Publication | Closed Access
Consumer Innovativeness and the Use of New versus Extended Brand Names for New Products*
107
Citations
42
References
2009
Year
Consumer ResearchBrand StrategyBrand LoyaltyBrand Name PreferencesManagementNew ProductConsumer BehaviorNew Product DevelopmentBrand ManagementBrand PositioningConsumer InnovativenessBrand DevelopmentBrand AwarenessMarketingAdvertisingConsumer-driven Product DevelopmentInteractive MarketingPositioning (Marketing)BusinessNew Product SuccessBrand EquityConsumer Attitude
Despite the importance of branding to new product success, little research has been conducted on how individual adoption orientation might affect brand name preferences. This paper draws on the diffusion literature to investigate how consumer innovativeness affects consumer response to alternative branding strategies (i.e., new vs. extended brands, for new products). The results of an empirical study found that consumer innovativeness has a greater effect on new product evaluations for new brand names relative to extended brand names. Also, results indicate that highly innovative consumers evaluate new products with new brand names more favorably than brand extensions. Furthermore, consumer confidence in the new product was found to mediate the effects of consumer innovativeness and its interaction with brand name type on new product evaluation. Implications include not only giving greater managerial consideration to using new brands but also supporting the chosen branding strategy with appropriate promotional efforts for respective adopter groups.
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