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Brand Image and Brand Usage

Is a Forty-Year-Old Empirical Generalization Still Useful?

Jenni Romaniuk, Svetlana Bogomolova, Francesca Dall'olmo Riley
DOI: 10.2501/JAR-52-2-243-251 Published 1 June 2012
Jenni Romaniuk
Ehrenberg-Bass Institute, University of South Australia,
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  • For correspondence: Jenni.Romaniuk@Marketingscience.info
Svetlana Bogomolova
Ehrenberg-Bass Institute, University of South Australia,
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  • For correspondence: Svetlana.Bogomolova@Marketingscience.info
Francesca Dall'olmo Riley
Kingston University Business School,
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  • For correspondence: f.d.riley@kingston.ac.uk
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ABSTRACT

In this paper the authors provide evidence of the breadth and longevity of Andrew Ehrenberg's work—a testimony to the quality of his research approach. To demonstrate this vitality, the authors drew on 45 new data sets to test findings about the relative brand image response patterns from customer usage groups (Bird, Channon, and Ehrenberg, 1970). The data cover different categories (among them, services, durables, and retailers), countries (including emerging markets), and newer data collection methods (i.e., online). The authors found the generalization that brand association responses are strongly and systematically linked to past brand usage still holds—both qualitatively and, to a large extent, quantitatively. This has implications for researchers and practitioners.

  • © Copyright 2012 The ARF. All rights reserved.
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Vol 52 Issue 2

Journal of Advertising Research: 52 (2)
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Brand Image and Brand Usage
Jenni Romaniuk, Svetlana Bogomolova, Francesca Dall'olmo Riley
Journal of Advertising Research Jun 2012, 52 (2) 243-251; DOI: 10.2501/JAR-52-2-243-251

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Brand Image and Brand Usage
Jenni Romaniuk, Svetlana Bogomolova, Francesca Dall'olmo Riley
Journal of Advertising Research Jun 2012, 52 (2) 243-251; DOI: 10.2501/JAR-52-2-243-251
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