Name order effects on cobrand perceptions: the impacts of product similarity and language structure

IF 3.1 Q2 BUSINESS
John J. Sailors, Jamal A. Al-Khatib, Tarik Khzindar, Shaza Ezzi
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Purpose

The Islamic world spans many different languages with different language structures. This paper aims to explore one way in which language structure affects consumer response to the marketing of cobrands.

Design/methodology/approach

Two between subject experiments were conducted using samples of participants from Saudi Arabia and the USA. The first manipulated partner brand category similarity and brand name order, along with the structure of the language used to communicate with the market. The data for this study includes Arabic speakers in Saudi Arabia as well as English speakers in the USA. The second study explores how targeting a population fluent in multiple languages of varied structure nullifies the findings from the first study and uses Latino participants in the USA.

Findings

This study finds that when brands come from similar product categories, name order did not affect cobrand evaluations, but it did when the brands come from dissimilar product categories. Here, evaluations of the cobrand are enhanced when the invited brand is in the position that adjectives occupy in the participant’s language. The authors also find that being proficient in two languages, each with a different default order for adjectives and nouns, quashes the effect of name order otherwise seen when brands from dissimilar product categories engage in cobranding.

Originality/value

By examining the impact of language structure on the effects of cobrand evaluation and conducting studies among participants with differing dominant languages, this research can rule out simple primacy or recency effects.

名称顺序对品牌认知的影响:产品相似性和语言结构的影响
目的伊斯兰世界有许多不同的语言,其语言结构也各不相同。本文旨在探讨语言结构影响消费者对眼镜营销的反应的一种方式。设计/方法/途径使用来自沙特阿拉伯和美国的参与者样本进行了两次主体间实验。第一个实验操纵了伙伴品牌类别相似度和品牌名称顺序,以及与市场沟通时所使用的语言结构。这项研究的数据包括沙特阿拉伯讲阿拉伯语的人和美国讲英语的人。第二项研究探讨了针对精通不同结构的多种语言的人群如何抵消第一项研究的结论,并使用了美国的拉丁裔参与者。研究结果这项研究发现,当品牌来自相似的产品类别时,名称顺序不会影响对联合品牌的评价,但当品牌来自不同的产品类别时,名称顺序会影响对联合品牌的评价。在这种情况下,如果受邀品牌在受试者的语言中处于形容词所处的位置,那么对联合品牌的评价就会提高。作者还发现,当来自不同产品类别的品牌进行联合品牌推广时,精通两种语言(每种语言的形容词和名词的默认顺序都不同)会消除名称顺序的影响。原创性/价值通过研究语言结构对联合品牌评价效果的影响,并对使用不同主导语言的参与者进行研究,这项研究可以排除简单的主要效应或重复效应。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
8.40
自引率
28.10%
发文量
80
期刊介绍: Launched in 2010, Journal of Islamic Marketing (JIMA) was the first journal dedicated to investigating Marketing’s relationship with Islam, in theory and practice, across Muslim majority and minority geographies. JIMA tackles the nuances associated with Muslim consumption patterns, doing business in Muslim markets, and targeting Muslim consumers. When considering the acronyms for the emerging economies to watch: in 2001 it was BRIC (Brazil, Russia, India, and China); and more recently in 2013 MINT (Mexico, Indonesia, Nigeria, Turkey), and CIVETS (Columbia, Indonesia, Vietnam, Egypt, Turkey and South Africa) – then it is apparent that economies with large Muslim populations are growing in importance. One quarter of the world''s population are Muslim, with well over half of Muslims today under the age of 25 - which prompted Miles Young, Global CEO of Ogilvy, to assert that Muslims are the "third one billion", following interest in Indian and Chinese billions, in terms of market opportunities.
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