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Summary, Lectures & Articles - International Brand Management (IBM): MAN-MMA035A

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This clear and concise summary covers all the essential theories, models, and cases from the International Brand Management course. It explains complex concepts in an easy-to-understand way, saving you time while helping you focus on what really matters for the exam. With this summary, you’ll be well-prepared to master the key topics. Perfect for students who want to study efficiently and pass the course with confidence.

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Lectures & Summary IBM
Lecture 1
Introduction
Brand  product + unique name, terms, signs, design + associations
(cognitive and effective). Brand is a perceptual entity (created in the
mind). A person’s gut feeling about a product, service, or
organization.




Brand elements  characteristics that identify a product and distinguish it from others (e.g.
name, logo, symbol, package design)


Brand identity  how the brand wants to be perceived
in the market
Brand image  how the brand is actually perceived in
the market
Brand strategy  how the organization will bridge
identity & image (goal is to have as much overlap
between identity & image!)


WHY BRANDS MATTER:
1. Advantages for consumers
- Consumer need for risk reduction (buy from brands they had a good experience with)
- Consumers need simplification
- Consumers want to express themselves
2. Advantages for companies
- Mean of identification
- Customer loyalty
- Price premiums (can be higher)  the extra amount a customer is willing to pay for a
product compared to similar alternatives because they perceive it as better or more
valuable.
- Predictable demand
- Robust to competitive actions
- Yield licensing opportunities – growth potential (e.g. via brand extensions)

,KEY THEORETICAL PERSPECTIVES IN THE BRANDING LITERATURE
Firm perspective: view brands as assets and examines the various
functions and roles that brands serve for firms (both strategically
and financially)
Consumer perspective: views brands as signals (economic
approach) and mental knowledge cues (psychological approach)
Society perspective: presents brands in societal and cultural
contexts affecting individual consumers both directly and
indirectly though social forces, structures, and institutions




Lecture 2
Brand Equity
ASSOCIATIVE NETWORK MEMORY MODEL (Blackwell, Miniard, Engel, 2001)
- Memory is a network of nodes and links:
o Nodes  stored information or concepts that are
connected by links
o Links  strength of the association between nodes
- Activation of nodes:
o When internal information is being retrieved from
memory (accessing stored information)
o When new info is being encoded (learning)




- Spreading activation:
o Activation of one node can spread to another node
- For example: if sport shoes are named, Nike may pop up.
But even further associations may pop directly, or via
activation of brand names.
The stronger a link between the brand node and the association, the
more likely that the association will pop up with the brand

,HOW DOES IT WORK FOR BRANDS?




EXAMPLE COCA COLA

, Keller (1993)
Conceptualizing, Measuring, and Managing Customer-Based Brand Equity
Customer-based brand equity (CBBE)  the differential effect of brand knowledge on
consumer response to the marketing of a brand; the value a brand adds based on what
consumers know, think, and feel about it. (e.g. if people prefer Coca-Cola over Pepsi, even
when the taste and price are similar, it’s because of the positive associations they have with
the Coca-Cola brand)
Brand equity  the commercial value that derives from consumer perception of the brand
name of a particular product or service, rather than from the product or service itself (different
outcomes result in the marketing of a product or service because of its brand name, as
compared to if the same product or service did not have that name).
Brand    knowledge    attitude    behavior. Strong brands have a benefit.


KEY DIMENSIONS OF BRAND KNOWLEDGE (determinants of CBBE)
1. Brand awareness  customer’s ability to identify the brand under different scenarios
(nodes exist with brand name in consumer’s mind)
2. Brand image  customer holds some strong, favorable, and unique brand
associations in memory (the other nodes that are linked to the brand name node)
BRAND AWARENESS:
1. Brand recall  consumer’s ability to retrieve a brand from memory when given a
product category or a need related to a category; remembering a brand without any
help (e.g. running shoe – Nike)
2. Brand recognition  consumer’s ability to confirm prior exposure to the brand when
give the brand as a cue; recognizing a brand when you see or hear it (e.g. show logo,
design, slogan, and then they know the brand)


Establishing (high) brand awareness is important:
- Increases the likelihood that the brand will be in the consideration set
- Influences on decisions about brands within consideration sets
o May be especially essential in low involvement or more impulse buying
categories (quicker decisions)
- It is a necessary condition for developing brand image and associations
Challenge for brand awareness = the human brain filters out most of the stimuli


Brand associations  all the nodes stored in a consumer’s memory to which linkages exist
from the brand

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