NEWS

ASSOCIATIVE NETWORKS…

A paper I did together with Celine Brandt and Charles Pahud from the University of Liege on “Associatice Networks as an Approach to Market Segmentation” was accepted for publication by the “International Journal of Market Research

Although Brand Concept Maps (graphical representations of brand image) have been discussed in the marketing literature since the 1990s, mapping methods are still in their infancy. We broadened the scope of the method, using it to segment the market. We introduce a segmentation technique that uses brand perception as its main criteria, and apply our method to a real case, that is Lipton Ice Tea.

, ,    18.05.2010

ACR POSTER

acr-poster

At the Pittsburgh ACR conference we presented a poster on “Compensatory Consumption when saying Good-Bye“. Mail me if you are interested in the topic or our short paper. A pdf version of the poster is available here!

,    15.11.2009

IT TOOK SOME TIME…

…to have our article on “Cross-National Logo Evaluation” published (to be concrete: around ten years…). But now its done. You´ll find the article in the September/October edition of “Marketing Science” and a short summary here:

The universality of design perception and response is tested using data collected from 10 countries: Argentina, Australia, China, Germany, Great Britain, India, The Netherlands, Russia, Singapore, and the United States. A Bayesian, finite-mixture, structural equation model is developed that identifies latent logo clusters while accounting for heterogeneity in evaluations. The concomitant variable approach allows cluster probabilities to be country specific. Rather than a priori defined clusters, our procedure provides a posteriori cross-national logo clusters based on consumer response similarity. Our model reduces the 10 countries to three cross-national clusters that respond differently to logo design dimensions: the West, Asia, and Russia. The dimensions under- lying design are found to be similar across countries, suggesting that elaborateness, naturalness, and harmony are universal design dimensions. Responses (affect, shared meaning, subjective familiarity, and true and false recognition) to logo design dimensions (elaborateness, naturalness, and harmony) and elements (repetition, pro- portion, and parallelism) are also relatively consistent, although we find minor differences across clusters. Our results suggest that managers can implement a global logo strategy, but they also can optimize logos for specific countries if desired.

, ,    15.11.2009