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Brand meaning management /

Noted authors discuss how and why consumers identify with and become attached to brands and the challenges marketers face in creating and sustaining these states. Other meaning makers (e.g., celebrities, culture, consumers themselves) can facilitate or detract from the brand meanings marketers aim t...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Otros Autores: MacInnis, Deborah J. (Editor ), Park, C. Whan (Editor ), Agarwal, Megha, 1982- (Contribuidor)
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Bingley, England : Emerald, 2015.
Edición:First edition.
Colección:Review of marketing research.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Front Cover; Brand Meaning Management; Copyright page; Contents; List of Contributors; Editorial Advisory Board; Series Introduction: Meaning of Research and Research on (Brand) Meaning; Overview; Publication Mission; Special Issues on Critical and Emerging Areas; Volume Introduction: New Perspectives and Future Research Issues on Brand Meaning Management; Brand Meaning Makers; Marketer-Derived Brand Narratives and Brand Meaning; Celebrities and Brand Meaning; Consumers as Brand Meaning Makers; Culture and Brand Meaning; Meaning Management Outcomes; Brands and Social Relationships.
  • Brand Identification and AttachmentBrand Evangelism; Meaning Management and Brand Transgressions; Exchange versus Communal Brand Relationships; Violating the Basis for Brand Attachment; Violations of Honor Values; Unanswered Questions; Brand Relationship Evolution; Establishing, Strengthening, Augmenting, and Revitalizing Brand Meaning; Drivers of Brand Attachment; Extensions to B2C Markets; Brand Architecture Design; References; What Does Brand Authenticity Mean? Causes and Consequences of Consumer Scrutiny toward a Brand Narrative; Introduction; Background; Brand Narratives as Stories.
  • Two Pretests of the Extent of Creative LicenseConsumers are "More Gullible than Suspicious"; Study 1; Method; Results; Study 2; Method; Results; Study 3; Method; Results; Discussion; General Discussion; Notes; References; APPENDIX; Managing Brand Meaning through Celebrity Endorsement; Theoretical Development; Self-Brand Connections; Celebrity as Source of Meaning; Brand Symbolism; Study 1; Method; Participants; Procedure; Independent Variables; Dependent Variable; Manipulation Checks; Results; Manipulation Checks; Hypotheses 1 and 2; Hypothesis 3; Discussion of Results from Study 1.
  • Self-Enhancement MotivesStudy 2; Method; Participants; Procedure; Independent and Dependent Variables; Manipulation Checks; Results; Manipulation Checks; Hypotheses Tests; Discussion of Results from Study 2; Conclusion; Notes; References; Brand Remixing: 3D Printing the Nokia Case; Brands: Private versus Communal Assets; The Rise of Remixing; Prior Research; The Impact of Remixing; The Nokia Case; 3D Printing Overview; Customizing the Lumia 820; Analysis of Remixing Activity by Users; Impact of Nokia's Remixing Initiative; Implications for Brand Management Thought and Practice.
  • Implications for Brand ScholarsImplications for Brand Managers; Conclusion; Notes; References; Managing Cultural Equity: A Theoretical Framework for Building Iconic Brands in Globalized Markets; What is Cultural Equity?; Consumer Responses to Brands and Cultural Equity; Positive Cultural Equity of Iconic Brands; Negative Cultural Equity of Iconic Brands; Simultaneous Activation of Two Cultures (or Bicultural Priming); Evoking a Culture Defense Mindset; Salience of Intercultural Competition; Cultural Equity for Which Group?; The Building Blocks of Cultural Equity.