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Redefining brand salience using memory theory and implications for measurement

conference contribution
posted on 2002-01-01, 00:00 authored by Julian Vieceli, F Alpert
The concept of brand salience, or brand accessibility in memory, has been prevalent in the area of brand research for several decades. Brand salience has been driven by memory theory and psychological research, but debate has continued over the structure of memory systems, the way in which consumers undertake memory search, and what they do with brand information once it is retrieved. With the rise to prominence of brand equity, brand salience has been subsumed into the awareness category, as an operationalisation of recalling information. This paper looks at redefining brand salience and proposes new methods for measuring brand salience.<br>

History

Location

Melbourne, Australia

Language

eng

Publication classification

E1 Full written paper - refereed

Copyright notice

2002, ANZMAC

Editor/Contributor(s)

R Shaw, S Adam, H McDonald

Pagination

2511 - 2519

Start date

2002-12-02

End date

2002-12-04

ISBN-13

9780730025627

ISBN-10

0730025624

Title of proceedings

ANZMAC 2002 : conference proceedings

Event

Australian and New Zealand Marketing Academy Conference (2002 : Melbourne, Vic.)

Publisher

Deakin University

Place of publication

Geelong, Vic.

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