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An exploration of the propensity of consumers to recall brand associations for fabricated brands

conference contribution
posted on 2010-01-01, 00:00 authored by Julian Vieceli, C Chifamba
This conceptual paper discusses the investigation of the recall of brand associations of consumer for brands of high and low salience, as well as for fabricated brands. There has been research on brand associations for "fake" or counterfeit brands, and also for brands with low residual awareness, but there has been little research on the role of brand associations for fabricated brands. This study will investigate the role of brand associations and the propensity of consumers to recall brand associations for brands that do not exist. It is proposed that consumers may revel1 to recalling associations for the product category when they are confronted with a brand name that does not exist. It is proposed to test this with an experimental method, utilising high salience, low salience and fabricated brands from a fastmoving consumer good and a service category. This study will have implications for the manner in which respondents utilise information related to a brand, and also the manner in which marketers advertise their brands, in order to differentiate the brand from others.<br>

History

Location

Christchurch, N.Z.

Language

eng

Notes

Conference website : http://www.anzmac2010.org/

Publication classification

E1 Full written paper - refereed

Copyright notice

2010, ANZMAC

Start date

2010-11-29

End date

2010-12-01

Title of proceedings

ANZMAC 2010 : Doing more with less : Proceedings of the 2010 Australian and New Zealand Marketing Academy Conference

Event

Australian and New Zealand Marketing Academy. Conference (2010 : Christchurch, New Zealand)

Publisher

ANZMAC

Place of publication

Christchurch, N.Z.

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