help?   A new consensus study report from the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine (NASEM) offer recommendations for developing tools that can help answer that question.   “Our job was to create methods to identify disadvantaged communities that most need federal resources to address environmental justice issues,” said Harvey Miller, ...

Wiener studying learning & metacognition for the perception of time

2024-08-27
Wiener Studying Learning & Metacognition For The Perception Of Time Martin Wiener, Associate Professor, Psychology, College of Humanities and Social Sciences (CHSS), received funding to study learning and metacognition for the perception of time.  Via this research, Wiener will conduct a series of studies that will inform metacognition and interval timing. He holds that this work will lead to a new domain of study to further understand how humans learn and adapt to temporal intervals. By understanding how the brain measures and learns intervals of time, we can better understand ...

Dumas receives funding for study of how distinct NMDA receptor signaling domains regulate hippocampal network dynamics

2024-08-27
Dumas Receives Funding For Study Of How Distinct NMDA Receptor Signaling Domains Regulate Hippocampal Network Dynamics Theodore Dumas, Associate Professor, Psychology, College of Humanities and Social Sciences (CHSS), received funding for the project: “Distinct NMDA receptor signaling domains regulate hippocampal network dynamics. Dumas and his collaborators hypothesize that in wildtype mice, NMDA receptors regulate hippocampal network oscillatory activity (slow gamma frequency) in the absence of ion conductance (nonionotropic) and that enhancing GluN2B subunit-type nonionotropic signaling will increase slow gamma power and enhance spatial memory retrieval. The researchers ...

Second genetic sensor for DNA methylation discovered

2024-08-27
DNA methylation is a process in which a methyl group is attached to the cytosine base of the DNA molecule, and a major way that DNA is epigenetically marked. Epigenetic modifications can act as on-off switches to regulate gene expression and help generate diverse cell types without changing the underlying DNA sequence. It is how the body ensures that brain-related genes don’t get turned on in heart cells, for example. For this reason, maintenance of the DNA methylation pattern is important to ensure the correct and consistent function of each cell type. But this is no easy feat: the DNA methylation pattern can change over time, and this is linked to a variety of diseases. One ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Illinois Institute of Technology Architecture Programs earn National Sustainability Designation from U.S. Department of Energy

Rice research could make weird AI images a thing of the past

NIH awards establish pandemic preparedness research network

$3.9 million grant accelerates UVA professor's efforts to detect Alzheimer’s early

Flowers use adjustable ‘paint by numbers’ petal designs to attract pollinators

Men behind the wheel: Three times more violations and accidents than women

Research alert: Technique to study how proteins bind to DNA is easily misused; New study offers solution

Edible insects show promise as sustainable nutritional source

Machine learning could help reduce hospitalizations by nearly 30% during a pandemic, study finds

E-cigarette brands are skirting the rules about health warning labels on Instagram

Scientists discover potential cause of an enigmatic vascular disease primarily impacting women

Stimulant, antidepressant, and opioid telehealth prescription trends between 2019 and 2022

One-year weight reduction with semaglutide or liraglutide in clinical practice

Adolescents and young adults’ sources of contraceptive information

Health warnings on Instagram advertisements for synthetic nicotine e-cigarettes and engagement

Cleveland Clinic study identifies key factors that can impact long-term weight loss in patients with obesity who were prescribed GLP-1 RA medications

Neoself-antigens induce autoimmunity in lupus

New therapy that targets and destroys tau tangles is a promising future Alzheimer’s disease treatment

Study finds ‘supercharging’ T cells with mitochondria enhances their antitumor activity

Harnessing the power of porosity: A new era for aqueous zinc-ion batteries and large-scale energy storage

Antibody-drug conjugate found effective against brain metastases in patients with HER2-positive breast cancer

Bacteria work together to thrive in difficult conditions

An ‘invasive’ marine organism has become an economic resource in the eastern Mediterranean

Unveiling the math behind your calendar

New research finds employees feel pressure to work while sick, which has been shown to cost companies billions

Harnessing egg yolk power: A new approach to paprika oleoresin stability

Millions of depressed Americans could benefit from psychedelic therapy, study finds

Towards the realization of compact and portable nuclear clocks

Global warming's economic blow: Risks rise more rapidly for the rich

CRISPR/Cas9 modifies euglena to create potential biofuel source

[Press-News.org] The importance of brand strength when designing group and individual sales incentives in brand-managed retail sales settings
News from the Journal of Marketing