| Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type | 
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5111029 | Industrial Marketing Management | 2017 | 9 Pages | 
Abstract
												This paper conceptualizes the notion of actionable marketing knowledge by investigating how market researchers produce and justify actionable recommendations for their clients. We build upon the market practices approach, as well as a close reading of market research reports, to conceptualize the rhetorical strategies used to guide firms into action. The findings show three rhetorical strategies: First, framing managerial anomalies draws managerial attention to perplexing situations. Second, loading instruments with meaning develops a narrative in which charts and tables “speak for themselves.” Third, signposting prescriptions reduces interpretive flexibility by encoding guidelines within the text intended to lead readers to an intended interpretation. The relevance for business marketing is that by studying the ways representations are encoded in business reports, business scholars can better understand knowledge calibration in the theory-praxis gap.
											Keywords
												
											Related Topics
												
													Social Sciences and Humanities
													Business, Management and Accounting
													Marketing
												
											Authors
												Diaz Ruiz Carlos, Holmlund Maria, 
											