Authors
Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Purpose – This study aims to map scientific knowledge in industrial marketing.
Design/methodology/approach – The research was conducted on the basis of a quantitative and descriptive research using scientometric analysis
based on scientific records. It analyzes more than 14,000 scientific records on the Scopus database from 1956 to 2009. The sample fits Bradford’s
and Lotka’s power laws of distribution of science in use.
Findings – The study reveals the existence of four stages: the genesis of this stream of research (1956-1984), the early development (1985-1995),
the consolidation of production (1996-2003) and the phase of scientific maturity (from 2004) with an increasing number of records in recent years.
Regarding authorship, there is a clear predominance of single authorship and an average increase in the number of authors per record from one
to two authors for recent years. The main sources of knowledge are the Journal of Business & Industrial Marketing and the Industrial Marketing
Management journal. A statistical significance is shown between the number of records and the number of papers per journal, highlighting that
Management Science and Industrial Marketing Management journals are the most cited sources.
Practical implications – Practitioners find in this paper a sound basis for a wide perspective of the key issues addressed by researchers on
industrial marketing over the past decades, as well as good insights in terms of the main challenges faced by companies in this field.
Originality/value – Evidence was found of the existence of a long tail behavior in scientific literature of industrial marketing regarding chronology,
sources, number of records with a single author and number of records cited.
Description
Keywords
Industrial marketing Business-to-Business marketing
Citation
Journal of Business & Industrial Marketing 30/1 (2015) 105–115
Publisher
Emerald