Effects of co‐creation claim on consumer brand perceptions and behavioural intentions |
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Authors: | Joyce van Dijk Gerrit Antonides Niels Schillewaert |
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Affiliation: | 1. Wageningen University, Department of Social Sciences, , Wageningen, The Netherlands;2. InSites Consulting, , New York, NY, USA |
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Abstract: | Increasingly often, companies ‘co‐create’ with consumers in open innovation practices to develop new products more effectively. Little is known about how co‐creation affects consumer brand perceptions in the mass market. We hypothesize that co‐creative brands – as opposed to non–co‐creative brands – are perceived as more authentic and sincere, and are associated with relatively positive behavioural intentions. A between‐subjects experiment was conducted to test these hypotheses in an online panel of consumers who did not take part in co‐creation. The experiment had a 3 (control vs. co‐creation vs. co‐creation supported with some visual proof) × 2 (well‐known existing brand vs. fictitious brand) design. Quantitative data analyses (n = 530) confirmed that for both brands, co‐creation affects brand personality perceptions directly and behavioural intentions indirectly. This study shows that co‐creating with consumers can be a strategic method to positively influence product perceptions and behavioural intentions. |
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Keywords: | Co‐creation consumer perceptions brand personality innovation |
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