An Empirical Investigation of Brand Equity


Book Description

Purpose: The author presents a model of the brand value drivers, measured by brand equity. The goal of this research is to identify the drivers, and determine how they influence brand equity performance in the researched industry, in order to develop a more effective brand strategy. Design/Methodology: The author studied an aggregate dataset for 739 food brands. Six predictors have been controlled for (i.e. marketing investments, price, revenue, perceived quality [organic and functional] and brand ownership), while the impact of the brand equity drivers on brand value has been estimated. The model has been formulated and estimated using a robust OLS procedure. Several data sources have been used in this study, such as market-based data from ACNielsen, as well as information and variable constructs using data from the Bureau Van Dijk Electronic Publishing AIDA financial statements database. Findings: Results suggest that marketing investment, price, revenue, brand ownership and perceived quality are highly associated with brand equity, and consequently with a higher brand value in the food industry. Research limitations/Implications: This study has only studied one industry (food), one industry segment (enriched-food) and one country (Italy). Originality/Value: The majority of marketing studies apply a single research approach and measures. This is the first study of brand equity that combines consumer, financial and marketing approaches. The model contributes to theory and practice in terms of suggesting which business drivers create brand value and what type of brand strategy a firm can apply in order to create brand value.







Jack Daniel's Brand Activity Analysis


Book Description

Seminar paper from the year 2010 in the subject Communications - Public Relations, Advertising, Marketing, Social Media, grade: 70%, University of Westminster, course: Introduction to Branding, language: English, abstract: Jack Daniel's is a smooth, premium whiskey, also specifically defined as a 'Tennessee Whiskey'; a product which was born as a bourbon but which, having been mellowed through maple charcoal, becomes a Tennessee sour mash whiskey (www.jackdaniels.co.uk). Jack Daniel's position itself as a familiar reassuring, dependable brand and it promote itself as such. "Jack Daniel's is a unique whiskey that is slowly mellowed drop by drop through 10 feet of sugar maple charcoal and matured in new American oak barrels at America's oldest registered distillery to achieve its smooth character". JD is a premium whiskey, often more expensive than its competitors especially outside the U.S maintains its position despite its price, because the uniqueness of the product (www.jackdaniels.co.uk).







Monitoring the Dynamics of Brand Equity Using Store-Level Data


Book Description

Management of brand equity has come to be viewed as critical to the optimal long-term performance of a brand. In this paper, we evaluate the usefulness of brand equity estimates obtained from store-level data for monitoring the health of a brand. For this purpose, we use a random coefficients logit demand model calibrated on store-level scanner data to track brand equity estimates over time in two consumer packaged goods categories that experienced several new product introductions during the time period of our empirical investigation. Using these tracked measures, we also study the impact of marketing actions such as advertising, sales promotions, and product innovations on brand equity. We find that the brand equity estimates effectively capture the high equity of strongly positioned popular brands as well as brands that command a significant price premium in niche markets. Using an example, we illustrate how these brand equity estimates can be used to monitor changes in brand equity, which measures such as market share may fail to capture. Our substantive results indicate that advertising has a positive effect on brand equity in both the product categories whereas the effect of sales promotions is not significant in either category. Further, our results reveal that new product innovations have a positive impact on brand equity and can explain a significant proportion of its variation. Overall, our analysis shows a brand manager can track brand equity using store-level data, gain insights into the drivers of the brand's equity, and manage these drivers to achieve brand equity targets.




Exploration of Consumer Brand Name Equity for Established Products and Services


Book Description

The objective of the study is the exploration of consumer brand name equity for established products and services. There is little research on consumer brandname equity for established products, despite the general assumption within the literature of the central importance to consumers of the brand name element. To achieve isolation of the brand name element the study focuses on name changes brought about by global marketing. Adopting both a critical realist position and a functional based approach towards consumer brand equity, a mixed methods three stage sequential study design is employed. The first stage of the research focuses on the theoretical literature relevant to consumer brand name equity. In particular it seeks to derive a theoretical model of the consumer impact of a change in brand name for an established product. The second stage of the research uses qualitative analysis to empirically explore established product brand name functions. The model developed in the first stage of research is used as a framework but research is not limited to the empirical exploration of this model. The final stage of the research uses quantitative analysis to empirically explore the importance of the brand name of established product to consumers. The research makes a number of contributions to the existing literature. It empirically identifies a number of ways in which the brand name of established products can provide equity to consumers; specifically through rational, relationship, habitual and symbolic functions. One key finding is the discovery that much of the symbolic value appears to be customer rather than corporate driven. A further contribution from the quantitative work is an indication that the overall importance of the brand name of established products holds significant variance. A minority of research participants placed great importance on the brand name element, whilst for the majority the brand name held little importance. This places in context the above functions of the brand name element. Key implications from this study are that the accepted centrality of the brandname element within branding needs qualification and the active role of the consumer within brand equity creation requires greater recognition. In addition, whilst the research findings provide a good rationale for why corporations are able to change the brand name of their products with minimal impact for most of their customers, it also suggests that for a minority of customers this name change will cause an insurmountable long term problem, which will have to be borne by the corporation.




Brand Equity


Book Description







Brands


Book Description

Brands are now a dominant feature of everyday life. Drawing on rich empirical material, this book builds up a critical theory, arguing that brands have become an important tool for transforming everyday life into economic value.