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Strategies to offset performance failures: The role of brand equity
Authors:Michael K. Brady  J. Joseph Cronin Jr.  Gavin L. Fox  Michelle L. Roehm
Affiliation:a College of Business, Florida State University, Tallahassee, FL 32306-1110, United States
b The Babcock Graduate School of Management, Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, NC 27109, United States
Abstract:In this research, we examine the role of brand equity as a strategy to offset the negative effects of a performance failure. Two independent studies, spanning four industries and involving 669 respondents are employed to investigate this issue. Results suggest that high brand equity leads to more favorable satisfaction evaluations and behavioral intentions than low brand equity. The brand equity effect is identified as a prevailing advantage that spans the entire failure and recovery sequence. This is an important finding because it implies that the advantages of high brand equity theoretically can apply to all failures, not just those for which recovery is attempted. Further inspection, however, reveals that despite the prevailing advantage, high-equity brand failures lead to a more drastic decline in customer evaluations immediately after the failure episode. Managerial implications and future research are addressed.
Keywords:Performance failures   Brand equity   Mitigation   Satisfaction   Customer perceptions
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