How brand communities create value.
This week’s blog is based on a 2009 article
by Shau, Muniz & Arnold . Don’t be put off because it’s from the
pre-IPad era: The way people behave now is still the same.
Brand Communities
There are 12 value creating practices across the
nine brand communities of study. The 12 practices are organized into four categories: (1) social networking (2) impression management (3)
community engagement and (4) brand use.
(1) social networking – creating, enhancing and extending
ties among brand community member
IA) – welcoming
1B) – empathizing
1C) - governing
(2) impression management – have an external,
outward focus. Want to create favourable of brand and community in the social
universe beyond the brand community.
(2A) – evangelizing
(2B) – justifying
(3) Community engagement practices reinforce members’
increasing engagement with brand community.
Brand is secondary here.
Practices are competitive.
(3A) - staking
(3B) - milestoning
(3C) - badging
(3D) - documenting
(4) Brand use
(4A) - grooming
(4B) - customising
(4C) - commoditising
Each practice exhibits three things:
(1) understandings - knowledge and tacit cultural templates
(2) procedures or explicit performance rules, and,
(3) emotional engagements
Practices generate consumption opportunities. For example,
by documenting commodisation, others are able to copy, thus generating
consumption. Trying to achieve milestones likewise generates consumption. Grooming
creates value by preserving appearance and performance. The empathetic nature
of a brand community adds to the switching cost and means members are more likely
to stay with that brand community. In fact, Muniz et al, argue that all practices
are an act of value creation, and that if people have the opportunity to
construct brand communities and the freedom to modify products, they will.
Implications for Marketers
Actions that marketers should take are to plug the gaps in
the brand community, thereby making it stronger. For example, perhaps a brand community has developed
brand use practices but has little social networking practices. This is where
the company should foster or sponsor social networking practices. Perhaps a brand community has developed various
customising techniques but has developed no milestoning practices. Perhaps the
Marketeer could offer a branded book or emblem to commemorate the milestone.
Perhaps the company website could also host ideas from other companies about
how to customize a brand. The company
can also get the brand community in designing new products: Feedback about new flavours or looks; If marketers
support and nourish brand communities they have access to a community dedicated
to the brand and how to make it better.
Do you agree that all practices are an act of value creation? Comments welcome!
Schau, H.J., Muniz Jr., A.M. & Arnould, E.J. (2009).
How Brand Community Practices Create Value. Journal
of Marketing 73(Sept), 30-51.
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