Abstract
Promoting growth by differentiating products is a core tenet of marketing. However, establishing and quantifying marketing’s causal impact on firm growth, while critical, can be difficult. This article examines the effects of a business support intervention in which international professionals from different functional backgrounds (e.g., marketing, consulting) volunteered time to help Ugandan entrepreneurs improve growth. Findings from a multiyear field experiment show that entrepreneurs who were randomly matched with volunteer marketers significantly increased firm growth: on average, monthly sales grew by 51.7%, monthly profits improved by 35.8%, total assets increased by 31.0%, and number of paid employees rose by 23.8%. A linguistic analysis of interactions between volunteers and entrepreneurs indicates that the marketers spent more time on product-related topics than other volunteers. Further mechanism analyses indicate that the marketers helped the entrepreneurs focus on premium products to differentiate in the marketplace. In line with the study’s process evidence, firms with greater market knowledge or resource availability benefited significantly more than their peers when matched with volunteer marketers. As small-scale businesses form the commercial backbone of most emerging markets, their performance and development are critically important. Marketers’ positive impact on these businesses highlights the need for the field’s increased presence in emerging markets.
Funder
London Business School
university of notre dame
Stanford Graduate School of Business
private enterprise development in low-income countries, centre for economic policy research
department for international development, uk government
economic and social research council
Uganda office of Innovations for Poverty Action
booth school of business, university of chicago
John A. and Cynthia Fry Gunn Faculty Scholar award
london school of economics and political science
Stanford Institute for Innovation in Developing Economies
Grow Movement
Deloitte Institute for Innovation and Entrepreneurship
london business school
Stanford Center on Global Poverty and Development
Subject
Marketing,Business and International Management
Cited by
24 articles.
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