Franchising rhetoric: a cross cultural study
Transcription
Franchising rhetoric: a cross cultural study
Anna Watson Hertfordshire Business School University of Hertfordshire Hatfield Hertfordshire AL10 9AB UK +44 1707 28 5535 [email protected] Owen Wright Griffith Business School Nathan campus, Griffith University, 170 Kessels Road, Nathan QLD 4111, Australia +61 7 3735 3557 [email protected] Lola Dada Lancaster University Management School Lancaster, LA1 4YX UK +44 1524 510711 [email protected] Franchising rhetoric: a cross cultural study This study explores the rhetoric franchisors use in digital communication of their franchise concept in a cross cultural context. Research shows that recruitment of suitable franchisees is a key challenge for franchise organisations. Franchisees have a broad range of franchising opportunities to select from (Michael, 2003), and thus, “..franchisors must compete with each other by marketing their opportunity to franchisees” (Zachary et al, 2011, p. 630). Whilst little research has considered the promotion of franchise opportunities to date, the study by Zachary et al (2011) is a notable exception. They suggest franchisors will seek to project their organisational identity into the promotional rhetoric (in this instance their web promotional material) in order to attract potential franchisees that “…align with their core values and beliefs” (Zachary et al, 2011, p. 630). In their study of US franchises they found franchisors use entrepreneurial and market oriented rhetoric to attract franchisees. This study seeks to build upon the noteworthy work of Zachary et al (2011) by considering how web promotional rhetoric may differ across different cultural contexts. Given different levels of maturity of franchise sectors across countries, and differing cultures, the rhetoric franchisors use to attract potential franchisees may not be the same. It is crucial to understand whether this rhetoric differs across cultures so as to know how it affects the promotion of franchise brands, especially for those franchise brands considering international expansion. In addition, as Dant (2008) has highlighted it is important to consider (and compare) franchising in markets beyond the US. As such, this paper contributes to the emerging stream of franchise branding literature by examining the rhetoric used by franchisors when promoting their concepts to potential franchisees in trade franchise directories, comparing the rhetoric across four cultures: the UK, Australia, India and South Africa. The paper explores whether culture, in terms of individualism/collectivism, uncertainty avoidance and assertiveness influences how franchisors communicate their franchise brand, as well as considering the impact of differing levels of maturity and regulatory context of the franchise industry. A computerised content analysis programme, DICTION, is used to enable thematic content analysis (Smith & Taffler, 2000) of franchise promotional materials in order to identify if cultural differences exist. DICTION has been widely used to reveal latent dimensions in corporate texts (Craig & Brennan, 2012; Ober, Zhao, Davis, & Alexander, 1999; Short & Palmer, 2008; Sydserff & Weetman, 2002). The results reveal that franchise promotional narratives (as part of the branding process) reflect the culture in which the franchise brand is located. That is, the communication of franchise brands tends to be influenced by country culture. The management implications of this are explored. To the authors’ knowledge, this is the first study to explore franchise branding narrative in a cross cultural context, and indeed, is the first to explore the semantic features of franchise brand promotions outside of the US. 1
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