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Dr. Ekant Veer, University of Canterbury Presentation given at Griffith University, Brisbane, 27 th August 2012. Social Marketing and TCR... What does the Future Hold?. A little about me. PhD at Auckland 2007 Lecturer at University of Bath 2006-2010
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Dr. Ekant Veer, University of Canterbury Presentation given at Griffith University, Brisbane, 27th August 2012 Social Marketing and TCR...What does the Future Hold?
A little about me... • PhD at Auckland 2007 • Lecturer at University of Bath 2006-2010 • Senior Lecturer of Marketing, University of Canterbury since 2010 • Most of my research focuses on consumer welfare and impact of identity on consumption choices • Social media’s impact on contemporary consumer culture • Editor of JRC, editorial board of JCB, CMC, IJEM • On the Transformative Consumer Research Advisory Board, Chaired by David Glenn Mick • ACR’s Communications Co-ordinator
Why am I here? • What does the future hold for Social Marketing/TCR style research? • Is there a future in this field? • How can we ensure we all have jobs? • How can we ensure we have meaning in those jobs? • Answer questions/dispel myths...
Social Marketing & TCR • Social marketing is the use of contemporary marketing technologies to affect the voluntary behavioural change of consumers to improve their lives and the society of which they are a part (Adapted from Andreasan, 1994) • TCR involve “investigations that are framed by a fundamental problem or opportunity, and that strive to respect, uphold, and improve life in relation to the myriad conditions, demands, potentialities, and effects of consumption.” (Mick, 2006) • Or, more simply put, “Research that focuses on improving the lives of consumers”
Social Marketing & TCR Public Policy Research Social Marketing TCR
Tensions... • We have knowledge, skills and perspectives in marketing, consumer behaviour and business in general that can add to the debate • We have a passion for this type of research and impacting a wider population • We see a greater purpose to our roles as academics (consciences of society) • There are greater opportunities for external funding • Pressure to publish • We have an ‘outsider’ stigma and, especially in marketing, deemed to be part of the problem, rather than the cure • We lack a track record • We lack a community. Although, this is improving On the one hand... ...but, on the other
What’s the problem? • Our engagement in the wider field is loose • Individuals have strong relationships, but as a field, we are separated if not stigmatised • Our access to the success and fortunes afforded to the wider group is tenuous • Our work, ultimately, is ignored by those outside our field • Our careers suffer...
So, why am I here? • To resolve tension? • To broadcast our availability to a wider population? • To convince everyone to do more social marketing/TCR style research? • To steer you away from SM/TCR? • To identify areas of opportunity and help you frame your research to target them... • To add meaning into your jobs...
Are there such things as ‘Hot’ topics? • Yes and no... • General consensus that the best received topics are ones that make a contribution to knowledge and have an impact on society • TCR and Social Marketing excel on societal impact • But...can suffer on contribution to knowledge • Can be difficult to fulfil the promises we make
What’s the plan? • Career focused? • Stick to what you’re doing and what you’ve been told • Publish rigorous/tight experiments with counter intuitive findings • Publish qualitative work with explanatory power on interesting contexts – the more deviant, the better • Submit them to marketing journals • Repeat
However... • A career focused approach can turn you into a publishing machine, but can affect the impact of your work beyond the field • It can build an indifference for the population being investigated and an excessive focus on the means of getting published, rather than the role of dissemination
Betterment Focus • “If I made one person’s life better, and never published an internationally recognised journal article, I can die happy” • Laudable pursuit, but affects your career progression • Not a good thing, as career & status does affect your ability to gain external funding
Finding Balance • Look to where you add value • Look to where you offer greatest impact • Look to publish in forms that achieve both career and external impact criteria
What do people value from marketing academics? Promotion, Entrepreneurship, Marketisation/Market entry strategies, Cultural & experiential meaning, Consumer activism, Alternative Perspective Experiments Clinical Studies Methods Impact studies Behavioural impact Social Psychology Critical Studies
Publish in forms where you’ll make the greatest contribution • Obviously, ranked journals • Easiest to hit marketing ones • Find areas you can add value to non-marketing journals • Journals that are interdisciplinary • Journals that offer alternative forms of publication • POLICY DOCUMENTS! For you For your area of investigation
So, what does the future hold? • Integration and collaboration • A silo approach will never impact the wider field • We can offer value, but it must reflect our areas of perceived excellence • Mercenary approach to tackling social problems – we can’t do this on our own
What is being done... • More and more TCR style work is being submitted to and published in top CB outlets • HOWEVER, the most impactful research is being submitted to cross-disciplinary outlets (not just in I-factor scores) • Funding is available to support efficacious projects (from TCR, ACR and traditional funding bodies) • Frame your projects to exploit areas of specific advantage, not replicate what is being done in other fields