Culture as a research bias factor in bilingual markets.

The emergence of global markets has been marked by a parallel emergence of bilingualism. This poses a growing dilemma concerning the language in which marketing communications should be framed, as it seems likely that the use of a language could form a trigger that places a message recipient in a ce...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Lee, Kin Man., Ong, Randall Choon Poh.
Other Authors: Marshall, Roger
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/7417
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author Lee, Kin Man.
Ong, Randall Choon Poh.
author2 Marshall, Roger
author_facet Marshall, Roger
Lee, Kin Man.
Ong, Randall Choon Poh.
author_sort Lee, Kin Man.
collection NTU
description The emergence of global markets has been marked by a parallel emergence of bilingualism. This poses a growing dilemma concerning the language in which marketing communications should be framed, as it seems likely that the use of a language could form a trigger that places a message recipient in a certain frame of mind. This is the issue addressed in this paper. Data collected from two matched groups of survey respondents in Singapore, distinguished by age, gender and social class, show that language frame does play a significant part in generating different responses to market research questions.
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spelling ntu-10356/74172024-01-12T10:32:15Z Culture as a research bias factor in bilingual markets. Lee, Kin Man. Ong, Randall Choon Poh. Marshall, Roger Nanyang Business School DRNTU::Business::Marketing::Research The emergence of global markets has been marked by a parallel emergence of bilingualism. This poses a growing dilemma concerning the language in which marketing communications should be framed, as it seems likely that the use of a language could form a trigger that places a message recipient in a certain frame of mind. This is the issue addressed in this paper. Data collected from two matched groups of survey respondents in Singapore, distinguished by age, gender and social class, show that language frame does play a significant part in generating different responses to market research questions. Master of Business Administration 2008-09-18T07:45:21Z 2008-09-18T07:45:21Z 2000 2000 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10356/7417 en Nanyang Technological University 36 p. application/pdf
spellingShingle DRNTU::Business::Marketing::Research
Lee, Kin Man.
Ong, Randall Choon Poh.
Culture as a research bias factor in bilingual markets.
title Culture as a research bias factor in bilingual markets.
title_full Culture as a research bias factor in bilingual markets.
title_fullStr Culture as a research bias factor in bilingual markets.
title_full_unstemmed Culture as a research bias factor in bilingual markets.
title_short Culture as a research bias factor in bilingual markets.
title_sort culture as a research bias factor in bilingual markets
topic DRNTU::Business::Marketing::Research
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/7417
work_keys_str_mv AT leekinman cultureasaresearchbiasfactorinbilingualmarkets
AT ongrandallchoonpoh cultureasaresearchbiasfactorinbilingualmarkets