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dc.contributor.authorWoodside, Arch
dc.contributor.authorKo, E.
dc.contributor.editorEunju Ko
dc.contributor.editorArch G. Woodside
dc.date.accessioned2017-01-30T15:38:07Z
dc.date.available2017-01-30T15:38:07Z
dc.date.created2014-03-10T20:00:40Z
dc.date.issued2013
dc.identifier.citationWoodside, Arch and Ko, Eunju. 2013. Luxury Fashion Theory, Culture, and Brand Marketing Strategy, in Ko, E. and Woodside, A.G. (ed), Luxury Fashion and Culture, pp. 1-14. Bingley, West Yorkshire: Emerald Group Publishing.
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/48207
dc.identifier.doi10.1108/S1871-3173(2013)0000007004
dc.description.abstract

This article describes the core tenets of fashion marketing theory (FMT) from the perspective of economic psychology. The study here is unique and valuable in proposing empirically testable hypotheses that follow from FMT and in describing evidence from available literature testing these hypotheses. The core tenets reflect the view that impactful fashion marketing moderates the relationships among price and consumer demand for the firm's offering (i.e., brand) by psychological customer segments, and subsequently firm profitability. Relating to fashion marketing, “psychology” in “economic psychology” includes the influences of chronic desire for conspicuous consumption (CC) and desire for rarity as relative human conditions, that is, humans vary in these desires; consumers relatively very high versus very low in these desires are more prone to enact conspicuous choices whatever the price level of the object or service. Consequently, different pricing points (decisions) that maximize profitability vary considerably for product designs which are positioned high in CC and rarity directed to customers very high in chronic desire for CC and rarity versus product designs which are positioned low in CC and rarity directed to customers very low in chronic desire for CC and rarity.

dc.publisherEmerald Group Publishing Limited
dc.subjectfashion
dc.subjectChoice
dc.subjectmarketing
dc.subjectpsychology
dc.subjectcustomer
dc.subjecteconomic
dc.subjectprofitability
dc.titleLuxury Fashion Theory, Culture, and Brand Marketing Strategy
dc.typeBook Chapter
dcterms.source.startPage1
dcterms.source.endPage14
dcterms.source.titleAdvances in Culture, Tourism and Hospitality Research, Volume 7, Luxury Fashion and Culture
dcterms.source.isbn978-1-78190-210-3
dcterms.source.placeUK
dcterms.source.chapter1
curtin.department
curtin.accessStatusFulltext not available


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