4.6 Article

The Coronavirus crisis in B2B settings: Crisis uniqueness and managerial implications based on social exchange theory

Journal

INDUSTRIAL MARKETING MANAGEMENT
Volume 88, Issue -, Pages 125-135

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.indmarman.2020.05.004

Keywords

Organizational crisis; Coronavirus; Crisis management; Social exchange theory

Funding

  1. Center for Business and Industrial Marketing at Georgia State University

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The current Coronavirus crisis is having disastrous effects for most B2B firms around the world. The decline in sales provokes infra-organizational and inter-organizational tension, requiring a new approach for managing firms' business operations. Particularly, the direct threat to human beings places the attention of managers on the individual. This study investigates the main differences between prior traditional financial-based crises and the practices that managers can adopt to navigate and survive the Coronavirus crisis from a social exchange theory (SET) view. The authors identify eight crisis-comparative dimensions to consider to successfully prevail: (1) formation, (2) focus, (3) temporality, (4) government jurisdiction, (5) preparedness, (6) normality, (7) business, and (8) operational deployment. In addition, the study results propose four intertwined areas to classify the managerial practices: (1) digital transformation, (2) decision-making processes, (3) leadership, and (4) emotions and stress.

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