855 resultados para Luxury brands
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Title Varies: Livestock Brand Record
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Thesis (Ph.D.)--New York University, 1915.
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"Published March 1906"--Verso of t.p.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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1920 [and] 1926 issued by: Cattle Protection Services.
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Has occassional supplements.
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Aiming at success in the currently challenging Brazilian market, luxury firms must consider a number of factors. Not only the adaptation to certain economic and political conditions but also the understanding of Brazilian luxury consumers’ characteristics as well as their value perceptions towards luxury are crucial in order to create an effective marketing strategy. This study investigated the value perceptions and purchasing motives of 428 Brazilian consumers. Brazilians purchase luxury goods in order to conspicuously put them on show to certain social reference group or to the general public. Thus, they display their wealth, income and social status. Social groups therefore play a distinct role in the purchasing decision process. Moreover, Brazilians are found to be hedonic consumers, seeking pleasurable moments and the reduction of stress when consuming luxury products. In addition to that, they use luxurious products to express their own personality. Brazilians hence place a much higher importance on self-expressive, emotional product benefits rather than on rational, functional product benefits. Marketers of luxury goods are advised to make use of this knowledge in order to adequately address consumers’ needs, wants and beliefs. The study focuses on consumers living in Rio de Janeiro and does not take into account different value perceptions on different luxury product categories. Therefore, suggestions for further research include replicating the study in different Brazilian regions and probing for differences among product categories.
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Purpose – The objective of the present research is to examine the relationship between consumers' satisfaction with a retailer and the equity they associate with the retail brand. Design/methodology/approach – Retail brand equity is conceptualized as a four-dimensional construct comprising: retailer awareness, retailer associations, retailer perceived quality, and retailer loyalty. Then the associative network memory model is applied from cognitive psychology to the specific context of the relationships between customer satisfaction and consumer-based retailer equity. A survey was undertaken using a convenience sample of shopping mall consumers in an Australian state capital city. The questionnaire used to collect data included an experimental design such that two categories of retailers were included in the study: department stores and specialty stores, with three retailers representing each category. The relationship between consumer-based retailer equity and customer satisfaction was examined using multivariate analysis of variance. Findings – Results indicate that retail brand equity varies with customer satisfaction. For department stores, each consumer-based retailer equity dimension varied according to customer satisfaction with the retailer. However, for specialty stores, only three of the consumer-based retailer equity dimensions, namely retailer awareness, retailer associations and retailer perceived quality, varied according to customer satisfaction level with the retailer. Originality/value – The principal contribution of the present research is that it demonstrates empirically a positive relationship between customer satisfaction and an intangible asset such as retailer equity.
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A marca Mercedes-Benz é uma marca legendária e está presente no imaginário do consumidor quando o assunto é automóvel. A história dessa importante indústria automobilística ultrapassa os 100 anos (1902-2008) e a cada dia impressiona ainda mais com novos modelos, sinônimo de tecnologia, qualidade, segurança e luxo. Este trabalho visa analisar e compreender o processo de comunicação da marca Mercedes-Benz, que surgiu em 1902 (como Mercedes), depois como Mercedes-Benz (1926), DaimlerChyrsler (1998), atualmente como Daimler AG (matriz Alemanha) e Mercedes-Benz do Brasil Ltda., e que permanece fortalecida e prestigiada no seu segmento, de acordo com os números e informações apresentadas, ratificadas por profissionais do setor automotivo e especialistas em luxo. Faz parte deste estudo abordar a forma e o significado da marca, representada por sua logomarca em toda a sua trajetória: esboço inicial, mudanças e desenho atual (parte gráfica) bem como as mensagens transmitidas e comunicação com o mercado. A metodologia consiste em realizar um levantamento bibliográfico por meio de: publicações, periódicos, documentos internos, dissertações e teses, que contenham informações sobre a marca Mercedes-Benz desde o seu momento inicial até o atual, visando estabelecer uma comparação entre os períodos, sobretudo no cenário nacional. O trabalho irá tratar o assunto como um estudo de caso, por se tratar de uma análise organizacional e gerencial, que compreendem fenômenos contemporâneos inseridos na vida real. O estudo tem como referência a Comunicação Integrada de Marketing, como linha de pesquisa e a Comunicação Especializada, como área de concentração.(AU)
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So far there has been scant empirical attention paid to the role of the sales force in the adoption of new brands in the early implementation stages. We test a framework of internal (sales manager and salespeople) brand adoption using an empirical multilevel study. Our findings suggest that the construct of expected customer demand (ECD) plays an important role in sales force brand adoption. First, ECD directly influences salespeople’s and sales managers’ brand adoption. Second, ECD serves as a cross-level moderator of new brand adoption transmission. We find the influence of sales managers’ brand adoption on salespeople’s brand adoption to be stronger when salespeople’s ECD is lower.
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This study examines the changes in brand structures based on a repeat audit of brand portfolios by leading grocery product suppliers. It compares results from content analyses of four hundred leading suppliers' brands sold to Tesco and Sainsbury's in 1994 and 2004. The brand structures used have changed although not uniformly in extent or direction. There is now more complexity in the way brand names are used. An extended typology of brand structures is incorporated. Propositions drawn from latest thinking on the use of brand portfolios are compared with the findings implications discussed.