Market selection and product positioning decisions’ implications for short- and long-term performance: evidence from the US music industry

J. Hoskins, A. Griffin
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Abstract

Purpose This research paper aims to investigate detailed relationships between market selection and product positioning decisions and their associated short- and long-term product performance outcomes in the context of the music category: a cultural goods industry with high amounts of product introductions. Market selection decisions are defined by the size, competitiveness and age of market subcategories within an overall product category. Positioning decisions include where a product’s attributes are located spatially in the category (periphery versus the market center), whether a product resides within a single subcategory or spans multiple ones and what brand strategy (single versus co-branding) is used. Design/methodology/approach Data are from multiple sources for the US music industry (aka product category) from 1958 to 2019 to empirically test the hypotheses: genres (rock, blues, etc.) correspond to subcategories; artists to brands; and songs to products. Regression analyses are used. Findings A complex set of nuanced results are generated and reported, finding that key marketing decisions drive short-term new product success differently and frequently in opposing ways than long-term success. Launching into very new, well-established or very competitive markets leads to the strongest long-term success, despite less attractive short-run prospects. Positioning a product away from the market center and spanning subcategories similarly poses short-run challenges, but long-run returns. Brand collaborations have reverse effects. Short-run product success is found, overall, to be difficult to predict even with strong data inputs, which has substantial implications for how firms should manage portfolios of products in cultural goods industries. Long-run product success is considerably more predictable after short-run success is observed and accounted for. Originality/value While managers and firms in cultural goods industries have long relied on intuition to manage market selection and product positioning decisions, this research tests the hypothesis that objective data inputs and empirical modeling can better predict short- and long-run success of launched products. Specific insights on which song characteristics may be associated with success are found – as are more generalizable, industry-level results. In addition, by distinguishing between short- and long-run success, a more complete picture on how key decisions holistically affect product performance emerges. Many market selection and product positioning decisions have differential impacts across these two frames of reference.
市场选择和产品定位决策对短期和长期业绩的影响:来自美国音乐行业的证据
本研究旨在调查市场选择和产品定位决策之间的详细关系,以及在音乐类别的背景下,它们相关的短期和长期产品性能结果。音乐类别是一个具有大量产品介绍的文化产品行业。市场选择决策是由整体产品类别中市场子类别的规模、竞争力和年龄来定义的。定位决策包括产品属性在类别中的空间位置(外围还是市场中心),产品是属于单个子类别还是跨越多个类别,以及使用何种品牌策略(单一还是联合品牌)。设计/方法/方法数据来自1958年至2019年美国音乐行业(又名产品类别)的多个来源,以经验检验假设:流派(摇滚,蓝调等)对应子类别;艺术家到品牌;和歌曲的产品。采用回归分析。一系列复杂而微妙的结果被生成和报告,发现关键的营销决策推动新产品短期成功的方式不同,而且往往与长期成功的方式相反。进入非常新的、成熟的或竞争激烈的市场会带来最强大的长期成功,尽管短期前景不那么诱人。将产品定位在远离市场中心的地方,并跨越子类别,同样会带来短期挑战,但长期回报。品牌合作有相反的效果。总体而言,即使有强大的数据输入,短期产品成功也很难预测,这对企业如何管理文化产品行业的产品组合具有重大意义。在观察和解释短期成功之后,产品的长期成功更容易预测。创意/价值虽然文化产品产业的管理者和企业长期依靠直觉来管理市场选择和产品定位决策,但本研究检验了客观数据输入和实证建模可以更好地预测推出产品的短期和长期成功的假设。对于歌曲的哪些特征可能与成功有关,我们找到了具体的见解——这是更普遍的、行业水平的结果。此外,通过区分短期和长期成功,可以更全面地了解关键决策如何从整体上影响产品性能。许多市场选择和产品定位决策对这两个参考框架有不同的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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