What's in a university logo? Building commitment in higher education
What's in a university logo? Building commitment in higher education
Achieving commitment can be challenging for the service industry, particularly for universities. If these service organizations can align and convey that their identity or image is beneficial toward their stakeholders, commitment is achievable. The present article examines a specific form of brand identity and image, namely brand logo benefit, and establishes that self-congruence is the driver of 'brand logo benefit' and that brand logo benefit positively influences commitment. Drawing on the self-concept theory, the study develops and empirically tests a conceptual model using survey data collected from 478 students in Indonesia. The study demonstrates that self-congruence (actual or ideal) affects the perceived brand logo benefit and brand logo benefit positively affects commitment. In addition, brand logo benefit partially mediates the link between self-congruence and commitment. Results indicate that actual self-congruence is a slightly better predictor of brand logo benefit compared with ideal self-congruence. Interestingly, ideal self-congruence is a slightly better predictor of commitment. Discussions and implications are provided.
actual self-congruence, brand logo benefit, commitment, ideal selfcongruence
137-152
Japutra, Arnold
004a3f8c-4d07-4cc7-8660-c5b3a5983760
Keni, Keni
88fd40f8-4ae0-4247-a697-979d5631ccbd
Nguyen, Bang
9a22b358-9ee4-44b7-8147-87e742ca7ff1
1 March 2016
Japutra, Arnold
004a3f8c-4d07-4cc7-8660-c5b3a5983760
Keni, Keni
88fd40f8-4ae0-4247-a697-979d5631ccbd
Nguyen, Bang
9a22b358-9ee4-44b7-8147-87e742ca7ff1
Japutra, Arnold, Keni, Keni and Nguyen, Bang
(2016)
What's in a university logo? Building commitment in higher education.
Journal of Brand Management, 23 (2), .
(doi:10.1057/bm.2016.1).
Abstract
Achieving commitment can be challenging for the service industry, particularly for universities. If these service organizations can align and convey that their identity or image is beneficial toward their stakeholders, commitment is achievable. The present article examines a specific form of brand identity and image, namely brand logo benefit, and establishes that self-congruence is the driver of 'brand logo benefit' and that brand logo benefit positively influences commitment. Drawing on the self-concept theory, the study develops and empirically tests a conceptual model using survey data collected from 478 students in Indonesia. The study demonstrates that self-congruence (actual or ideal) affects the perceived brand logo benefit and brand logo benefit positively affects commitment. In addition, brand logo benefit partially mediates the link between self-congruence and commitment. Results indicate that actual self-congruence is a slightly better predictor of brand logo benefit compared with ideal self-congruence. Interestingly, ideal self-congruence is a slightly better predictor of commitment. Discussions and implications are provided.
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Published date: 1 March 2016
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© 2016 Macmillan Publishers Ltd.
Keywords:
actual self-congruence, brand logo benefit, commitment, ideal selfcongruence
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Local EPrints ID: 499986
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/499986
ISSN: 1350-231X
PURE UUID: 2f447e0f-1b91-4110-a727-e62062d60eed
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Date deposited: 10 Apr 2025 17:20
Last modified: 11 Apr 2025 02:16
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Contributors
Author:
Arnold Japutra
Author:
Keni Keni
Author:
Bang Nguyen
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