Abstract

While mental associations between a brand and its marketing elements are an important part of brand equity, previous research has yet to provide a sound methodology to measure the strength of these links. The following studies present the development and validation of an implicit measure to assess the strength of mental representations of brand elements in the mind of the consumer. The measure described in this paper, which we call the Brand Discrimination task, requires participants to identify whether images of brand elements (e.g. color, logo, packaging) belong to a target brand or not. Signal detection theory (SDT) is used to calculate a Brand Discrimination index which gives a measure of overall recognition accuracy for a brand’s elements in the context of its competitors. A series of five studies shows that the Brand Discrimination task can discriminate between strong and weak brands, increases when mental representations of brands are experimentally strengthened, is relatively stable across time, and can predict brand choice, independently and while controlling for other explicit and implicit brand evaluation measures. Together, these studies provide unique evidence for the importance of mental brand representations in marketing and consumer behavior, along with a research methodology to measure this important consumer-based brand attribute.

Highlights

  • Creating and maintaining strong brands is an enormous priority for today’s marketers and organizations

  • We show that mental representations of a brand and its elements form an important part of consumerbased brand equity, and that these representations can predict brand choice, even when controlling for other explicit and implicit brand constructs

  • The measure described in this paper, which we call the Brand Discrimination task, requires participants to identify whether images of brand elements belong to a target brand or not

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Summary

Introduction

Creating and maintaining strong brands is an enormous priority for today’s marketers and organizations. Companies invest a great deal of time, money and effort in building and maintaining coherent brands, in which branding elements (e.g. slogans, colors, packaging) are all coherent with one another, strongly linked to the parent brand, and unique from competitor brands in the same category. A great deal of marketing budgets is spent on strengthening links among brand elements in the minds of consumers through marketing communication and advertising. Understanding the uniqueness and strength of consumers’ mental representation of brands and their elements is vital from a marketing perspective.

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