UNIVERSITY OF ECONOMICS HO CHI MINH CITYInternational School of Business ---IMPACT OF CORPORATE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY AND CORPORATE REPUTATION ON CONSUMER ATTITUDE TOWARD FOOD PRODUCTS
Trang 1UNIVERSITY OF ECONOMICS HO CHI MINH CITY
International School of Business
-IMPACT OF CORPORATE SOCIAL
RESPONSIBILITY AND CORPORATE
REPUTATION ON CONSUMER ATTITUDE TOWARD FOOD PRODUCTS AND CONSUMER
BEHAVIORAL INTENTION
Cao Thị Hải Âu
MASTER OF BUSINESS (Honours)
Ho Chi Minh City – Year 2014
Trang 2UNIVERSITY OF ECONOMICS HO CHI MINH CITY
International School of Business
-IMPACT OF CORPORATE SOCIAL
RESPONSIBILITY AND CORPORATE
REPUTATION ON CONSUMER ATTITUDE TOWARD FOOD PRODUCTS AND CONSUMER
Trang 3I would like express my sincere thankfulness to Dr LuuTrong Tuan who is my research supervisor He helped me to understand the purpose of study research, as well asthe process of research Thanks to his help, I can understand clearly about the topic I like and I can complete my thesis His guidance helps me a lot in performing the thesis, studying theories, and collecting the data This thesis could not be finished without his supporting
I would like to thank Prof Nguyen DinhTho and Prof Nguyen Dong for giving
me helpful advices to correct my thesis I am grateful to Dr Nguyen Thi Mai Trang and
Dr Nguyen ThiNguyetQue with the useful comments for the thesis
I would like to thank to all staffs of ISB for supporting me during the
thesis processes with informing and guiding accurately and on time
I would also like to thank to all of my family members, friends who supported andare by my side throughout my life
Trang 5Chapter 1: INTRODUCTION 1
1.1 Introduction: 1
1.2 Research Problem: 2
1.3 Research Objective and Questions: 4
1.4 Research Structure: 4
Chapter 2: LITERATURE REVIEW 6
2.1 Corporate Social Responsibility: 6
2.2 Corporate Reputation: 8
2.3 Corporate Social Responsibility and Corporate Reputation: 10
2.4 Consumer Attitude toward the Company’s Food Products: 12
2.5 Corporate Social Responsibility and Consumer Attitude toward the Company’s Food Products: 15
2.6 Corporate Reputation and Consumer Attitude toward the Company’s Food Products: 18
2.7 Consumer Behavioral Intention: 20
2.8 Consumer Attitude toward the Company’s Food Products and Consumer Behavioral Intention: 22
2.9 Model: 24
2.10 Summary: 26
Chapter 3: METHODOLOGY 27
3.1 Research Approach: 27
3.2 Survey Research Method: 27
3.3 Questionnaire Design: 29
3.3.1 Scale Measurement: 31
3.3.2 Questionnaire: 32
3.4 Sampling Method: 33
3.5 Data Collection: 33
3.6 Data Preparation: 34
3.7 Summary: 35
Chapter 4: RESULTS AND DISCUSSION 36
4.1 Cronbach’s Alpha: 36
4.2 Exploratory Factor Analysis (EFA): 37
4.3 Regression Analysis and Multiple Regression Analysis: 38
4.4 Descriptive Analysis: 39
Trang 64.5 Measurement Assessment: 40
4.5.1 Cronbach’s alpha: 40
4.5.2 Exploratory factor analysis (EFA): 42
4.5.3.1 Testing hypothesis 1: 44
4.5.3.2 Testing hypotheses 2 and hypothesis 3: 47
4.5.3.3 Testing Hypothesis 4: 50
4.6 Discussion Results: 53
Chapter 5: CONCLUSION AND IMPLICATION 56
5.1 Findings: 56
5.2 Managerial Implication: 57
5.3 Limitation: 59
5.4 Future Direction: 61
REFERENCES 62
Trang 7Besides, corporate reputation also influences on consumer attitude toward the company’sfood products, as Schwager (2004) defines reputation related to attitude Sen and
Bhattacharya (2001) say corporate social responsibility is a key component of a firm’s marketing toolbox to build their corporate reputation; that means a positive relationship between corporate social responsibility and corporate reputation The research focuses oncorporate social responsibility and corporate reputation influence on consumer attitude toward the company’s food products Attitude changing will lead to behavior changing ofconsumer (Eagly&Chaiken, 1993), consumer attitude toward the company’s food
products and consumer behavioral intention has a positive relationship Both theories of reasoned action (Fishbein&Ajzen, 1975) and of planned behavior (Ajzen, 1991) considerbehavioral intentions to be the most proximal determinant of behavior, and behavioral intention is proposed to be influenced attitude that consumer attitude toward the
Trang 8company’s food products towards consumer behavioral intention By looking and
considering corporate social responsibility and corporate reputation of a company,
consumer can attitude toward their food products; that leads to buy and consume their food products as consumer behavioral intention As well as, producers can change
their images by focusing on building their corporate social responsibility and corporatereputation to lead to consumer attitude toward the company’s food products and gain customer’s consumer behavioral intention
1.2 Research Problem:
Vietnam is a communist country that has opened the economics door to integrate into the global economy by joining ASEAN in 1995, AFTA in 1996; especially Vietnamhas joined WTO since 2007 that opened a new way for Vietnamese economy, as well as gave many opportunities and challenges to Vietnam companies Besides the advantages the economics integrating has given, Vietnam had to face many disadvantages,
difficulties in the process of its development Vietnam has allowed foreign products that exported to Vietnamese market Vietnamese consumers contact with many trademarks ofproducts, as well as variety quality of products Vietnamese also has another
consideration about Vietnamese products One of industrial is food manufacturing is affected Vietnamese customers don’t believe in Vietnam food products They prefer foreign food products such as milk products for babies; they believe that food products from famous trade mark have good quality and they trust the guarantee that the famous organizations posted in the food products’ labels The Vietnam food production lost theircustomer because they lose consumer trust To attract customers to Vietnam food
Trang 9products, the Vietnam food productions need to build their own strategy to gain customertrust The paper supposes to give two supposed factors that maybe influences to attitude toward food products of costumers in Vietnam market Additions, the link between attitude and intention has been explained by Ajzen (1991), and this relationship is also improved a positive one The paper studies the indirect impact of supposed variables corporate social responsibility and corporate reputation on consumer behavioral intentionthrough consumer attitude toward food products.
Every company has its own aim; that is profit The profit comes from consuming
products That their marketing strategy All of four variables in the paper are areas of marketing Because food producers lack of corporate social responsibility and corporate reputation, customers don’t care their food products and avoid buying their food product The paper investigates the relationships of these variables Food producers can build theircorporate social responsibility and corporate reputation to influence on consumer attitudetoward the company’s food products From that, customers can buy their food products,
as previous research about the positive relationship between consumer attitude toward thecompany’s food products and consumer behavioral intention
The purpose of building corporate social responsibility is to enhance corporate reputation, also to gain consumer attitude toward the company’s food products Food producers can attract consumer behavioral intention by their corporate social
responsibility and corporate based on the positive relationship of consumer attitude toward the company’s food products and consumer behavioral intention Corporate socialresponsibility and corporate reputation help food producers to build a long term
Trang 10relationship with the customers based on gaining consumer attitude toward the
company’s food products; the customers would think about their brand when making
a decision on buying food products
1.3 Research Objective and Questions:
The aim of research is to explore the relationships between supposed factors and studied variables Simultaneously, the study shows how the independent variables
influence on the dependent variables In additions, the data analysis will help to
improve these assumptions
1 How do the supposed factors influence on consumer behavioral intention?
2 What kind of relationship between independent variables and dependent variables?
3 How strong are these correlations?
To answer the above questions, the author performs step by step to find the final result The process is described in research process section The organized form of thepaper is indicated in the next section
1.4 Research Structure:
Following the concepts of a typical research paper, the concept of the study
is performed as the list of chapters below:
Chapter 1 illustrates the introduction of the paper, including four sections such as:introduction, research problem, research questions, research Structure
Trang 11Chapter 2 presents literature review, which indicates the contents of concepts and therelationships The supposed hypotheses and the model of the paper are listed in this chapter.
Chapter 3 details the process of methodology that describes 8 steps in total In succession,these are research process, research problem, research approach, survey research method,questionnaire design, sampling method, data collection, and data preparation
Chapter 4 shows the method used to analysis the data and the way of data analysis, aswell as gives the results This chapter describes how the data is analyzed by using datasingle and multiple regression analysis of SPSS 1.6 software
Chapter 5 summarizes the consequences of the paper, as well as
gives recommends, and supposed the future directions
Trang 12Chapter 2: LITERATURE REVIEWThe chapter explains the concepts of the paper and describes the relationship between variables by using the ideas from previous researchers It shows the previousstudies that mention about the impact of independent variables affecting on dependentvariables.
2.1 Corporate Social Responsibility:
There are diversity definitions to describe corporate social responsibility One of them is a concept whereby firms incorporate environmental and social concerns in their business performances on a voluntary base; this definition is given by the European Commission that published a Green paper in 2001 According to Brown and Dacin
(1997), an entity’s activities and its social duties and stakeholder obligations describe itscorporate social responsibility These activities include responsible business practices, employee volunteering, corporate giving and cause-related marketing; a company whichhas social responsible goals, also wishes to bring benefits to its stakeholders that are its employees, individuals, customers, organization and community (Berger, Cunningham and Drumwright, 2007)
There are many definitions of corporate social responsibilities Angelidis and Ibrahim (1993) define corporate social responsibility is the policy and practice of
corporate social involvement to satisfy social needs They find the three types of
corporate social responsibilities in their research; these types are sponsorship, related marketing, and philanthropy These activities show organizational empathy to the
Trang 13cause-community, as well as its stakeholders Meanwhile in Carroll’s Pyramid Model, he
mentions four different kinds of responsibilities indicating CSR; these are economic, legal, ethical, and philanthropic (Snider, Hill, & Martin, 2003) Customers carefully consider a brand, which promises social commitments to their consumers, who would
be influenced about their brand reputation (Pérez, Alcañiz, & Herrera, 2009)
Jamali (2008) says that organizations use corporation social responsibility as a mean
to develop itself, to attract stakeholder’s attention, and contribute to develop social
standards Meanwhile corporate social responsibility is also defined an engagement of an entity to enhance higher and higher living conditions while still protecting benefit of the company, as well as of people both within and outside the firm (Hopkins, 2007) Corporate social responsibility is also known as the way the organization treat its stakeholders and community ethically and responsibly As Carroll (1979) writes, making good profits is a social responsibility when the company thinks that its business is a part of social economic system He also gives four dimensions, such as economic, legal, ethical, and philanthropic, that described in the model of corporate social responsibility Where the economic
responsibility involves to getting profits, the company is responsible to the benefits of
stakeholders The ethical responsibility means about following the laws of government, relevant international, state, federal, and local Meanwhile ethical responsibility talks about moral of an organization; it tries to avoid harm or social injury The firm respects moral of community, individuals; as well as does good things even the laws don’t stipulate these in papers Finally, philanthropic responsibility shows that the
Trang 14company has the good treating people, loving human policy, many activities and extra
behaviors contributing community, society, and cultural enterprises (Carroll, 1979)
The stakeholders such as the community, customers, employees, employers, etc.that are in relationship with a firm, can examine these dimensions of corporate social responsibility of its Besides, corporate social responsibility is structured by two
factors that are doing good things and avoiding impairments; those describe as a
societal marketing concept, (Petkus and Woodruff, 1992) Concepts as following the laws, not breaking rules, supporting special cased in society as well as doing charities, protecting the environment, taking care of employees and people in the community fairly and ethically, implementing company’s responsibility to the society, etc also keyout the defining corporate social responsibility
2.2 Corporate Reputation:
The reputation can be valued as the consequence from doing marketing by
contributing a company’s branding in some fields It also show to an indication of behavior and actions in future Sometimes, it is a possible difficulty for a company to entry into a field of management; or reputation is a kind of goodwill in accounting By producing good product to satisfying experiences from customers builds a reputation of an organization, (Simon, 1985) Meanwhile Weigelt and Camerer (1988) say the reputation is a result of many actions in the past that help to assign an image of an entity
According to Davies, Chun, Silva and Roper (2003); all the organizational actions from the past perform its reputation; those activities supply to stakeholders about images
Trang 15of the organization, and predict the probable activities and strategy for the marketplace inthe future (Fombrun and Riel, 1997) Smaiziene and Jucevicius (2009) reckon corporate reputation including all impressions of customers and a company’s stakeholders about the company by what the company did and does; so corporate reputation is difficult to copy because it is a unique and intangible asset Corporate reputation is also what
relevant public knows about a firm, they can judge about an organization through a socialphenomenon that the organization tries to build to its image Bromley (2001) defines reputation as a distribution of opinions about a company According to Herbig and
Milewicz (1993); corporate reputation is the conglomeration or the perceptive assessment
of many groups about the actions of the company Corporate reputation is viewed as the external stakeholders’ perception about an organization (Davies & Miles, 1998)
Gotsi and Wilson (2001) state corporate as a reflection of view of consumer in a long time about a company Meanwhile, people’s actions toward an organization are
influenced by their beliefs and opinions; that are created into a collective system by the lasting sensing of a firm holding by an individual, a group or network, says Balmer (2001) The importance of these factors of corporate reputation is indicated by definition
of reputation, as the below formula (Doorley and Garcia, 2007) Corporate reputation can be considered as all organizational images that summarize from organizational
performance with organizational behavior plus organizational communication as the below formula
Reputation = sum of images = (Performance + Behavior) + Communication
Trang 16Schwaiger (2004) says that building and corporate reputation sometimes requests using operationalize images with only connotative attribute Organization images can effect
on customer central nervous with planned perception; that lead to behavior and valuation of consumers The stakeholders, who are impressed by the emotive responses of community, consumers, investors, staffs, can give estimation about a company based on its corporate reputation Fombrun and Shanely (1990) pronounce corporate reputation as the overall approximation of the organization Hall (1992) says that corporation reputation is messages that the company wants to communicate with its stakeholders or targeted experiences that the company wants to provide to them, and a firm’s reputation includes emotions and
knowledge, what each person has about an organization
2.3 Corporate Social Responsibility and Corporate Reputation:
According to Fombrun and Shanely (1990), CSR initiatives are means for
organizations to utilize to gain the favorite reputation as its strategy Companies also use CSR as a key component of their marketing weapons because it responds to consumer expectations, improves corporation performance and reputation (Sen and Bhattacharya, 2001) Nan and Heo (2007) also state that CSR initiatives are well established in
marketing literatures as affecting a variety of outcomes; including a firm’s image or reputation Polonsky and Speed (2001) also say that the philanthropic type of CSR is proposed as the most effective initiative to build corporate reputation through association
of causes
Trang 17In addition, the perceptive intimacy of corporate social responsibility and corporate reputation is studied and talked about by many papers and researchers The potential
relationship between corporate social responsibility and corporate reputation is researched more and more, that helps to increase concepts and studies about it Hiilenbrand and Money (2007) state corporate social responsibility and corporate reputation are mutually arising factors and they are different concepts The studies firstly directed to the basal stakeholder group; that are the company’s staffs, employees This group communicates to the firm
previously because they work for the company They judge about the organizational
reputation previously by its policy is for its employees Fombrun and Shanley (1990) state when a firm builds a good policy, social welfare to their employees; that means it is building its corporate social responsibility; that will lead to a good corporate reputation Such as the better corporate social responsibility the entity raises, the better reputation the entity gets back Garberg and Fombrun (20066) also affirm gaining a good reputation is a result of outcome of corporate social responsibility
Docherty and Hibbert (2003) say about the relationship between corporate social responsibility and corporate reputation, there are many studies show strongly that corporatesocial responsibility performances are caused surely to corporate reputation aspiration of
an organization This relationship is considered with a degree of delicacy The images and reputation of the firm will be broadcasted to community by articles and discussions on
philanthropy with its corporate social responsibility activities (Porter and Kramer, 2002) Meanwhile Mutch and Aitken (2009) pronounce that corporate social
Trang 18responsibility plays an important role in making sure of corporate reputation in general Corporate social responsibility activities programs highlight their multiple duties in relation to corporate reputation The individual companies that promise will play their role in society as a good entity, would carry out these corporate social responsibility activities to contribute their reputation According to Gotsi and Wilson (2001), when thearms of a company conflict each other, the good way to solve the problem is using
corporate social responsibility as a tool not only to help the firm avoid the troubles, but only to build and improve its corporate reputation That means that corporate social responsibility is also a reputation enhancer In general, all organizations want to use corporate social responsibility activities as a weapon to promote its reputation; that is organizational desirability
H1: Corporate social responsibility positively influences on corporate reputation
2.4 Consumer Attitude toward the Company’s Food Products:
Attitude is stated as the level of measurable influence that a person becomes
familiar with using an object (Ajzen and Fishbein, 1972) According to Mathieson
(1991), attitude is drawn as a wish of costumers by performing their goods consumption, and Ajzen and Fishbein (1972) describe attitude as positive or negative feelings what lead to target behavior in work setting of workers Davis, Bagozzi and Warshaw (1989) focus on a system’s utility, attitude is consider as an enhancer for improving working productivity if studied with a cognitive perspective
Trang 19According to Schau, Stevens, Dauphinee and Vecchio (1995), attitude is defined
as a concept including four components, such as affective, cognitive, the value, and the component of difficulty Affective is concerned with positive arousing emotions that are called positive feelings towards statistics Cognitive includes the processes of perception, memory, judgment, and reasoning; it shows the capacity of a person of knowledge and thinking skills in the life; as well as contrasted with emotional and volitional processes The value is the worth of something in terms of the useful amount; it shows a perceived value of something in general life The component of difficulty is defined that it focuses
on the perception of a subject Attitude is something that people cannot observe it by theirsenses directly; it is counted based on both beliefs as feelings and behavioral
predispositions toward the armed things Attitude also is defined as estimating bias what decide the behavioral intention of a person positively or negatively
Attitude is defined in diversity ways; and the most important definition is about notion of evaluation One of definitions about attitude is all of the emotions and feelingswhat people experienced and gained when they learn the processing of the studied thing,(Gal and Ginsburg, 1994) In the paper, attitude can be said as perceptions of consumersabout an organization that can be measured as perceptions based on the affective and cognitive skulls of knowledge Petty and Krosnick (1995) based on the notion of
evaluation say that how attitude is viewed depends on the evaluation of objects, such as beholders, issues, etc commonly That follows from positive to negative up to the
dimension ranging Two angles of this evaluation (base and structure); are the
Trang 20investigating about attitude These two components of attitude are considered as the label of attitude strength.
Hoyer and MacInnes (1997) pronounce that attitude is eternal measurement of an issue, problem, person or action through a process of associating the object Attitude is internal evaluation of a person about something such as a company’s product; this causesthe important role of attitude in marketing research Researching about consumer attitudeshows that one property of attitude is relatively stable and this causes to fixed tendency that lets to special behavior of costumers (Fishbein and Ajzen, 1975) Because of the stable angle of attitude, Oskamp (1999) reckons that corporate should build a strategy by using forecasting about consumer’s behavior toward their products and services Theories
of Fishbein and Ajzen (1975) about attitude in social psychology literature help others to continue to study about attitude in research marketing
Attitude is defined as the judgment level that an individual associates by using an object (Ajzen&Fishbein, 1972) Besides that, attitude is also identified as a person’s positive or negative feelings about performing a target behavior in a work setting
(Mathieson, 1991) Mackenzie, Lutz and Belch (1986) define attitude as “a predisposition
to respond in a favorable or unfavorable manner to a particular advertising stimulus during a particular exposure situation” Hoyer and MacInnis (1977) say that individual attitude toward an object also influences on their attitude toward another object that is related to the first one That means if costumers favorite a company because of its
corporate social responsibility activities; it will lead to their attitude toward the
Trang 21company’s products or services; or it can be said that corporate social responsibility activities are transferred as messages making attitude of costumers toward the brandedproducts and services.
Phelps and hoy (1996) claim that attitude toward something is a tendency in a positive or negative manner to that thing by perceiving through all its information and image shown to the individual Fazio (1995) pronounces that the approachability of attitudes has important significances for understanding the functioning of attitudes
Attitudes can sometimes be automatically activated from retention about just
encountering an attitude object The effectiveness of this consequence grows up as the accessibility of people’s attitudes toward the attitude object increased (Fazio et al, 1986).Based on these sayings, consumer attitude toward the company’s food products means that consumers perceive about the brand food products through information about that entity
2.5 Corporate Social Responsibility and Consumer Attitude toward the Company’s Food Products:
In the time a firm uses its corporate social responsibility initiatives to gain
consumer recognition about the firm’s corporate social responsibility reputation,
Lichtenstein, Drumwright and Braig (2004) have studied that a firm’s corporate social
responsibility reputation influences on consumer responses directly For instant, the
company perceived corporate benefit and affective attitude (Marin & Ruiz 2007)
Trang 22Corporate social responsibility indicates in several behaviors, activities, or output; the organizational manager may use it to form the organizational moral risk; these can
influence to the community and public about the company (Kitzmueller and Shimshack, 2012) The directors can use corporate social responsibility as the strategy to affect to consumer product responses and product attitudes, as well as the beliefs of customers andproduct attributes They also pilot that the corporate social responsibility roll is more and more important in gaining the consumer perception, may lead to a positive consumer attitude
According to Fombrun and Shanely (1990), corporate social responsibility is a kind of institutional signal used by the public to construct the company’s reputation Menon and Kahn (2003) also announce that corporate social responsibility effects on building corporate reputation of the company The organizational value system is
transmitted to the customers through corporate social responsibility engagement (Sen andBhattacharya, 2001); addition, Menon and Kahn (2003) assume corporate social
responsibility helps to acquire consumers’ positive perception about the organizational specialties
Sheik and Rian (2011) claim that the influence of corporate social responsibility; that considered as the cause; on consumer attitude is controlled by two factors: the
company’s cause fit and customer’s affinity toward the specific cause The corporate
social responsibility is defined as the cause specificity in the model of Sheik and Rain
(2011) It is also delineated as the level of separateness or understanding of the cause
Trang 23While the company agrees to support it and stakeholders might demand and pay for it based on purely monetary incentives The cause specificity of corporate social
responsibility effects on customer’s attitude toward the company’s products directly or indirectly Consumers are willing to favor the organizational products with a positive cause affinity if they presume that company has a preference of its products strengthens the cause itself The cause affinity and cause fit are intermediaries that impulse the direct impact happened Meanwhile, the indirect influence of cause affinity helps to promote theimpact of general corporate social responsibility on consumer attitude Because the
corporate social responsibility information can be tempered by the cause affinity
positively; the cause specificity of corporate social responsibility influences the consumerattitude toward the company’s products (Sheik and Rian, 2001)
A study of Barlow and Wogalter (1993) claim that the relationships between
companies and their customers exist based on the concept of the social contract Individualsfocus on the revelation that is highly noticeable about an organization, and this leads to their attitude toward the firm When all the organizational information is broadcasted, they consumers get benefits from this performance They would notice about the quality of the organizational products, as well as its side effects by filtering the important information Consequently, the customers perceive about the organizational image; that affects to
consumer attitude The reflection of corporate social responsibility practices supports the intermediate effect of consumers’ perceived corporate social
Trang 24responsibility practices on their attitudes toward the firm by corporate social
responsibility activities (Barlow and Wogalter, 1993)
According to Torres et al (2007), perceived corporate social responsibility
performances and consumer attitude toward the company’s product can change time bytime Wang (2009) also examines the relationship between consumer attitude and
corporate social responsibility activities based on the advertising and quality of service (in another industry) His result gives that consumer attitude toward the company’s
products (or services) of individuals enhance corporate social responsibility
announcement The relationship between consumer attitude toward the company’s
services or products and perceived corporate social responsibility practices is improved
by Wang’s research along with other relationships
H2: Corporate social responsibility positively influences on consumer attitudetoward the company’s food products
2.6 Corporate Reputation and Consumer Attitude toward the Company’s
Trang 25organization, the stakeholders are ready to contribute the main issues of both corporatereputation and internal communication.
Castaldo et al (2009) assume that companies, which have a reputation for being sociallyresponsible, will attract consumers to their products while companies with a bad
reputation regarding CSR efforts will be punished by the consumers through, for
a variable, which together with the level of public awareness, determines a firm’s
corporate image Schwaiger (2004) conceptualizes reputation as related to attitude,
therefore containing affective as well as cognitive components and described solely by denotative attributes
To determine how good the corporate reputation from the organizational images, the customers base on the organizational history, their activities through time, its historical perspective, etc By the process, the reputation of the firm is found in consumers’ mind (Fombrun and Riel, 1997) Bick et al (2003) pilot that; a good corporate reputation affects to the attitude and behavior of customers Therefore, attaining the good corporate reputation ensures the survival situation of the organizations and supports the growth of the corporate brand in a long term Meanwhile, Frooman (1999) says that
Trang 26because the strong influences of corporate reputation on the attitudes, decision, and behaviors of stakeholders, the companies compete each other by building a strong
reputation The strong signaling effect of reputation is a good strategy in the competitive challenge The high quality and reliability of products and services can be enhance by a good reputation, the efficiency of marketing efforts are also support by a strong corporatereputation Perceived risks associated with consumer buying decisions are reduced; this influences behavioral intentions (Yoon et al, 1993)
Lafferty and Goldsmith (1999) reckon an excellent reputation can increase
customer trust when they made the purchasing decisions This helps to gain consumer satisfaction and loyalty, reduce the buying disagreement of customers They will perceivewell about the organizational products with a good attitude Not only in the consume marketing, as Caminiti (1992) claim, a good reputation also attract candidates to apply to the company, in the recruiting market Roberts and Dowling (2002) pronounce that in thesupplier markets, the good corporate reputation not only effects on gaining consumer attitude, but also helps in negotiation with business partners on contracting and
monitoring Additionally, with a strong reputation, entities can access to the markets easier when believes of consumer, as well as investors, is higher and higher in the
reliability
H3: Corporate reputation positively influences on consumer attitude toward
the company’s products
2.7 Consumer Behavioral Intention:
Trang 27Ajzen and Fishbein (1980) state behavioral intention as a usual concept; that used in social behavior research Behavioral intention concerns to the behavioral direct
decision, it will supply the given behavior when an appropriate valuation of intention is received The consumer behavioral intention leads to consumer behavior Perloff (2003)conceptualize behavioral intention as the purpose of a special behavior performance, a plan to place behavior on effect Intention is a symptom of a person readiness that is ready to carry out a chosen behavior Assumes that behavior intention, behavior, an, action are in the same group under the same will of heading (Ray, 1973)
Ajzen (1991) develops two theories about behavior; the theory of planned behavior isconstructed to expand the theory of reasoned action that includes a determinant, it is perceived behavioral control The theory of planned behaviors includes five terms, such
as behavior; behavioral intention; attitude toward the behavior; subjective norms; and perceived behavioral control The reasoned action theory mentions that customers
consciously measure the results of alternative behaviors, and then collect one of them to choose the most favorable consequence Planned behavior theory shows that customers consider the degree of the ease or difficulty in planned behavior making (Blythe, 2008) Also, in the reasoned action theory, Fishbein and Ajzen (1975) say that behavioral
intention is defined by attitude toward the behavior and subjective norms
Behavior is defined as actions of consumer with regard to an attitude object (Solomon, 2009) Shiffman et al (2010) give a definition about behavioral intention, behavioral
intention is the likelihood that customers tend to perform the action in future
Trang 28when you making purchasing decisions Oliver (1997) encourages more for behavioral intention as an affirmed likelihood of engaging in a certain behavior Liu and Jang (2009)reckon that the product and service quality can influence on perceived value and
customer behavioral intentions directly They also define the relationship between
organizational attributes and consumer behavioral intention, in other words the product and service quality and consumer behavioral intention might be mediated by perceived value and perceived overall product and service quality
Fishbein and Ajzen (1975) pilot that behavioral intention always leads to actions in the future and often combine up with behaviors In addition, the behavioral intentions also signifies the consumer would like to recommend to others about the positive
meaning, maybe encourage friends and relations to experience with the loyalty This helps the company gains the future consumption (Zeithaml et al, 1996) Cronin et al (2000) confirm that behavioral intention is predicted by an important indicator, it is perceived value If the costumers feel satisfied when spending some products or
services, with their behavioral intention, they also tell good information about the
products and advice their relations to purchase them
2.8 Consumer Attitude toward the Company’s Food Products and Consumer
Behavioral Intention:
According to Morrel and Jayawardhena (2010), consumer attitude leads to
consumer intention which predicts consumer behavioral intention The intention leads to
Trang 29consumer behavior based on consumer attitude Ajzen and Fishbein (1975) state that; thebehavioral intention is determined by the consumer attitude toward the company’s food products through purchasing and using the brand Consumer behavioral intention results from deeply held values and attitudes (Patwardhan, Flora, and Gupta, 2010) Homer and Kahle (1988) find that the influence flows from values to consumer attitude to specific behavioral intention theoretically The behavioral intention is the most important
consumer behavior determinant and that depends both on consumer attitude toward performing the behavior and effect of consumer opinions about behavior (Price,
Arnould, &Zinkhan, 2004) Attitude plays a critical role in consumer behavioral
intention, and it is really important because it actuates customers to behave in relatively logical ways (Babin and Harris, 2009)
Theory of planned behavior confirms that a specific behavior is affected by the behavioral intention; meanwhile the behavioral intention is explained by attitude toward the behavior, toward attitude objects (Fishbein and Ajzen, 1975) In theory of reasoned action, behavioral intention is defined by attitude toward subjective norms Ajzen (2005 also affirms surely that there is a relationship between attitude and behavioral intention, which described in theories of reasoned action and planned behavior Schiffman et al (2010) define an attitude as “a learned predisposition to behave in a consistently
favorable or unfavorable manner with respect to a given object” (p.246) An attitude can predict behavioral intention of a person in making specific decision, such as buying a product or service, this saying Yoo and Lee (2009) list in their research They also reckon
Trang 30if a customer has positive attitude toward a brand product, he (or she) is ready to buy thecompany products; which can said as consumer behavioral intention Petty et al (1997) claim that an individual acts toward some environmental expressions, such as
organizational brand, product, and trade mark, etc.; based on their attitude toward the company Chiou et al (2005) suppose that between attitude and behavioral intention have strong correlations based on the previous ideas
H4: Consumer attitude toward the company’s food products positively influences onconsumer behavioral intention
2.9 Model:
From the assumptions given above and the relationships between factors
and dependent variables described in the listed theories, the author can summarize
these hypotheses in the below model
Trang 31The above model describes the relationships between variables of the paper.
Below are the supposed hypotheses
H1: Corporate social responsibility positively influences on corporate reputation
H2: Corporate social responsibility positively influences on consumer attitudetoward the company’s food products
H3: Corporate reputation positively influences on consumer attitude toward thecompany’s products
H4: Consumer attitude toward the company’s food products positively
influences on consumer behavioral intention
In the model, the hypothesis 1 is described that corporate social responsibility influents on corporate reputation positively It also shows a positive relationship betweenthese two variables; the measures of them will help to inform how strong corporate socialresponsibility effects on corporate reputation The hypothesis 2 indicates the positive relationship between corporate social responsibility and consumer attitude toward the company’s products; and the hypothesis 3 shows the impact of corporate reputation on consumer attitude toward the company’s products Both of the hypotheses say two
independent variables affect to one dependent variable, data multiple regression analysis
is used to measure these relationships, to help determine whether they exists or not Finally, the hypothesis 4 claims the influence of consumer attitude toward the company’s
Trang 32products and consumer behavioral intention This is the last effect of the chain reaction ofthe model.
2.10 Summary:
In the “Examining company experiences of a UK cause related marketing
campaign” Docherty and Hibbert (2003) definite the relationship between corporate social responsibility and corporate reputation Besides, they also pronounce that there aremany researches that study about the impact between these variables The paper supposesthat this relationship exists in Vietnam food product market Sheik and Rian (2001) showthe impact of corporate social responsibility on attitude of costumers The paper supposesthat the cause specificity of corporate social responsibility effects on the consumer
attitude toward the company’s products in Vietnam food market Bick et al (2003)
reckon that the attitude of consumers is influenced by good corporate reputation
positively Whether this relationship happen in Vietnam market or not; the paper helps toimprove this suggestion The hypothesis 4 describes the impact of consumer attitude toward the company’s food products on consumer behavioral intention This relationship
is explained by Fishbein and Ajzen (1975) in the theory of planned behavior
This chapter gives the example about previous researches about these supposed relationships If the study can improve these hypotheses really exist in Vietnam
market, those issues can impact on marketing strategy, leadership, and performance The following chapter will describe about methodology of research
Trang 33Chapter 3: METHODOLOGY
3.1 Research Approach:
The research uses quantitative data collective in this investigation This method is used to measure corporate social responsibility, corporation reputation, consumer attitudetoward the company’s food products, and consumer behavioral intention Each variable uses Likert Scale with five points as detail: Strongly disagree 1; disagree 2; neither 3; agree 4; strongly agree 5 The questionnaires are adopted from other researchers such as Smirnova (2012); Fombrun, Gardberg, and Sever J., M (1999); Huang (2004); and Zeithaml, Berry, and Parasuraman (1996) to measure these variables The customers will
be asked with five choices for each question and when answering, they will choose one offive choices that listed below the questions The customers who are buying in super markets will be chosen when they were deciding to buy branded food products After collecting the date from the consumers, the author will process SPSS version 16.0 to analysis the data to gain the result for the research paper The results will be explained to show the meaning of each number That would show how strong the independent
variables effect on the dependent variables How strong the relationships between factors are
3.2 Survey Research Method:
The mall-intercept personal survey was chosen as the survey method for the paper.This method has a lower cost and more easily entry to a large number of the population
Trang 34Using this method helped researcher to speak directly to participants, it would gain a higher response rate After asking the permit of the costumers for bothering those
several minutes, the author processed the collecting the data quickly; this makes sure thepercent of response feedback is 100% The customers were asking directly by the
author, so the questionnaires are explained directly to them to make sure they could understand the whole questions The pretesting the questionnaires was not processed because collecting data was collected directly from costumers, they had been
interviewing face to face, the questions could be explained clearly directly the
consumers at the same when they don’t understand something in the questionnaires
The respondents were intercepted in shopping in malls Data was collected by spot
or inviting shopper to a research facility located in the mall to complete the interview Every second customer choosing and buying food products at food product shelves in super-markets in Hochiminh City would be stopped and invited to fill the questionnaire
as based on mall-intercept personal survey
The chosen sample were super-markets (such as Maximart, Co-op mart, etc.), which were chosen as malls to intercept shoppers who were choosing and buying food products and food product shelves in Hochiminh City The list of super markets (in the data collectionpart) showed the detail of each super market was chose to collect the date
The sample was created through was a small group of customers who selected to complete the questionnaire This small group of people would be representative of a large
Trang 35people 203 shoppers would be asked to make the sample group, with age range from
20-55 years old that had equal ratio men and women
3.3 Questionnaire Design:
A five-point Likert scale (Strongly disagree 1 disagree 2 neither 3 agree 4
strongly agree 5) was used for participants to answer the questions of all the constructs tomeasure corporate social responsibility, consumer attitude toward the company’s food products, consumer behavioral intention, and three terms emotional appeal, products and services, and workplace environment of corporate reputation The customers would choose one of five points for their answers for all the questions
To measure CSR, corporate reputation, consumer attitude toward the company’s products, and consumer behavioral intention, questionnaire design indicates the scaled of measurement that was adapted from measures of Smirnova (2012); Fombrun, Gardberg, andSever J., M (1999); Huang, Lee and Ho (2004); and Zeithaml, Berry, and Parasuraman (1996) The questionnaires measure corporate reputation; that were built by Fombrun,
Gardberg, and Sever J., M (1999); they described the process of questionnaire building very clearly in “The reputation quotient(SM): A multi-stakeholder measure of corporate reputation” Initiative questionnaires, they built the whole questions with six terms that are needed to measure to value the corporate reputation of a company, including emotional appeal, products and services, vision and leadership, workplace environment, social and environment responsibility, and financial performance Because
Trang 36of the requirement of the paper, the research only measured how corporate reputation of afirm influences on customer’s attitude toward the company’s food products, then leaded
to effect on consumer behavioral intention; only three terms were chosen, those are emotional appeal, products and services, and workplace environment The questionnaires
of these terms were used to measure the food company’s corporate reputation The
questions of the term social and environment responsibility were used as an instrument for measuring corporate social responsibility of the food organization Besides, the
question number two of questionnaires for corporate social responsibility was borrowed from Smirnova (2012) in “Perception of corporate social responsibility in Kazakhstan”
The questionnaires for measuring consumer attitude toward the company’s food products were borrowing from Huang, Lee and Ho (2004) The paper of them researchesabout consumer attitude toward gray market goods Then the questions were adopted andchanged to consumer attitude toward the company’s food products because of the
requirement of the paper In other words, the concept “the company’s food products” replaces the concept “gray market goods” in the questionnaires Zeithaml, Berry, and Parasuraman (1996) used their questionnaires to measure behavioral intentions battery infive terms, such as loyalty, switch, pay more, external response, and internal response Because the stakeholders of this paper are customers, the measure of consumer
behavioral intention is borrowed one of those five terms The loyalty park is the most suitable for this paper, and then the questions are adopted
Trang 373.3.1 Scale Measurement:
To measure two independent variables (corporate social responsibility and
corporate reputation) and two dependent variables (consumer attitude toward the
company’s food products and consumer behavioral intention), the questionnaires were adopted from many researchers The measure of corporate social responsibility includes four questions that focus on how the company treats people (such as stakeholders, their staffs, the customers, and community), how it engages in protecting the environment This describes how good the customers percept about the organization’s corporate social responsibility The questionnaire for corporate reputation includes three elements, ten questions in total In detail, three terms name emotional (that indicated by three
questions: 1/ I have a good feeling about the company; 2/ I admire and respect the
company; 3/ I trust this company); products and services (that described by four
questions to study who valuation of customers about the company’s products and servicesquality); workplace and environment (three questions with the tenor shows the feeling of the company workplace) By answering these questions, the consumers showed their perception about the company’s corporate reputation The measure was used to value the variable consumer attitude toward the company’s food products; includes four questions They valued how the customers percept about the firm that the consumers buy its
products Finally, the factor consumer behavioral intention is measured by four questions such as:
1/ Consider the company’s food products my first choice to buy food products
Trang 382/ Say positive things about the company’s food products to other people
3/ Recommend the company’s food products to someone who seeks my
advice about buying food products
4/ Encourage friends and relatives to buy the company’s food products whenbuying food products
These questions describe not only how the customers make purchasing decision,but only how they affect their behaviors on their relations The data was collectedbased on these constructs
3.3.2 Questionnaire:
The questionnaire with total has four parts, the first part to measure CSR includes four questions (beginning with the question: the company maintains high standards in theway it treats people), the second has three sections with ten questions for measuring corporate reputation, the third measure has four questions (such as: General speaking, buying the company’s food products is a better choice, etc.) for consumer attitude towardthe company’s food products, and the last one includes four questions (with the last question: Encourage friends and relatives to buy the company’s food products when buying food products) to measure consumer behavioral intention
The elements of corporate reputation are emotional appeal, products and services, workplace environment are measured by ten questions Emotional appeal variable has three questions appeal (such as: I have a good feeling about the company, etc.); products
Trang 39and services measure variable includes four questions: 1/The company stands behind its products; 2/The company develops innovative products; 3/The company offers high-quality products; 4/ The company offers products that are good value for money The final workplace environment is measured by three questions (beginning with: Workplaceenvironment is well-managed).
3.4 Sampling Method:
The questionnaire has total 22 questions to measure four variables, and the
data collection received 203 responses in total To be get a high significant, the
collecting sample size should be at least 100 participates (Hair et al, 2010) They
suggested that amount of responsible must higher than the amount of question five
times The questionnaire includes 22 items; then the sample size is greater than:
5*22= 110 responsible 203 response is satisfied the technique requirement
3.5 Data Collection:
The data was collected at the super-market in food products shelves Firstly,
asking permissions of customers to collect their response the questionnaires was
initiative Survey face to face was taken to make sure they understood and answered all the questions Secondly, the collecting data was processed by asking the customers
question by question And then, the data was gathered and classified as order Finally, thedata was input in the software; then processed analysis
Trang 40Ten super markets were visited one by one twice in twenty days, in different times The names of super markets that were used to collect the data, indicate in the table of the list of super-markets was chosen to collect data in appendices.
The data was collected in 20 days; each super-market was visited many times intwo days The time and amount of times collecting data shows clearly on theworksheet The worksheet in appendices indicates the amount of customers’ responses
in everyday with the chosen super market
3.6 Data Preparation:
The total amount of response is 203 units After collecting 203 responded from
203 shoppers answering the questionnaire, the data was coded for the processing The SPSS program was used for the data analysis and all data is entered using a table format
In this process, the hard copy data was transferred into a form suitable for data analysis SPSS software was applied to analysis the data with namely from 1 to 5 based on the five-point Likert scale, that shopper choosing for each response
Each question in the questionnaire would be given a number code with its shortedname to input into the SPSS file for analysis process The variable corporate social
responsibility is coded as CSR; the four questions to measure corporate social
responsibility are in succession CSR1, CSR2, CSR3, and CSR4 The instrument of
corporate reputation has ten questions; they name one by one CR1, CR2, CR3, CR4, CR5, CR6, CR7, CR8, CR9, and CR10 The variable corporate reputation is shorted by