Cultural adaptation in cross border e-commerce: A study of German companies
TL;DRAbstract
The standardization vs. adaptation debate in international marketing is still ongoing, yet, in the online realm the \ndiscussion is only just emerging. While practitioners are excited to jump on the online communication and \ncommerce bandwagon, empirical research on the issue of online standardization vs. adaptation is still relatively \nlimited and mostly concerns US firms. This paper explores 100 German companies’ domestic, U.S., U.K. and Latin \nAmerican websites and employs a cultural value analysis. We build on Hofstede’s and Hall’s cultural framework. \nFindings suggest that cultural value depiction is not very strong in the relevant markets, thus a certain degree of \n‘cultural alienation’ takes place. It is suggested that to engage better with their customer and reach better cultural \ncongruency companies need to work harder on developing culturally adapted websites.
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The standardization vs. adaptation debate in international marketing is still ongoing, yet, in the online realm the \ndiscussion is only just emerging. While practitioners are excited to jump on the online communication and \ncommerce bandwagon, empirical research on the issue of online standardization vs. adaptation is still relatively \nlimited and mostly concerns US firms. This paper explores 100 German companies’ domestic, U.S., U.K. and Latin \nAmerican websites and employs a cultural value analysis. We build on Hofstede’s and Hall’s cultural framework. \nFindings suggest that cultural value depiction is not very strong in the relevant markets, thus a certain degree of \n‘cultural alienation’ takes place. It is suggested that to engage better with their customer and reach better cultural \ncongruency companies need to work harder on developing culturally adapted websites.
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