๐”– Bobbio Scriptorium
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Marketing Universals: Consumers' Use of Brand Name, Price, Physical Appearance, and Retailer Reputation as Signals of Product Quality

โœ Scribed by N. Dawar; P. Parker


Book ID
126608355
Publisher
American Marketing Association
Year
1994
Tongue
English
Weight
649 KB
Volume
58
Category
Article
ISSN
0022-2429

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โœฆ Synopsis


Marketing universals are defined as consumer behaviors within a segment and toward a particular product category that are invariant across cultures. Using several definitions of culture and three different criteria for universality, the authors evaluate whether the use of brand, price, retailer reputation, and physical product appearance as signals of quality are marketing universals for consumer electronics products. Using a sample representing 38 nationalities, they find that there are few differences in the use of quality signals across cultures for a high priority segment of consumers. They draw conclusions for the adaptation versus standardization debate and argue that certain behaviors are likely to be universal, whereas others are not. Understanding such differences is essential to designing international marketing strategies. E


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