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Branding of post‐purchase ancillary products and services: An application in the mobile communications industry
Purpose - After the sale of a primary product, firms often have the opportunity to sell ancillary products or services in support of the primary brand. These add-ons or services may be offered in a generic or in a branded form. The aim of the this paper is to study the demand for add-on services in...
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Published in: | European journal of marketing 2010-01, Vol.44 (5), p.547-566 |
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container_title | European journal of marketing |
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creator | Baker, William E. Sciglimpaglia, Donald Saghafi, Massoud |
description | Purpose - After the sale of a primary product, firms often have the opportunity to sell ancillary products or services in support of the primary brand. These add-ons or services may be offered in a generic or in a branded form. The aim of the this paper is to study the demand for add-on services in the mobile communications industry and to detail a methodology that can be employed to make this assessment. Design/methodology/approach - A field experimental design approach using two-brand manipulations, four-price points and six content applications was employed. The study was fielded at a mall intercept facility in a major urban center. Interviews with 389 mobile phone users between the ages 18-31 were conducted. Findings - Results extend brand equity theory into the context of ancillary product sales and demonstrate that branded ancillary services can command a price premium and are less sensitive to price increases than unbranded alternatives. Practical implications - Given the growth of demand for non-voice mobile services, proliferation of such services and the global competition in the industry, marketing managers are under constant pressure to differentiate while achieving revenue goals. This study provides a methodology for managers to calculate the price premium that branded ancillary services may provide over unbranded alternatives and, hence, estimates the worth of potential brand partnerships. Originality/value - This study extends brand equity theory by recognizing an overlooked scenario: offering branded versus generic ancillary services after the sales of the primary products, through which firms can leverage brand equity benefits. [PUBLICATION ABSTRACT] |
doi_str_mv | 10.1108/03090561011032261 |
format | article |
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These add-ons or services may be offered in a generic or in a branded form. The aim of the this paper is to study the demand for add-on services in the mobile communications industry and to detail a methodology that can be employed to make this assessment. Design/methodology/approach - A field experimental design approach using two-brand manipulations, four-price points and six content applications was employed. The study was fielded at a mall intercept facility in a major urban center. Interviews with 389 mobile phone users between the ages 18-31 were conducted. Findings - Results extend brand equity theory into the context of ancillary product sales and demonstrate that branded ancillary services can command a price premium and are less sensitive to price increases than unbranded alternatives. Practical implications - Given the growth of demand for non-voice mobile services, proliferation of such services and the global competition in the industry, marketing managers are under constant pressure to differentiate while achieving revenue goals. This study provides a methodology for managers to calculate the price premium that branded ancillary services may provide over unbranded alternatives and, hence, estimates the worth of potential brand partnerships. Originality/value - This study extends brand equity theory by recognizing an overlooked scenario: offering branded versus generic ancillary services after the sales of the primary products, through which firms can leverage brand equity benefits. 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These add-ons or services may be offered in a generic or in a branded form. The aim of the this paper is to study the demand for add-on services in the mobile communications industry and to detail a methodology that can be employed to make this assessment. Design/methodology/approach - A field experimental design approach using two-brand manipulations, four-price points and six content applications was employed. The study was fielded at a mall intercept facility in a major urban center. Interviews with 389 mobile phone users between the ages 18-31 were conducted. Findings - Results extend brand equity theory into the context of ancillary product sales and demonstrate that branded ancillary services can command a price premium and are less sensitive to price increases than unbranded alternatives. Practical implications - Given the growth of demand for non-voice mobile services, proliferation of such services and the global competition in the industry, marketing managers are under constant pressure to differentiate while achieving revenue goals. This study provides a methodology for managers to calculate the price premium that branded ancillary services may provide over unbranded alternatives and, hence, estimates the worth of potential brand partnerships. Originality/value - This study extends brand equity theory by recognizing an overlooked scenario: offering branded versus generic ancillary services after the sales of the primary products, through which firms can leverage brand equity benefits. 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source | ABI/INFORM Global; Emerald:Jisc Collections:Emerald Subject Collections HE and FE 2024-2026:Emerald Premier (reading list) |
subjects | Affinity credit cards Alliances Brand equity Brand loyalty Brand names Brands Cellular telephones Co-branding Communications industry Customer services Information services Marketing Mobile communications networks Pricing policies Product development Sales Studies Willingness to pay |
title | Branding of post‐purchase ancillary products and services: An application in the mobile communications industry |
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