The attitudinal response to alternative brand growth strategies
Abstract
Purpose
Brand managers must decide between extension and alliance strategies to grow their brands. This paper aims to describe testing of consumers' responses to two alternative brand growth strategies: an extension strategy whereby a brand moves into a new category alone, and an alliance strategy whereby the same brand moves into the new category as a branded ingredient in a brand already established in that category. How far to stretch a brand is yet another strategic choice facing the brand manager, and the current research tests, under short and long category‐stretch conditions, the attitudinal responses to extension and alliance strategies.
Design/methodology/approach
The paper builds on the categorisation and incongruence literature. An experiment was employed to test the main hypotheses in the study.
Findings
Extensions outperform alliances, especially when the brand undertakes a long stretch, and short‐stretch strategies outperform long‐stretch strategies.
Practical implications
An extension strategy may be preferred to an alliance strategy, especially in situations in which the new growth opportunity requires a long stretch.
Originality/value
The paper compares, in the same study, the attitudinal effects of two important growth strategies widely employed by companies. Previous studies have assessed the performance of these two strategic options only separately.
Keywords
Citation
Meling Samuelsen, B. and Erling Olsen, L. (2012), "The attitudinal response to alternative brand growth strategies", European Journal of Marketing, Vol. 46 No. 1/2, pp. 177-191. https://doi.org/10.1108/03090561211189293
Publisher
:Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2012, Emerald Group Publishing Limited