Fashion Branding and Consumer Behaviors presents eye-opening theory, literature review and original research on the mutual influence of branding strategies and consumer response. Contributors use multiple methods to analyze consumers’ psychosocial needs and the extent that their fulfillment goes beyond the usefulness or value of the items they purchase as well as the fashion industry’s means of communicating brand identity and enhancing brand loyalty. Along the way, these studies raise important questions about consumer behaviors, consumer welfare, environmental ethics and the future of consumer research. Included in the coverage:
- A symbolic interactionist perspective on fashion brand personality and advertisement response.
- Optimizing fashion branding strategies in a fluctuating market.
- An analysis of fashion brand extensions by artificial neural networks.
- Domestic or foreign luxury brands? A comparison of status- and non-status- seeking teenagers.
- The impact of consumers’ need for uniqueness on purchase perception.
- How brand awareness relates to market outcome, brand equity and the marketing mix.
A breakthrough volume on the complexities of how and why we buy, Fashion Branding and Consumer Behaviors will captivate researchers and practitioners in the fields of consumer psychology, marketing and economics.
Innehållsförteckning
Preface.- I. Introduction and Review.- Fashion Branding and Consumer Behaviors: An Introduction.- Luxury Fashion Branding: Literature Review, Research Trends and Research Agenda for Scientific Research.- Fashion Brand Personality and Advertisement Response: Incorporating a Symbolic Interactionist Perspective.- II. Analytical Modeling Research.- Optimizing Fashion Branding Strategies: Management of Variety of Items and Length of Lifecycles in a Stochastically Fluctuating Market.- An Analysis of Fashion Brand Extensions by Artificial Neural Networks.- III. Empirical Studies.- “Domestic Made” or “Foreign Made” Luxury Brands? A Comparative Investigation Between Status and Non-Status Seeking Teenagers.- Co-branding in Fast Fashion: the Impact of Consumers’ Need for Uniqueness on Purchase Perception.- How Brand Awareness Relates to Market Outcome, Brand Equity and the Marketing Mix.- Consumer Perceived Risks Towards Online Group Buying Service for Fashion Apparel Products.
Om författaren
Tsan-Ming Choi is currently an associate professor at The Hong Kong Polytechnic University. Over the past few years, he has actively participated in a variety of research projects in branding and supply chain management. His papers have appeared in leading business and engineering journals such as IEEE Transactions on Automatic Control, IEEE Transactions on Systems, Man, and Cybernetics – Parts A, B, C, Automatica, Production and Operations Management, Decision Support Systems, Journal of Brand Management, and various other IEEE Transactions, as well as well-established fashion journals such as Journal of the Textile Institute, Journal of Fashion Marketing and Management, Textile Research Journal etc. He has authored/edited five research handbooks and guest-edited seven special issues in academic journals. He is an associate editor/editorial board member of various well-established journals which including Decision Support Systems, IEEE Transactions on Systems, Man and Cybernetics – Part A, Information Sciences and Journal of Fashion Marketing and Management.