Publication | Closed Access
Exploring the Antecedents and Consequences of<i>Míng Pái Kòng</i>(Brand-Name Fanaticism) Among China's Generation Y
15
Citations
65
References
2015
Year
Consumer UncertaintyEast Asian StudiesConsumer ResearchBrand StrategyConsumer AttitudeSocial InfluenceBrand LoyaltyCultural StudiesConsumer CulturePersonal BrandingManagementConsumer BehaviorLanguage StudiesBrand BuildingBrand-name FanaticismBrand ConsciousnessBrand ManagementGeneration YConsumer Decision MakingMíng Pái KòngBrand DevelopmentEast Asian LanguagesBrand AwarenessAdvertisingMarketingCultureChinese CultureBusinessBrand EquityGlobal Name
The authors examine antecedents and consequences of míng pái kòng (MPK)–brand-name fanaticism, obsessive fandom, and purchases of global name brands―among a large number of Gen-Yers in China. This phenomenon is scrutinized because Confucian virtues discourage self-expressive, materialistic flaunting behaviors. A survey of 510 respondents finds that consumers’ need for uniqueness and peer influence affect brand consciousness, MPK, and willingness to pay a price premium for name-brand merchandise. Results indicate that relationships between brand consciousness and MPK are more evident in males and suggest that MPK may be marked by incongruity between projections of status and self. Managerial implications are discussed.
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