• Title/Summary/Keyword: Extended product

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Gender differences in brand extension (남녀 성차에 따른 브랜드 확장 평가에 관한 연구)

  • Rhee, YoungJu
    • The Research Journal of the Costume Culture
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    • v.24 no.3
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    • pp.301-314
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    • 2016
  • The purpose of this study was to determine the gender differences in the relationships between knowledge of, attachment with, and attitude toward a parent brand and perceived risk of, attitude toward, and purchase intension of an extended product in the case of brand extension. A total of 300 survey questionnaires were distributed to 150 male and 150 female college students, and 275 responses were used for the final analysis. The results showed that for male college students, knowledge of the parent brand had a positive relationship with brand attachment with the parent brand, which in turn had a positive relationship with brand attitude toward the parent brand. Knowledge of the parent brand had a negative relationship with perceived risk of the extended product, which again had a negative relationship with attitude toward the extended product. In addition, for male college students, knowledge of the parent brand had a positive relationship with attitude toward the extended product, which also had a positive relationship with purchase intension of the extended product. For female college students, brand attachment with the parent brand had a positive relationship with brand attitude toward the parent brand, which also had a positive relationship with attitude toward the extended product. Brand attachment with the parent brand showed a negative relationship with perceived risk of the extended product, which also had a negative relationship with attitude toward the extended product.

Influence of Product Similarity between Parent Brand and Extended Brand on Extended Product Evaluation - Focus on Franchise Brand - (모브랜드 제품-확장브랜드 제품간 유사성이 확장제품평가에 미치는 영향 - 프랜차이즈 브랜드를 중심으로 -)

  • Kim, Ki-Suk;Shin, Bong-Sup
    • The Journal of the Korea Contents Association
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    • v.11 no.11
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    • pp.378-389
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    • 2011
  • This study scrutinizes the similarity difference between parent brand product and extended brand product of franchise business and its effect on the attitude toward extended brand product. Results showed that the similarity difference is appeared according to product extended. The cognitive attitude and the behavioral attitude toward similarity difference are also appeared to be different as high in product similarity leads to high in both cognitive and behavioral attitude. The result also showed that the food similarity compare to the technological similarity has higher impact on attitude. These study results provided a significant insights in brand extension strategy of franchise business.

The effect of congruency of parent brand image with self-image, perceived risk, and product knowledge on the attitude towards extended product in fashion brand extension - Focusing on moderating effects - (패션브랜드 확장시 모 브랜드와의 자아이미지 일치성과 지각된 위험, 제품지식이 확장제품의 태도에 미치는 영향 - 조정적 역할을 중심으로 -)

  • Rhee, YoungJu
    • The Research Journal of the Costume Culture
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    • v.23 no.1
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    • pp.63-73
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    • 2015
  • The purpose of this study was to investigate the effect of congruency of parent brand image with self-image, perceived risk, and product knowledge on the attitude towards extended product in fashion brand extension. A survey questionnaire was used to collect data from 170 female college students and collected data were subjected to descriptive analysis and regression analysis using SPSS Window program. The results of this study showed that the congruency of parent brand image with self-image and perceived risk had a positive effect on attitude towards extended product, whereas product knowledge had a negative effect on attitude towards extended product in fashion brand extension. Also, the congruency of parent brand image with self-image had a positive effect on the attitude towards extended product in fashion brand extension with positive moderating effect of perceived risk and negative mediating effect of product knowledge.

The Effect of Extended Warranties on Economic Outcome in a Supply Chain (공급사슬상에서 연장보증의 경제적 효과)

  • Sunghee Lee;Jinsoo Park
    • Journal of Korean Society for Quality Management
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    • v.51 no.1
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    • pp.1-18
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    • 2023
  • Purpose: In Part 1, the purpose of this study is to examine how a used product provider optimizes a company's profits by comparing an extended warranty to a used product only when selling a product and what it provides later. In addition, in Part 2, an empirical study can confirm the structure in which extended guarantees can work effectively by grasping consumers' purchase intention according to the time of sale of extended guarantees, which is the basic premise of the analysis model of Part 1. Methods: This study aims to conduct not only analytical studies but also empirical studies applying various statistical analysis methods using questionnaires targeting customers and potential consumers who have subscribed to extended warranty services. Results: The study showed that the profits of companies providing extended warranty services were proportional to the coefficient of the extended guarantee service value, so it is necessary to create an environment in which the effect of extended guarantee services can be well realized. In the empirical model, the higher the emotional and economic benefits are perceived, the higher the purchase intention according to the future purchase of extended guarantees. Conclusion: Through this study, various problems that may be caused by the structural diversity of the supply chain providing extended warranties in the future can be viewed and contribute to the theoretical foundation for strategic understanding.

ON THE EXTENDED HAAGERUP TENSOR PRODUCT IN OPERATOR SPACES

  • Itoh, Takashi;Nagisa, Masaru
    • Journal of the Korean Mathematical Society
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    • v.51 no.2
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    • pp.345-362
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    • 2014
  • We describe the Haagerup tensor product ${\ell}^{\infty}{\otimes}_h{\ell}^{\infty}$ and the extended Haagerup tensor product ${\ell}^{\infty}{\otimes}_{eh}{\ell}^{\infty}$ in terms of Schur product maps, and show that ${\ell}^{\infty}{\otimes}_h{\ell}^{\infty}{\cap}\mathbb{B}({\ell}^2)$(resp. ${\ell}^{\infty}{\otimes}_{eh}{\ell}^{\infty}{\cap}\mathbb{B}({\ell}^2)$) coincides with $c_0{\otimes}_hc_0{\cap}\mathbb{B}({\ell}^2)$(resp. $c_0{\otimes}_{eh}c_0{\cap}\mathbb{B}({\ell}^2)$). For $C^*2$-algebras A, B, it is shown that $A{\otimes}_hB=A{\otimes}_{eh}B$ if and only if A or B is finite-dimensional.

A Study on the Brand Extension of Digital Product : Focused on Consumer's Attachment to Product (디지털 제품의 브랜드 확장에 관한 연구 : 소비자의 제품 애착을 중심으로)

  • Lim, Yang Whan
    • Journal of Korea Society of Digital Industry and Information Management
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    • v.6 no.3
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    • pp.179-190
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    • 2010
  • With science and technology getting more and more advanced, the scope of digital product is expanding and the new products continuously are introduced on the market. On the basis of consumers' attachment to products, we investigated the consumers' behaviors towards the product when a digital product is extended. As a result of an empirical analysis, it turned out that a consumer tended to have higher trust and a positive emotion about relevant goods if he or she had a strong attachment to digital products. However, even though one had a strong attachment to digital products, the emotion about the corresponding brands did not necessarily appeared to be positive. In the event that a brand of digital products was extended to other new products, only the trust in the brand exerted significant influence on the consumers' behaviors towards the extended products. Finally, this study suggests some theoretical and managerial implications for effective strategies in response to customers' attachment to digital product.

Effect of Attitude towards Parent Brand on Extended Fashion Product in Fashion Brand Extension (패션브랜드 확장시 모브랜드에 대한 태도가 확장패션제품에 미치는 영향에 관한 연구)

  • Rhee, Young-Ju
    • Fashion & Textile Research Journal
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    • v.10 no.4
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    • pp.506-514
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    • 2008
  • The purpose of this study was to investigate the effect of attitude towards parent brand on extended fashion products in case of fashion brand extension. The subjects of this study were 386 college students and data were collected using survey questionnaire. For data analysis, factor analysis and path analysis were applied. The results showed that there were four factors (e.g., familiarity attitude, emotional attitude, value-expressive attitude, utility information attitude) in attitude towards parent brand and six factors (e.g., economical risk, utilitarian risk, social risk, psychological risk, time/advantage loss risk, risk for losing opportunity) under perceived risk in extended product. The results showed that attitude towards parent brand had a negative effect on perceived risk in extended products and had a positive effect on attitude towards extended products. Perceived risk in extended products then had a negative effect on purchase intention of extended products whereas attitude towards extended products had a positive effect on purchase intention of extended products.

FRACTIONAL INTEGRATION AND DIFFERENTIATION OF THE (p, q)-EXTENDED BESSEL FUNCTION

  • Choi, Junesang;Parmar, Rakesh K.
    • Bulletin of the Korean Mathematical Society
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    • v.55 no.2
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    • pp.599-610
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    • 2018
  • We aim to present some formulas for Saigo hypergeometric fractional integral and differential operators involving (p, q)-extended Bessel function $J_{{\nu},p,q}(z)$, which are expressed in terms of Hadamard product of the (p, q)-extended Gauss hypergeometric function and the Fox-Wright function $_p{\Psi}_q(z)$. A number of interesting special cases of our main results are also considered. Further, it is emphasized that the results presented here, which are seemingly complicated series, can reveal their involved properties via those of the two known functions in their respective Hadamard product.

Effects of Product Number and Brand Breadth on the Evaluations of an Extended Product

  • Yeu, Minsun;Yuk, Hyeyeon;Kim, Boha;Yoo, Jung-Hyun;Cho, Seong Wan;Yeo, Junsang;Park, Chan Su
    • Asia Marketing Journal
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    • v.15 no.3
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    • pp.97-115
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    • 2013
  • This paper was motivated by two gaps in the extant literature on brand portfolio planning. First, research has shown that, as the number of products connected to a brand increases, the extended product receives more favorable evaluations. However, this result was obtained by comparing two brands with different number of products while controlling the brands' breadths. Hence one may question if the above result would hold when the brand is narrow as well as broad. Second, the literature has investigated the effect of brand breadth on the perceived fit and evaluations of an extended product within a relatively limited range ("narrow vs. broad") and not considered the case of a "very broad" brand. To address these gaps, we propose two hypotheses: 1) the effects of the number of products associated with a brand on the perceived fit and evaluations of a moderately far brand extension are moderated by the brand's breadth (H1); and 2) the relationship between a brand's breadth and a moderately far extension's perceived fit and evaluations looks like an inverse-U shape (H2). Study 1 was conducted to test H1. Study 1 employed a 2 × 2 within-subjects design in which the first factor was the number of products (small (2) or large (5)), and the second factor was brand breadth (narrow or broad). We measured brand breadth as the perceived similarity among products associated with a brand. Participants provided the perceived fit and evaluations of an extended product. Study 2 was conducted to test H2 as well as to replicate Study 1 in a more general setting and with different products. It employed a 2 × 3 within-subjects design, in which the first factor was the number of products (small (2) or large (5)), and the second factor was brand breadth (narrow, broad, or very broad). The results from two experiments support both hypotheses. This paper contributes to the literature on brand extensions in two ways. First, it broadens our understanding of the effects of product number and brand breadth on extended product evaluations by considering the two factors jointly. Second, we believe this study to be the first to present evidence that brand breadth can exert an inverted U-shape effect on the perceived fit and evaluations of an extended product. The results also offer implications for marketers. First, marketers should heed the finding that adding similar products to a narrow brand does not help the brand's extension launch. Second, the finding that the relationship between brand breadth and extended product evaluations might not be linear provides practical implications. While a narrow brand should not keep launching close extensions, nor should a broad brand continue producing far extensions to broaden its breadth. A firm with a broad corporate or family brand might want to consider introducing a new brand instead of adding dissimilar products under the brand umbrella.

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Difference in Extended Products Evaluation by Consumer Innovativeness and Similarity of Product Category for Apparel Brand Extension (의류브랜드 확장시 소비자 혁신성과 제품범주의 유사성에 의한 확장제품 평가차이)

  • Rhee, Young-Ju
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Clothing and Textiles
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    • v.33 no.10
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    • pp.1622-1632
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    • 2009
  • This study investigates the influence of the innovativeness of consumers on extended products in brand extensions. 300 surveys were distributed and 283 were used in the final analysis. The results of this study show that consumers evaluate similar product category (i.e., sportswear) better than a dissimilar category (i.e., cosmetics) in brand extension. In addition, innovative consumers evaluated extended product better regardless of similarity with the original brand. The results showed that consumers with higher level of innovativeness were less likely to evaluate differently between a similar product and dissimilar product categories in apparel brand extension.