PhD Studentship: “Urban Agora and the Search for Authenticity – London’s Street Markets as Alternative Retail Experiences” #KingsBusinessSchool #Marketing #Sociology #Studentship #PhD

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https://www.findaphd.com/phds/project/urban-agora-and-the-search-for-authenticity-london-s-street-markets-as-alternative-retail-experiences/?p182137

About the Project

This PhD project aims to explore how market participants produce “authenticity” and use it to generate value (Zukin, 2011). Specifically, it investigates how marketing practices undertaken by market operators and traders in a street market facilitate the emergence of “authentic spaces”, the generation of value, and wider economic and social benefits for the community. Market participants engage in marketing practices to attract and retain customers (Dibb et al., 2014). They encompass transactional activities such as offering curation and relational activities such as interaction with customers and amongst traders. This project is anchored in the UK non-store retailing industry. While retailing is dominated by online sales (ONS, 2021), brick-and-mortar retail forms such as street markets still exist, adding up to roughly 1000+ locations nationwide (NABMA, 2022). They allow for economic and social interaction among local communities and visitors. Given their flux and heightened competition for pitches in crowded urban spaces, innovative marketing practices are indispensable for street traders and operators (Binkley and Connor, 1998; GLA, 2019; RBKC, 2022; vom Lehn, 2014). 

London houses around 280 street markets. They employ roughly 13,250 people and contribute £247.6 million to the capital’s economy (GLA, 2019). The Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea (RBKC) – the project’s non-academic partner – houses eight markets (RBKC, 2022). The RBKC street trading office manages two of them, including the world-famous Portobello Market, and exerts statutory controls over the other sites. These markets supply local communities and tourists with goods ranging from antiques, fruit and vegetables to street food. 

Although some marketing scholars attempt to define authenticity, the concept remains ambiguous (Bartsch et al., 2022; Nunes et al., 2021). Most conceptualisations acknowledge that authenticity is not a set of discrete properties but an ongoing process of verifying the assumed with the factual or the stated with the actioned (Chiu et al., 2012; Zhang and Patrick, 2021). How this applies to physical spaces, such as street markets, has yet to be explored. Moreover, studies examining authenticity tend to do so from the demand, not the supply side (e.g., Fuchs et al., 2015; Zhang and Patrick, 2021). However, authenticity requires two reference points. As most studies concentrate on changes in individual perceptions (Becker et al., 2019), insights into the economic or societal consequences of authenticity and its curation remain rare (Siemens et al., 2020). The project aims to examine authenticity through a multistakeholder lens, focusing on the supply side (traders’ and market operators’ viewpoints) and economic (customer purchase behaviour) and societal (community well-being) consequences. The final framing of the PhD thesis topic would be however incumbent on the PhD student in cooperation with RBKC and the academic supervisor team. The overall project ownership lies within the successful applicant

What we expect from the candidate?

As a necessary prerequisite to express your interest in this project you shall meet all formal requirements to apply for the doctoral programme at KBS (https://www.kcl.ac.uk/study/postgraduate-research/areas/management-research-mphil-phd) as well as NOT already have been awarded a PhD or equivalent degree. This project is only meant as the thematic context for your PhD research while enrolled in the PhD in marketing programme.

We are looking for a candidate (either home or overseas) with a background in any of the disciplines of marketing, business management, sociology, applied economics, public policy, cultural and urban studies or related fields. They must be interested in exploring the abovementioned topics with us and keen to engage with RBKC’s street trading office on a regular basis. You do not need to be an expert in street market management or trading as this is clearly a PhD in marketing endeavour, though some interest in the intersection of the brick-and-mortar non-store retailing industry and municipal policies is assumed. 

We further expect a reasonable level of personal resilience, readiness to engage with various retailing topics, ability to openly approach people, good oral and written communication skills, as well as a general willingness to embrace new challenges, and diverse cultural settings. We appreciate, a high level of motivation and curiosity in conjunction with the ability to efficiently self-organise. 

Please note the project is available full-time only for a start in September 2025. 

Benefits we offer.

The project provides:

•           a committed contact person at the RBKC street trading office. 

•           access to various RBKC stakeholders depending on the final research design.

•           selected opportunities to get to know the RBKC street trading office/council better through, e.g., a placement or ad hoc project support tasks (please note that while we very much advocate for renumerated engagement, all these options would be time-limited and/or part-time and/or depend on the candidate’s willingness to volunteer as well as subject to availability and, if applicable, individual visa conditions).

•           workspace on our Strand Campus located in Central London. 

•          a edicated interuniversity KBS/Brunel supervisory team with long-standing research experience in marketing, public services management, and small business/family entrepreneurship, and qualitative and quantitative research methods. 

How to apply?

Please submit 1. a letter of motivation (up to 2 pages), and 2. your updated CV incl. your UG and PG degree grades (1 page only) by February 28, 2025, via e-mail to the whole supervisor team:

-Dr Anna Dubiel (Senior Lecturer in Marketing), KBS, anna.dubiel@kcl.ac.uk

-Prof. Dirk vom Lehn (Professor of Organisation and Practice), KBS, dirk.vom_lehn@kcl.ac.uk

-Dr Carolin Decker-Lange (Senior Lecturer in Strategy and Entrepreneurship), Brunel University of London, carolin.decker-lange@brunel.ac.uk

The project team will invite selected applicants for an interview in-person at KBS premises in Central London or if not feasible via MS Teams on March 20 or March 21, 2025. Please kindly note, that we are unable to provide application-related feedback for unsuccessful applicants.

Please do not concurrently – in the context of this project – apply with the KBS PhD programme office. We will ask you to do so if selected. In practice, this means that the applicant selected will need to formally apply with the KBS PhD in Marketing programme with a deadline on June 1, 2025. Being selected for the project does not guarantee admission to the KBS PhD in Marketing programme.


Funding Notes

Funding at the level of home/international student fees (as applicable) and a basic stipend

·      the full KBS home/international tuition fees for three years, the pending submission status fee, and 

·      a tax-free stipend of approximately £21k/annum (2024-2025 rate is £21,237) for four years with small, annual inflationary increases.


References

Bartsch, F., Zeugner-Roth, K. P., & Katsikeas, C. S. (2022). Consumer authenticity seeking: conceptualization, measurement, and contingent effects, Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science, 50, 296–323.
Becker, M., Wiegand, N., & Reinartz, W. J. (2019). Does it pay to be real? Understanding authenticity in TV advertising, Journal of Marketing, 83(1), 24-50.
Binkley, J.K., & Connor, J.M. (1998). Grocery market pricing and the new competitive environment. Journal of Retailing, 74(2), 273-294. 
Chiu, H.-C., Hsieh, Y.-C., & Kuo, Y.-C. (2012). How to align your brand stories with your products. Journal of Retailing, 88(2), 262-275. 
Dibb, S., Simões, C., & Wensley, R. (2014), Establishing the scope of marketing practice: insights from practitioners, European Journal of Marketing, 48(1/2), 380-404.
Fuchs, C., Schreier, M., & Van Osselaer, S. M. (2015). The handmade effect: What’s love got to do with it? Journal of Marketing, 79(2), 98-110.
Greater London Authority (2019), Street markets toolkit: Evidencing and capturing social value, https://www.london.gov.uk/sites/default/files/ulm_toolkit_web.pdf, accessed October 23, 2024
NABMA (2022), National markets survey 2022, https://nabma.com/version2020/wp-content/uploads/2022/12/NABMA-Survey-2022.pdf, accessed November 2, 2024.
Nunes, J. C., Ordanini, A., & Giambastiani, G. (2021). The concept of authenticity: What it means to consumers, Journal of Marketing, 85(4), 1-20.
Office of National Statistics (2021), Economic trends in the retail sector, Great Britain: 1989 to 2021, https://www.ons.gov.uk/economy/nationalaccounts/balanceofpayments/articles/economictrendsintheretailsectorgreatbritain/1989to2021#online-retail-in-the-uk-analysis-by-sector, accessed November 1, 2024 
RBKC (2022), Kensington and Chelsea markets plan 2022-27, https://www.rbkc.gov.uk/business-and-enterprise/business-advice/markets-and-street-trading-0, accessed November 1, 2024.
Siemens, J. C., Weathers, D., Smith, S., & Fisher, D. (2020). Sizing up without selling out: the role of authenticity in maintaining long-run consumer support for successful underdog brands. Journal of Advertising, 49(1), 78-97.
vom Lehn, D. (2014). Timing Is Money: Managing the Floor in Sales Interaction at Street-Market Stalls, Journal of Marketing Management, 30(13–14), 1448–1466. https://doi.org/10.1080/0267257X.2014.941378.
Zhang, Z., & Patrick, V. M. (2021). Mickey D’s has more street cred than McDonald’s: Consumer brand nickname use signals information authenticity, Journal of Marketing, 85(5), 58-73.
Zukin, S. Reconstructing the authenticity of place. Theory and Society 40, 161–165 (2011). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11186-010-9133-1

Ilicco Elia (Reuters Media) – Mobile Technology: Opportunities and Challenges for News Organisations

interactivity, Marketing, Mobile, mobility, public places, Social Media, Technology

Ilicco Elia, Head of Consumer Mobile, Reuters Media, gave a lecture as part of my module “Marketing and New Technologies” (MSc International Marketing) at King’s College London. Ilicco who has been working at Reuters since 1993 and at Reuters Mobile for the past 6 years, highlighted the increasing difficulty for media companies to retain their integrity whilst reporting news as they emerge.

Reuters are a news agency that over the decades has built up an image and a brand that stands for trust and integrity in news reporting. It now is confronted with the pressure that their customers Reuters to deliver up-to-date accurate information about events as and when they happen. Therefore, Reuters use about 2500 journalists to gather, edit and disseminate news to a global audience. These journalists use mobile technology, including networked high-end cameras, camera phones, mobile phones, laptops, etc, to gather information (pictures, videos, text, …) and immediately send it to the editor in the London office who produces news items that are disseminated across the various Reuters distribution channels. Illico illustrated the process by referring to the Football World Cup 2010 when pictures taken by journalists in South Africa appeared on Reuters mobile seconds after they had been taken. On the next day, the same pictures were published in newspapers around the world.

The immediacy that people increasingly demand from news organisations is driven by the growing pervasiveness of consumer mobile technology, such as mobile telephones, laptops and tablet computers. It is not sufficient anymore that Reuters disseminate news via its website but they have to develop applications, ‘apps’, that run on a range of different mobile devices and systems. Based on the opportunities offered by the iPhone and Blackberry phones Reuters created applications that deliver news through different kinds of mobile device. For example, Reuters New Pro, Reuters Mobile Website and Reuters RSS deliver global news to customers who are on the move; and Reuters Galleries exhibit the best photographs taken by Reuters correspondents around the word.

Ilicco highlighted the profound changes to journalism that have been initated by the wide distribution of mobile technology to consumers. It not only influences the consumption of news, everywhere and at any time but also the organisation of news production, editing and disemination. The scope of these changes is just becoming visible in the editorial offices but little is known of the emerging practices of news consumption.

The new technologies also facilitate new forms of journalism. In recent years, citizen journalism and the contribution of news by consumers in others ways has become more and more popular with many news organisations. This seems to be a dangerous path for organisations like Reuters that have built their brand on the integrity and authenticity of their news. News and information delivered by people other than Reuter’s journalists are difficult to assess in their truthfulness and authenticity. Similar, it can sometimes be difficult for news organisations to hold on and evaluate information before disseminating it, as competitors may push forward with the distribution of an item. Examples of the speedy dissemination of wrongful news are manifold. The Guardian for example pressed forward with repeatedly reporting that Nokia Smartphones would soon be running Google’s Android operating system. As we now know Nokia have entered a close collaboration with Microsoft, rather than Google.

The ease of diseminating news is a tempting for news organisations as for mobile users. By clicking on a few buttons a news item with (maybe incorrect) information, can be shared with friends and followers on social networks. The sharing of wrong news by mobile users can badly reflect on their image in the ‘twitterverse’. As Rob Wilmot highlighted in an earlier guest lecture in the same module in January, ‘trust’ is difficult to gain but easily lost in social media. And this valid for businesses and organisation as well as for individuals.

Ilicco Elia in the News

Media Guardia 100

NMA Portrait (£)

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