Publication: The influence of mating mind-sets on brand extension evaluation
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Program
KU-Authors
KU Authors
Co-Authors
Monga, Alokparna Basu
Advisor
Publication Date
2012
Language
English
Type
Journal Article
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Abstract
Prior research has identified several factors that influence brand extension evaluations. Extending this research, the authors suggest that external, situational factors can have an important influence on brand extension evaluations. This research focuses on mating mind-sets (i.e., thinking about a mate), which consumers commonly experience. Specifically, the authors propose that mating mind-sets triggered by the external situation can influence brand extension evaluations, particularly for men. Mating mind-sets induce male consumers (but not female consumers) to engage in relational processing, increasing fit perceptions and evaluations for moderately dissimilar brand extensions. These differences are more likely to emerge when a short-term mating mind-set is primed (vs. a long-term mating mind-set). Furthermore, using prestige brands (vs. functional brands) reduces the gap between men and women. In addition, subbrand architecture (vs. direct brand architecture) boosts the evaluations of female consumers but decreases those of male consumers. The authors find that the effects of mating mind-sets on brand extension evaluation are driven by male consumers' need to express creativity.
Description
Source:
Journal of Marketing Research
Publisher:
American Marketing Association (AMA)
Keywords:
Subject
Business