Aaker Model
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The Aaker Model, created by David A. Aaker, a marketing professor at the University of California-Berkeley and a management consultant at Prophet, is a marketing model which views brand equity as a combination of brand awareness, brand loyalty and brand associations, which add up to give the value provided by a product or service.[1]
For Aaker, brand management starts with developing a brand identity, which is a unique set of brand associations representing what the brand stands for and offers to customers an aspiring brand image.
Aaker primarily sees brand identity as consisting of 8-12 elements which fall under four perspectives:
- Brand as Product - consists of product scope, product attributes, quality or value of the product, uses, users and country of origin.
- Brand as Organisation - consists of organizational attributes, local workings versus global activities.
- Brand as Person - consists of brand personality and consumer brand relationships.
- Brand as Symbol - consists of audio and visual imagery, metaphorical symbols and brand heritage.
The purpose of the Aaker Model is to help in creating a brand strategy consisting of different brand elements or patterns, so as to clarify, enrich and differentiate a brand from its competitors. An organization carefully employs several of these elements to communicate to the consumers what their brand stands for.
References
- ^ Marketing Management:Creating Brand Equity by Philip Kotler