Volume 27, Issue 7 p. 662-678
Research Article

The differential roles of brand credibility and brand prestige in consumer brand choice

Tae Hyun Baek

Tae Hyun Baek

University of Georgia

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Jooyoung Kim

Corresponding Author

Jooyoung Kim

University of Georgia

Department of Advertising and Public Relations, Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communication, The University of Georgia, Athens, GA 30602-3018Search for more papers by this author
Jay Hyunjae Yu

Jay Hyunjae Yu

Sogang University, South Korea

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First published: 10 June 2010
Citations: 266

Abstract

This study explores how brand credibility and brand prestige affect brand purchase intention and empirically investigates how the combinatory mechanism of brand credibility and brand prestige materialize across multiple product categories. The proposed model of six latent constructs is tested with structural equation modeling analysis: brand credibility, brand prestige, perceived quality, information costs saved, perceived risk, and brand purchase intention. The results suggest that both brand credibility and brand prestige positively influence brand purchase intention through perceived quality, information costs saved, and perceived risk under different product categories representing the high and low self-expressive nature. Several implications for advertising messages and brand positioning strategies are discussed. © 2010 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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