ABSTRACT

Since the first International Corporate Identity Group’s symposium in 1994, the fields of corporate identity, corporate communications and corporate branding have become a focal point for scholars and managers alike. Recently, the term corporate marketing has incorporated a host of key corporate-level concepts, representing a new paradigm of thought.

Contemplating Corporate Marketing, Identity and Communication is a collection of papers and extended abstracts from the 12th ICIG symposium, presenting a variety of perspectives with a view towards stimulating debate about the advances in corporate marketing, identity and communication. The contributions in this volume examine critically the development of the field and focus for future research in order to encourage cutting-edge scholarship along with practitioner insights.

In a field characterized by paradoxes – unity and variety; integration and specialization – the aim is to integrate diverse practices to inspire a more sophisticated approach or theoretical framework. The papers in this volume are both challenging and distinctive.

chapter 1|2 pages

Contemplating the Corporate Communications, Corporate Marketing and Identity Curricula

Celebrating 15 years of the ICIG Symposium: 1994–2009; editorial note

chapter 2|33 pages

Weathervanes or Signposts? Constructs or Philosophy?

Scrutinizing and explicating corporate image, corporate identity, corporate communications, corporate reputation, corporate brands and corporate marketing

chapter 3|13 pages

Schools of Thought in Corporate Marketing

Traces and future perspectives

chapter 5|9 pages

Corporate Social Responsibility and Corporate Identity

Potentials for disciplinary cross-fertilization within research and teaching

chapter 8|27 pages

Holland's Got Talent?

The relevance of employer branding in job advertisements for becoming an employer of choice

chapter 9|2 pages

Generic Charisma

A conceptualization and measurement tool development

chapter 11|10 pages

Corporate Communications in China

A preliminary study