Marketing managers' perceptions of the applicability of Ashridge mission model to organisations in Zimbabwe
Date
2013-09Author
Muzondo, Noel
Gwavuya, Frank
Sai, Judias P
Kaseke, Nyasha
Type
ArticleMetadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Mission statements are an important component of marketing audits and marketing plans.
Campbell and Yeung's Ashridge mission model is one of the methodologies suggested in
academic literature for use in the analysis and design of mission statements. This paper
measures marketing managers' perceptions of the usefulness of the Ashridge mission model
as a tool for assessing the quality of organisational mission statements in Zimbabwe. To
fulfill this objective, the perceptions of a convenience sample of 25 marketing managers
enrolled on a postgraduate marketing programme at a leading Zimbabwean university are
gathered and content-analysed. The Ashridge mission model prescribes that an ideal mission
statement should have four elements - i.e. purpose, strategy, behaviour standards and values.
The study finds that nearly all the mission statements in the sample reflect the purpose and
strategy elements. More than half of them are in conformity with the values component.
Less than half are in compliance with the behaviour standards aspect. Although the study is
exploratory in 'nature, considering the convenient nature of the sample, the practical
implication of this paper is that marketing managers in Zimbabwe can draw on the Ashridge
mission model to analyse existing mission statements and design new ones.
Additional Citation Information
Muzondo, N.,Gwavuya, F., Sai, J. P., & Kaseke, N. (2013). Marketing managers' perceptions of the applicability of Ashridge mission model to organisations in Zimbabwe. University of Zimbabwe Business Review, 1 (1), 13 - 21.Publisher
University of Zimbabwe, Faculty of Commerce