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This research paper analyzes the role of pre-crisis
reputation for quality on consumers ’ perceptions of
product-related dangers and company responsibility
in product-harm crises with varying risk information.
We consider (non-) substantiated public
complaints incorporating low and moderate product-
related risks, as well as product-recall situations
involving serious risks to the health and safety of
consumers. Hypotheses are derived from theories
and concepts of consumer behavioural psychology.
These are then tested empirically by using an
online experiment. The effects of reputation are
analyzed across different crises contexts to derive
some general insights useful for crisis management.
In order to shed light on situational differences of
the reputation mechanism its effect on individual
crisis level will also be considered. In general, the
analysis fi nds that reputation for quality is capable
of positively infl uencing the perceptions of company
responsibility and thereby shielding the
manufacturer from receiving blame. However, an
established reputation for high product quality
prior to the crisis fails to positively impacting
consumers ’ perceptions of problem severity. The
crisis-specifi c effects of reputation turn out to be
ambivalent. On the basis of these fi ndings, recommendations
to crisis managers and relevant avenues
for future research are derived.
Spätestens seit der breiten Rezeption, die das 2002 erschienene Buch von Richard Florida (The Rise of the Creative Class) erfahren hat, ist die Bedeutung von Wissenschaft und Kreativität für die Stadtentwicklung in vielen Kommunen erkannt worden. Städte und Regionen konkurrieren in zunehmend globalem Maßstab um Hochqualifizierte, um die Ansiedlung von Hochschulen, Forschungseinrichtungen und um innovative Unternehmen. Deshalb versuchen sich viele Kommunen mittlerweile als Wissenschaftsstandort zu profilieren. Die Autorin geht der Frage nach, was eine Wissenschaftsstadt von einem Wissenschaftsstandort unterscheidet und welche unterschiedlichen kommunalen Strategien sich in diesem Feld unterscheiden lassen.
Zwischen Bologna und Hsinchu : Die Entdeckung der Wissenschaftsstadt durch Kommunalverwaltungen
(2011)
This study examined the relation between employees' perceived extent of change and adaptive performance, focusing on the roles of expressive suppression (i.e. the habit of suppressing overt expressions of emotion) at work and perceived strain. Analysing survey data of 153 employees in Germany with different occupational backgrounds via bootstrapping, the conceptual moderated indirect effect scheme was supported. As hypothesized, greater changes were associated with higher strain. Strain, in turn, was negatively related to adaptive performance. Although extent of change did not directly affect adaptive performance, the data supported the expected indirect relationship via strain. Finally, expressive suppression at work acted as a buffer of this indirect effect: extent of change was only negatively related to strain for employees low in suppression. In line with newer evidence, our results indicate that the suppression of overt emotional expressions at work can have positive effects under certain circumstances.