Defining brand relationships based on image-in-use and image heritage PhD Anne Rindell, Professor Tore Strandvik HANKEN School of Economics, CERS: Centre for Relationship Marketing and Service Management Helsinki, Finland Winter Park (Orlando), Florida, USA
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Defining brand relationships based on image-in-use and image heritage
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Defining brand relationships based on image-in-use and image heritage
PhD Anne Rindell, Professor Tore Strandvik
HANKEN School of Economics, CERS: Centre for Relationship Marketing and Service Management
Helsinki, Finland
Rollins CollegeWinter Park (Orlando), Florida, USA
Agenda
Relationships in Relationship Marketing
Brand relationships
Our proposal: Brand relationships defined from a time perspective.
Future research
Rindell/ Hanken Svenska handelshögskolan / Hanken School of Economics
Relationships in Relationship marketing and management
indicate time, behavior and attitude dimensions
In RM relationship principles focus on business activities i.e. they require activities from both parties involved. Therefore, the focus is on customers and other stakeholders, not on consumers in general
» In a B2B context, a relationship can be considered to exist in cases of a
contract or repeat purchase
» Indications: time; either contract or repeated purchase behavior
» In B2C context, a relationship is defined based on the customer’s
attitude and behavior (contract or repeat purchase) (Strandvik 1998)
»Indications: time; contract/repeated purchase behavior and
attitude
Hanken Svenska handelshögskolan / Hanken School of Economics www.hanken.fi
Relationship Marketing
» Relationship marketing can be defined as the deliberate management of customers and other stakeholders so that relationships with them are initiated, cultivated and dissolved in such a way that the company achieves and maintains its competitiveness.
» Creation entails discovery, choice of partner, initiation, and even
rejection to initiate a relationship
» Cultivation entails development and enhancement of created
relationships and prevention of unplanned dissolution of these
relationships
» Dissolution entails taking initiative to terminate, but also to manage
the termination process so that re-establishment and establishment of
other relationships will be possible. (Strandvik 1998)
Conclusion: Business focus
Hanken Svenska handelshögskolan / Hanken School of Economics www.hanken.fi
Brand relationships –metaphoric, imagined, and time
Branding / Business relationships: Company perspective
Continuing mutual agreement between two parties who agree to
participate in the ongoing relationship (Schultz, Barnes, Schultz and
Azzaro 2009)
Mental relationships: Consumer perspective
Consumers are willing to consider brands as relationship partners
(based on a literature review; Hayes, Alford, Silver and York 2006)
Brand relationships are meaning-laden resources engaged to help
people live their lives. They are multiplex process phenomena. (Fournier
2009)
Collective brand relationshipsSociety creates the brand (O’Guinn and Muniz 2009)
Brands are cultural blueprints (Holt 2002)
Conclusions: Brand relationships are metaphoric (Bengtsson 2003;
Story and Hess 2006) imagined (O’Guinn and Muniz 2009), and they have a time dimension .
Company
Consumer
Social
Consider this example ...........
» “It was Saturday and I came out to the parking place outside our house. Our neighbour had just arrived from a shopping trip and was unpacking his car. My presence obviously got him embarrassed, he took his time when unpacking his car and finally, as I didn’t leave, he began to excuse himself for having shopping bags from a shop for home decoration that had opened up some time ago nearby. He explained he got an impulse all of a sudden to look into the shop, although he doesn’t usually shop there. It had been a real surprise for him to find out that they sold nice, good quality things and that the shop was really fresh and inviting. He was still embarrassed and tried to convince me to visit the shop in order to find out myself and verify the difference.”
Hanken Svenska handelshögskolan / Hanken School of Economics www.hanken.fi
Image? Brand relationship?
What images does he refer to? What does he think mine are?Past, present, future?
What is his brand relationship over time? When did it start? What has happened? How does it still influence?
How and when does it end?What is mine?
We propose, that
A brand relationship is the consumer’s mental relationship with the brand [over time]
It develops over time and can be studied using two novel brand image concepts: image in use and image heritage
Hanken Svenska handelshögskolan / Hanken School of Economics www.hanken.fi
“Image is the consumer’s reality” David Bernstein, 1984
“Brand image is the consumer’s’ perceptions about a brand, as reflected by the brand associations held in consumer memory” (Keller, 2008,51)
“Image is the consumer’s idea of a product” (David Ogilvy)
Brand images are dynamic processes, influenced by a multifaceted network of images from multiple sources over time (Rindell 2007)
“If anyone can build a brand it is the customer. Marketers cannot do that. They can only create favourable conditions for a brand to develop in customers’ minds” (Grönroos, 2007, p. 229)
Hanken Svenska handelshögskolan / Hanken School of Economics www.hanken.fi
Perspective
Time dimension
Company/
organisation
Groups Consumer
Past, Present and
Future
Heritage Brands
(Urde et al. 2008)
Brand Icons (Holt
2005)
Image Heritage
Image-in-Use
(Rindell 2007)
Past Brand Heritage
(Aaker1996),
Retro branding (e.g.
Brown et al 2003)
Nostalgic brands
(Simms and Trott
2007)
Reputation
(Fombrun et al.
2003, 230)
Memory
(e.g. Braun-La Tour,
La Tour, Zinkhan
2007:
Autobiographical
memory)
Time in branding literature:Concepts and perspectives
Image heritage and image-in-use studies
Hanken Svenska handelshögskolan / Hanken School of Economics www.hanken.fi
Finnish retailing context
Rindell, A (2007). Image heritage. The temporal dimension in consumers’ corporate image constructions. Doctoral thesis.
www.hanken.fi/public/publ
Research question: How are consumers constructing corporate images?
Method: Grounded theory
Data: 35 accounts (21-75 year-old informants): 12 in-dept open interviews; 11 written accounts; 1 group interview; 7
learning diaries.
International retailing context
Rindell, Edvardsson, Strandvik (2010) “Mapping the roots of the consumer’s image-in-use of companies”. Journal of
Product and Brand Management. Vol. 19,No 6
Case IKEA Finland, Sweden and Germany, 2006-2009, data: 30 interviews
Banking sector
Strandvik, T and Rindell, A (2006): Nordea bank, C2B context . Conference proceedings
Räyhäntausta, P (2007): GE-money, B2B context. Master’s thesis
Image heritage are activated earlier brand-related images from various sources over time, which
influence on the present image construction process.
Answers the question How and Why past experiences influence on present image construction process
Image Heritage is defined through its dimensions: length of the awareness time span
When does the brand relationship start What is the dynamics of it? Who / What initiated it
“it’s the company from where my Granny bought her pullover” (male 48 years old) “I was a newcomer in town and my fried guided me to shop there” (female 47
years old) content of earlier memories
Past experiences over time consumers associate to in various contexts From many sources
They can be own experiences, learnt knowledge from e.g. parents, others experiences, company activity
Image dynamics, includes both cognitive and emotional aspects main temporal focus
Those past experiences that significantly influence present images. What eras/ age/ life context do they represent in the consumer’s life
Hanken Svenska handelshögskolan / Hanken School of Economics www.hanken.fi
Hanken Svenska handelshögskolan / Hanken School of Economics www.hanken.fi
Image heritage dimensions
Male, 49, I Awareness time span: 40-50 years.
Male, 43, IAwareness time span: 40 years
Female, 42, IAwareness time span: 35 years
Male, 31, IAwareness time span: 25 years
Female, 31, AAwareness time span: 10 years
Female, 28, AAwareness time span: 15 years
Female, 27, AAwareness time span: 20 years
Female, 25, A Awareness time span: 5 years
Female, 23, A
Awareness time span: 50 years
Length of an awareness time span
The company’s history
50’s 60’s 70’s 80’s 90’s 00’s
Data gatheringFuture
Main temporalFocus
Content of earlier experiences
Image Heritage dimensions
* Awareness time span
* Content
* Temporal Focus
Present: Image-in-use
Image-in-use is the present image construction process. It is influenced by [past] image heritage, the present context, and future expectations.
Plans for
wine cellar
Wine travelInformal
Champagne
study circle
”Wine & Spirit
education trust”
courses
Customs (import)
Plans to
start wine
business
Wine
Blogs
”Viinilehti”
magazine
Alko
Informal wine-
tastings with
friends
Wine fairs
Books
about wine
”Wine
Spectator”
magazine
”Wine
Advocate”
magazine
Tastings
Courses
Ebay
wine
sales
”Munskänkarna”
wine association
H
Winemaker
webpages
Figure: A consumer’s activity context concerning
a specific field of interest (wine). Source: Karl-Jacob
Mickelsson
Image heritage and Image in use
For companies and other stakeholders
Image heritage is a concept for understanding
how and why our messages are interpreted as they are
what and how to communicate to various stakeholder groups.
Image-in-use is a concept for understanding
where, when and with whom, and with what content consumers construct brand meanings and images
Image heritage and image-in-use captures the temporal, social, cultural
and contextual dimensions of image
Hanken Svenska handelshögskolan / Hanken School of Economics www.hanken.fi
Future research A brand relationship is the consumer’s mental relationship
with the brand [over time]
» Brand relationships studied from a time perspective
» Brand relationship dynamics
»How, why and when do brand relationships start, develop, change
and end
» Brand love vs. Brand avoidance dynamics
» Latent and Fading Brand relationships
» Conscious vs. Unconscious Brand relationships
» Behavior as a dimension in Brand relationships
Hanken Svenska handelshögskolan / Hanken School of Economics www.hanken.fi
Hanken Svenska handelshögskolan / Hanken School of Economics www.hanken.fi