Title of article :
The role of conflict, culture, and myth in creating attitudinal commitment
Author/Authors :
Bodkin، نويسنده , , Charles D. and Amato، نويسنده , , Christie and Peters، نويسنده , , Cara، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Pages :
7
From page :
1013
To page :
1019
Abstract :
Using qualitative methods, the authors examine commitment in the sports industry and specifically in a NASCAR context. Commitment, or the culmination of the customer-service provider relationship, plays a particularly critical role in NASCAR, for which more than 70% of fans consciously choose a current sponsorʹs brand over a competitorʹs. Previous research, primarily in the domain of business-to-business marketing, focuses on attitudinal, instrumental, and temporal components of commitment; this article examines attitudinal commitment within the NASCAR context. Whereas previous research conceptualizes attitudinal commitment as identification, value congruence, and affiliation, this research presents a wider view. Specifically, within the NASCAR consumption culture, hero/villain myths surrounding drivers create conflict that heightens attitudinal commitment to the sport. This research therefore offers implications regarding non-traditional components of attitudinal commitment.
Keywords :
Mythology , commitment , Marketing , NASCAR , Consumer behavior
Journal title :
Journal of Business Research
Serial Year :
2009
Journal title :
Journal of Business Research
Record number :
1954315
Link To Document :
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