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How the Emphasis on Original Empirical Marketing Research Impedes Knowledge Development
Raymond Hubbard
Drake University, USA
R. Murray Lindsay
University of Western Ontario, Canada
Empirical research in marketing should focus on the development of empirical generalizations. Marketers do a huge amount of empirical research, but have little in the way of empirical generalizations. This is primarily because most empirical research consists of original or novel works looking for significant differences, rather than significant sameness, in unrelated data sets, thus exemplifying the cult of the isolated study. As a result, the marketing literature is made up largely of uncorroborated, fragmented, one-off results. Such results are of little use to marketing practitioners or academicians. We discuss a number of impediments to the development of empirical generalizations preoccupation with the hypotheticodeductive conception of science, preoccupation with statistical rather than empirical generalization, the publish or perish syndrome in academia, and denigration of replication-with-extension research. We conclude that replication-with-extension research must be championed as the vehicle for discovering empirical generalizations.
Key Words: empirical generalizations knowledge development original research replications-with-extensions statistical generalizations
Marketing Theory, Vol. 2, No. 4,
381-402 (2002)
DOI: 10.1177/147059310200200408

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