Sustainable Marketing and Organisational Performance: Evidence from the Nigerian Brewery Industry
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FUTA Journal of Logistics and Innovation Technology
Abstract
Sustainable marketing is now a strategic requirement of organisations that want to enhance
performance and address environmental and social expectations. Despite the significant attention
given to the concept by scholars, empirical information at the firm level in the Nigerian brewing
industry is scarce. This paper has looked at how sustainable marketing influences organisational
performance in International Breweries Plc, with particular focus on the Ilesa and Sagamu plants.
The objectives explored environmental sustainability on operational efficiency, social
responsibility on community engagement and economic viability on operational productivity.
Descriptive survey design was used. A census of 256 employees (production,
marketing/operations, and management units within the two plants) was used in the study. The
response rate was 96.9 out of 256; 248 of the 256 questionnaires sent out were received and could
be used. The SPSS version 27 was used to analyse data using descriptive statistics and simple
linear regression. The alpha coefficients of 0.80-0.85 show that the measurement scales are
internally reliable at an acceptable level. These findings indicated that environmental
sustainability had a significant influence on operational efficiency (R² = 0.42, p < 0.05), social
responsibility had a significant influence on community engagement (R² = 0.44, p < 0.05), and
economic viability had a significant impact on operational productivity (R² = 0.41, p < 0.05). It
was found that sustainable marketing has a great impact on the organisational performance when
it comes to the manufacturing environment. It thus suggested that International Breweries Plc
ought to integrate sustainability into its fundamental strategy, enhance stakeholder-based
programmes, and invest in innovations that are economically viable and that can help it maintain
its strength over time.
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Kolade, Olatunji, Animasaun and Olawoyin