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First published online December 1, 2016

How Product Category Shapes Preferences toward Global and Local Brands: A Schema Theory Perspective

Abstract

In contrast to the abundance of research on brand- and consumer-related determinants of global/local brand preference, little is known about whether and how the product category affects consumer choices between local and global brands. Drawing from schema theory, the authors (1) argue that consumers rely on their product category schemata to form perceptions of global versus local brand superiority, (2) introduce a compact scale to measure these perceptions, and (3) identify the key antecedents and consequences of these perceptions. Two studies in developed and emerging markets empirically support the hypotheses across multiple product categories, for both real and fictitious brands. The results indicate that consumers perceive global brands as superior to local brands in product categories with strong functional character and extensive symbolic capacity. Moreover, brands congruent with category superiority perceptions are preferred because of their justifiability, while brands that deviate from these perceptions are avoided because of their proneness to normative criticism. The findings imply that global/local brand preference is largely formed at the product category level and advocate for the use of category-specific strategies in global/local brand management.

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Published In

Article first published online: December 1, 2016
Issue published: December 2016

Keywords

  1. global brands
  2. local brands
  3. product category
  4. schema theory

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Authors

Affiliations

Vasileios Davvetas
Department of International Marketing, University of Vienna
Adamantios Diamantopoulos
Department of International Marketing, University of Vienna

Notes

(e-mail: [email protected]).
(e-mail: [email protected]).
The authors thank Richard Biath and Lucy Liu for their assistance with data collection, Georgios Halkias and Bodo Schlegelmilch for their valuable feedback on previous versions of this work, and the JIM review team for their constructive comments. This research has been funded by the Austrian National Bank Anniversary Fund (Österreichische Nationalbank Jubiläumsfonds, Project Number: 16246). Matthew Robson served as associate editor for this article.

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