Staff Profiles

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Dr Katy Mason

BA (Hons) Management and Marketing (Wolverhampton), MA International Marketing (Greenwich), PhD (Warwick)

Senior Lecturer

http://katymason.wordpress.com/

Blog

http://katymason.wordpress.com/

Department

Marketing

Contact

Room: D33
Tel: +44 1524 5 10983
Fax: + 44 (0)1524 593928
Email:

Office Hours

Monday 10-11am

Current Teaching

Undergraduate Studies: Marketing Part One: 101 Marketing Innovation.  Marketing Part Two: MKTG 315 Marketing Innovation

Postgraduate Studies: MSc Advanced Marketing Management: Dissertation Supervision and Project Supervision.

Research Interests

My research interests originate from work experience in industry.  This experience drove my PhD research which explored the relationship between how firms structured and managed their supply chains and the level of market orientation they achieved.  Today, my research continues in this broad area as I endeavour to explore the issues that drive successful business networks.

My research now focuses on understanding how managers develop promising market-making practices through business model innovation.  Understanding the practices of markets and business models requires an exploration of the different elements of business models and the interactions between these elements; specifically the network, knowledge, revenue, relationship and market architectures.  Such archetictures frame the  mechanisms and processes that cross organisational boundaries as firms attempt to co-ordinate and manage their strategic business networks.

Currently, I’m working on variety of projects including a project on the co-evolution of supplier relationships and their business models.  This project explores how firms develop and change their relationships over time and follows an international network of firms embarking on the establishment of a long term relationship, as a design activity is outsourced for the first time. 

Other projects I am currently engaged in explore the effect of corporate identity on business-to-business relationships (with Claudia Simões at the University of Minho) and the effect of communications typology on task success in a business-to-business environment (with Sheena Leek at the University of Birmingham).  These projects are united by a common theme: how managers institute and administer successful and dynamic organizational networks in multiple contexts.

Current Research

Making Markets: The Practice of Business Models

The press is replete with stories suggesting that the way firms develop business models (that interact with and shape markets) is likely to affect their ability to compete internationally.  Yet we know very little about the micro, firm-level practices that underpin business models.  Government policy initiatives have done much to promote macro-economic management and provide a helpful regulatory environment for business to prosper. However, the key to improvements in firm productivity lies in understanding what goes on inside productivity processes and how this links to the external macro environment.   That is, we need to understand more about the process of ‘translating’ a firm’s market vision and business strategy encapsulated in their business model into localised, contextualised and enacted market practices.  The aim of this research is explore and identify promising practices that enable managers to make markets through the development and adaptation of business models.

This research is supported by: AIM and the ESRC

The Practice of Business Models and the Role of Corporate Identity

Research suggests that business models are co-created by the interactions of firms within a network.  The purpose of this research is to explore how the different firms within a network percieve their own Corporate Identity and the Corporate Identities of those firms they have dealings with.  Further, the study sets out to explore how these differing percieptions of Corporate Identity influence management and marketing practices.

This research is supported by: Fundação para a Ciência e Tecnologia  

Research Grants

Research Area: Making Markets: the Practice of Business Models

Awarding Body: AIM

Research Area: The Practice of Business Models and the Role of Corporate Identity

Awarding Body: Fundação para a Ciência e Tecnologia

Research Area: Flexible Business Models in the Service Sector

Awarding Body: Lancaster University Management School Pump-Priming Grant

Research Area: An exploartion of the impact of horizontal mergers and acquisitions on buyer-seller relationships.

Awarding Body: Lancaster University Small Grant Scheme

AIM Visiting International Fellows:

 

Profile

Following completion of my first degree I worked as marketing manager for a company manufacturing fire-fighting vehicles for the home and international markets. I then worked for a firm of international publishers marketing legal services directories worldwide.  The issues raised within these practical work environments required that I understood how firms developed and maintained inter-firm relationships.  As I watched the frustrations of the sales and marketing teams, the realisation that the classic marketing tools presented in marketing texts that I studied as an undergraduate, were useful in a consumer setting but seemed far removed from the issues being grappled with by managers in a business-to-business setting, left me wondering.  This ultimately brought me to my research.  Having completed my PhD at Warwick in 2002, today, I continue to pursue research in the field of inter-firm relationships and business networks here at Lancaster as part of the Industrial Marketing and Purchasing Group.

Chapter (3)
Journal article (11)
Conference contribution (19)
Working paper (3)
Other (6)

View all publications (42)

Publications

  • Mason K, Oshri I. and Leek Sheena, forthcoming, 'Shared learning in supply network : evidence from and emerging market supply network.', European Journal of Marketing
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  • Mason K and Mouzas S, 2011, 'Flexible business models', European Journal of Marketing
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  • Mason K, Oshri I and Leek S, 2011, 'Shared learning in supply network: evidence from an emerging market supply network', European Journal of Marketing
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  • Leek S and Mason K, 2011, 'The utilisation of network pictures to examine a company's employees' perceptions of a supplier relationship', Industrial Marketing Management
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  • Spring M and Mason K, 2011, 'Business models for complex performance: procuring aerospace engineering design services', in Procuring Complex Performance: Studies in Innovation in Product-Service Management, Routledge, London and New York, pp. 99-119, ISBN: 9780415800051
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  • Mason K and Easton Geoffrey, 2009, 'Boundary objects and buyer-seller relationships.'
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  • Mason K and Simões C., 2009, 'Artefacts of corporate identity and business relationships.'
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  • Leek Sheena and Mason K, 2009, 'Network pictures : building an holistic representation of a dyadic relationships.', Industrial Marketing Management, vol 38, no. 6, pp. 599-607.
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  • Mason K and Easton Geoffrey, 2009, 'Boundary objects and buyer-seller relationships', IMP (Marseilles) - 2009
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  • Mason K and Simoes C, 2009, 'A framework on the expressions of corporate identity within a supply network', 38th EMAC Conference (Nantes) - 2009
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Business Model Innovation

Katy Mason and Martin Spring ran a workshop in August 2010 called Business Model Innovation – for owner-managers of SMEs in Northwest England – as part of Lancaster University Management School's innovation for Growth programme.

Microsoft Collaboration

My research looks at how firms develop and use business models in ways that make and shape markets. Part of my AIM funded research looks at how Microsoft is making a market in the ICT Citizens Safety market. Watch full size.

Working with Prof Luis Araujo, we have developed a postgraduate course around business-to-business markets. In 2009/2010 were able to involve our MSc students in Microsoft’s market-making activities. Students researched the processes and structures of Citizens Safety markets around the world. Watch full size.

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