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Brand typicality and distant novel extension acceptance: how risk-reduction counters low category fit

Goedertier, Frank
Dawar, Niraj
Geuens, Maggie
Weijters, Bert
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Publication Type
Journal article with impact factor
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Supervisor
Publication Year
2015
Journal
Journal of Business Research
Book
Publication Volume
68
Publication Issue
1
Publication Begin page
157
Publication End page
165
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Abstract
To increase consumer acceptance of novel products, firms often employ extension strategies, that is, launching new products under familiar brand names. Prototypical brands are among the most familiar in any product category, and, therefore, seem attractive candidates for extension efforts. But, by definition, prototypical brands and their product category show a strong association. Starting from a categorization theory perspective, prior research suggests that this association may hinder the extendibility of prototypical brands to products that belong to distant categories. Yet counter-intuitively, results from two studies focusing on novel extensions demonstrate that brand prototypicality increases rather than decreases consumer acceptance of novel extensions, in “close” as well as “distant” product categories. A mediation analysis provides evidence for the underlying mechanism by indicating that the risk-reducing advantage of prototypical brands outweighs their category-anchored rigidity.
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Keywords
Brand Prototypicality, Novelty, Perceived Risk, Category Fit, Product Innovation
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