Abstract

Relations between channel member organizations are not the only relationships of importance in channels research. Significant relationships also exist between channel members and the brands that they represent and sell. Just as in consumer brand relationships, we find that downstream agents co-create the meaning of the brand with which they form relationships. However, unlike consumer brand relationship models that often conflate brand and company, treating them as one; we find that brand relationships in a B2B setting are independent and distinct from the relationships formed between downstream agents and the owners and/or managers of the brand. These particular brand relationships are complicated by the high switching costs associated with long term investments. The findings from a four-year multi-method research project, including ethnographic and survey data, point to the salience of these brand relationships and their importance to channel management. We find that perceived stability of the corporate channel partner, as well as perceptions of overlap between the corporate identity and that of the brand, are key antecedents of the downstream channel members' relationship with the corporation.

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