Elyria Kemp, Ravi Jillapalli and Enrique Becerra
Brands can imbue unique meaning to consumers, and such meaning and personal experience with a brand can create an emotional connection and relationship between the consumer and…
Abstract
Purpose
Brands can imbue unique meaning to consumers, and such meaning and personal experience with a brand can create an emotional connection and relationship between the consumer and the brand. Just as many service providers have adopted branding strategies, marketers are branding the health care service experience. Health care is an intimate service experience and emotions play an integral role in health care decision making. The purpose of this paper is to examine how emotional or affect-based consumer brand relationships are developed for health care organizations.
Design/methodology/approach
Empirical evidence from both depth interviews and data garnered from 322 surveys were integrated into a conceptual model. The model was tested using structural equation modeling.
Findings
Results indicate that trust, referent influence and corporate social responsibility are key variables in establishing affective commitment in consumer brand relationships in a health care context. Once affective commitment is achieved, consumers may come to identify with the health care provider's brand and a self-brand connection is formed. When such a phenomenon takes place, consumers can serve as advocates for the brand by actively promoting it via word-of-mouth.
Practical implications
The findings provide insight for marketing managers in developing successful branding strategies for health care organizations.
Originality/value
This research examines the advantages of cultivating meaningful brand connections and relationships with consumers in a health care context.
Details
Keywords
Ravi Shekhar Kumar, Satyabhusan Dash and Naresh K. Malhotra
This study aims to propose and empirically test new improved customer-based brand equity (CBBE) creation framework, which advocates marketing activities create CBBE through…
Abstract
Purpose
This study aims to propose and empirically test new improved customer-based brand equity (CBBE) creation framework, which advocates marketing activities create CBBE through customer experience (CE). The proposed framework is in contrast to extant literature suggesting marketing activities directly create CBBE.
Design/methodology/approach
Qualitative interviews with patients, followed by interaction with respondents using a structured questionnaire, were used to collect the data.
Findings
The results suggest that CE is the focal mediating variable for the relationship between marketing activities and CBBE. Out of 15 marketing activities, 8 positively impacted CBBE through CE and 2 negatively affected CBBE through CE. Among the remaining five, three had only a direct positive impact on CBBE and two neither directly nor indirectly impacted CBBE.
Research limitations/implications
The effects of only individual marketing activity, and not of the interaction among marketing activities, were assessed.
Practical implications
The study provides insights into the importance of CE in building CBBE for credence-dominant services (e.g. healthcare). This work will help managers in implementing experiential marketing by designing suitable activities for creating service CBBE.
Originality/value
The study outlines service CBBE creation through CE, offering specific insights for the healthcare market.