The influence of a country's brands and industry on its image
The influence of a country's brands and industry on its image
Purpose: Extant research has largely treated country image (CI) as an exogenous variable, focusing mostly on its consequences for consumers’ evaluations and purchases of products or brands originating from a country. Scant research has examined the instrumental role of a country’s brands and products in the evaluations of CI. This study aims to investigate how the brands of a country contribute to CI ratings and the conditions underlying their effect on CI.
Design/methodology/approach: Three experimental studies test the hypotheses, one pertaining to the effect of brands on CI (N = 227), the second to the effect of products on CI (N = 116) and the third to the effect of brands and products on industry image (N = 215). The experimental approach overcomes the limitations of cross-sectional surveys commonly used in CI studies to detect the direction of the observed effects. Furthermore, respondents (British consumers) were allowed to determine the brands and products associated with a country.
Findings: Drawing on memory schema theory, across three studies, the authors identify two types of reverse inferences: from brand to CI and from product category to CI. The reverse inference from a brand to a superordinate image is stronger for industry image than for CI.
Research limitations/implications: This research focuses on consumers’ evaluations from only one country (the UK). Further research could replicate the studies across different countries and with different countries of origin (COOs). Researchers could also examine the influence of brands misidentified with the wrong COO and mistakenly stored as such in consumers’ memories.
Practical implications: The results are relevant for managers and consultants working with country- (place-) branding campaigns. Brands and industries can help strengthen the evaluations of the economic dimension of different countries; however, these assets are underdeveloped in country-branding campaigns. Linking countries with brands and industries in campaigns could result in positive associations, which, in turn, could enhance the reputational rating of the countries.
Originality/value: This research extends previous studies on the effects of a country’s products and brands on CI by incorporating the mediating role of industry image between brands/products and CI, separating the effects of brand and product category on CI, allowing consumers to determine, which brands and products are associated with a country and adopting an experimental methodology to ascertain the causal direction of the effects.
Brand, Country image, Industry image, Memory schema
27-62
Lopez, Carmen
f11f88d5-36c4-4beb-a4c5-ceb16a6df19c
Balabanis, George
6c619905-c23a-42e9-bb8d-4696e0c1735c
4 January 2021
Lopez, Carmen
f11f88d5-36c4-4beb-a4c5-ceb16a6df19c
Balabanis, George
6c619905-c23a-42e9-bb8d-4696e0c1735c
Lopez, Carmen and Balabanis, George
(2021)
The influence of a country's brands and industry on its image.
European Journal of Marketing, 55 (1), .
(doi:10.1108/EJM-06-2018-0414).
Abstract
Purpose: Extant research has largely treated country image (CI) as an exogenous variable, focusing mostly on its consequences for consumers’ evaluations and purchases of products or brands originating from a country. Scant research has examined the instrumental role of a country’s brands and products in the evaluations of CI. This study aims to investigate how the brands of a country contribute to CI ratings and the conditions underlying their effect on CI.
Design/methodology/approach: Three experimental studies test the hypotheses, one pertaining to the effect of brands on CI (N = 227), the second to the effect of products on CI (N = 116) and the third to the effect of brands and products on industry image (N = 215). The experimental approach overcomes the limitations of cross-sectional surveys commonly used in CI studies to detect the direction of the observed effects. Furthermore, respondents (British consumers) were allowed to determine the brands and products associated with a country.
Findings: Drawing on memory schema theory, across three studies, the authors identify two types of reverse inferences: from brand to CI and from product category to CI. The reverse inference from a brand to a superordinate image is stronger for industry image than for CI.
Research limitations/implications: This research focuses on consumers’ evaluations from only one country (the UK). Further research could replicate the studies across different countries and with different countries of origin (COOs). Researchers could also examine the influence of brands misidentified with the wrong COO and mistakenly stored as such in consumers’ memories.
Practical implications: The results are relevant for managers and consultants working with country- (place-) branding campaigns. Brands and industries can help strengthen the evaluations of the economic dimension of different countries; however, these assets are underdeveloped in country-branding campaigns. Linking countries with brands and industries in campaigns could result in positive associations, which, in turn, could enhance the reputational rating of the countries.
Originality/value: This research extends previous studies on the effects of a country’s products and brands on CI by incorporating the mediating role of industry image between brands/products and CI, separating the effects of brand and product category on CI, allowing consumers to determine, which brands and products are associated with a country and adopting an experimental methodology to ascertain the causal direction of the effects.
Other
EJM._2020._Lopez_Balabanis_Open_Access
- Accepted Manuscript
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 25 June 2020
e-pub ahead of print date: 30 September 2020
Published date: 4 January 2021
Keywords:
Brand, Country image, Industry image, Memory schema
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 442166
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/442166
ISSN: 0309-0566
PURE UUID: defb9327-4389-4a4d-bc9f-27875efa2f48
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Date deposited: 08 Jul 2020 16:30
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 05:42
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Contributors
Author:
Carmen Lopez
Author:
George Balabanis
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