Sharing values and the co-creation of brands: Towards a new consumer driven branding paradigm. The project proposes a paradigm shift from traditional image building towards a full understanding and integration of consumer values into a deliberate process of co-created brand meanings. Brands thus managed can become iconic and symbolic of consumers' existing subcultures or may even define micro-cultures of consumption of their own (as in the case of Harley Davidson).
Should managers understand t ....Sharing values and the co-creation of brands: Towards a new consumer driven branding paradigm. The project proposes a paradigm shift from traditional image building towards a full understanding and integration of consumer values into a deliberate process of co-created brand meanings. Brands thus managed can become iconic and symbolic of consumers' existing subcultures or may even define micro-cultures of consumption of their own (as in the case of Harley Davidson).
Should managers understand the process by which such co-created brands develop, more Australian brand success stories (eg. Rip Curl, Penfold's Grange) would evolve and be better placed to tap the increasingly diversified sub-cultural landscape that characterises the Australian marketplace and many of our major trading partners.
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CROSS-CULTURAL DIFFERENCES IN PERCEPTIONS OF CONSUMPTION ETHICS. This research addresses the influence of such culturally distinct variables as the relevance of important others in determining and acting on ethical interpretations, the significance of external factors such as prominence of brand name on interpretations by consumers, and the importance of the type of potential ethical infraction. It utilises an interpretive research paradigm that poses potential ethical consumption dilemmas and ....CROSS-CULTURAL DIFFERENCES IN PERCEPTIONS OF CONSUMPTION ETHICS. This research addresses the influence of such culturally distinct variables as the relevance of important others in determining and acting on ethical interpretations, the significance of external factors such as prominence of brand name on interpretations by consumers, and the importance of the type of potential ethical infraction. It utilises an interpretive research paradigm that poses potential ethical consumption dilemmas and examines consumers? reactions. The interpretations of the dilemmas (are ethical issues perceived?) and informants? justifications for their actions are investigated across countries to examine how the cultural lens through which consumption decisions are viewed can shape reactions.Read moreRead less