Industrial Marketing and Purchasing Group

The Industrial Marketing and Purchasing Group or International Marketing and Purchasing Group (abbreviated IMP Group) is a European research initiative in the field of Industrial marketing established in 1976 by researchers from different countries and universities in Europe.[1][2] It has evolved into an "informal international group of scholars concerned with developing concepts and knowledge in the field of business-to-business marketing and purchasing."[3] The group is also called the Nordic school of marketing.[4][5]

History

In 1976 the Industrial Marketing and Purchasing Group started as a joint research project of scientists for the Swedish University of Uppsala, the British University of Bath and University of Manchester Institute of Science and Technology, the French Ecole Superieure de Commerce, Lyon (now EMLYON Business School), and the German Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich. The IMP Group (2010) explained:

The first IMP Group research project was developed on the basis of empirical observations which did not fit into the mainstream economic theories’ assumption about an atomistic market: Industrial marketing and purchasing appeared to take place within stable, long-term business relationships. But why do companies develop these interdependencies? What benefits could outweigh the drawbacks of being dependent on others? These and other related research questions have triggered a large number of empirical studies over the past three decades of the “doing of business”, carried out by increasing numbers of researchers. These scholars have investigated a wide variety of interactions between individual companies and organisations as well as the wider network that surrounds them. These empirical studies, including issues such as marketing, purchasing, technological development, management, logistics, business communities and policy all challenge mainstream business theory and call for theoretical tools that allow investigations of the interactive aspects of the business landscape.[6]

The initial research of the IMP Group, as Young 1989 acknowledged added "significantly to the knowledge of how companies in industrial markets develop their international activities and what has contributed to the success of companies."[7] Möller and Wilson (1995) mentioned that this "work of the IMP Group can be accessed through Hakansson (1982) and Ford (1990)." [8]

In 2012 Rider et al. confirmed, that "the work of the IMP Group is reported in some dozen books, about 2,000 papers and more than 130 Ph.D. studies," based on data from the IMP Group website in 2009.[9]

gollark: I don't actually "study" machine learning as much as "randomly acquire and use low-end pretrained models".
gollark: Semihyperbeeologistics.
gollark: This is with *hypo*beeologistics.
gollark: The original is this, but I subjected it to hyperbeeologistics.
gollark: Descent into the apiohyperdomain.

References

  1. Turnbull, Peter, David Ford, and Malcolm Cunningham. "Interaction, relationships and networks in business markets: an evolving perspective." Journal of Business & Industrial Marketing 11.3/4 (1996): 44-62.
  2. Ford, David. "Guest editorial: The IMP Group and international marketing." International Marketing Review 21.2 (2004): 139-141.
  3. The Supply Chain Yearbook, McGraw-Hill, 2001. p. 475
  4. Christian Grönroos. "Marketing redefined." Management Decision 28.8 (1990).
  5. Nicholas O'Shaughnessy, Stephan C. M. Henneberg (2002) The Idea of Political Marketing. p. 102
  6. About the IMP Group, at impgroup.org, 2000-2010. Accessed 29.01.2015.
  7. Stephen Young (1989). International market entry and development: strategies and management. p. 94-95
  8. Kristian Möller, David T Wilson (1995). Business Marketing: An Interaction and Network Perspective. p. xvi
  9. Sharon Rider, Ylva Hasselberg, Alexandra Waluszewski (2012) Transformations in Research, Higher Education and the Academic Market: The Breakdown of Scientific. p. 73

Further reading

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