Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
886291 | Journal of Retailing | 2015 | 17 Pages |
•We examine how cultural elements influence the international diffusion of new products.•We elicit the cultural content of the product using consumers’ online product reviews.•We rely on cultural discount, cultural premium, and cultural categorization theories.•We conduct our empirical analysis on American movies.
We investigate factors influencing the international retailing of cultural products by concentrating on two cultural elements: (1) consumer-perceived cultural content embedded in the product and (2) the general cultural environment of the foreign market. To test cross-culture predictability in international retailing, we develop a novel text mining procedure to elicit the specific cultural content of the product using consumers’ online product reviews. In addition, to measure the general cultural environment of the market, we apply Hofstede's cultural distance measure. To explain foreign markets’ acceptance of culturally specific elements, we theorize that the relationship between inter-country cultural distance and product sales is U shaped because of both cultural discount and cultural premium. In our empirical analysis using American movies in international retailing, we find that the two specified types of cultural factors determine a movie's success, along with the movie's characteristics and the market's economic environment. From a managerial perspective, international retailers that understand the delicate implications of the match/mismatch of their general national culture and the imported product's specific cultural content can better predict the international success of imported cultural products.
Graphical abstractFigure optionsDownload full-size imageDownload as PowerPoint slide