Index

Multi-Channel Marketing, Branding and Retail Design

ISBN: 978-1-78635-456-3, eISBN: 978-1-78635-455-6

Publication date: 18 October 2016

This content is currently only available as a PDF

Citation

(2016), "Index", Mcintyre, C., Melewar, T.C. and Dennis, C. (Ed.) Multi-Channel Marketing, Branding and Retail Design, Emerald Group Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 253-259. https://doi.org/10.1108/978-1-78635-456-320161012

Publisher

:

Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2016 Emerald Group Publishing Limited


INDEX

Abercrombie and Fitch
, 204

Aerie
, 54

Aesthetic impressions
, 9

Aesthetic perception
, 9, 11, 15

‘Ak Orda’ (‘White Horde’) Presidential Palace
, 146

All Saints
, 202

American Marketing Association
, 5

Appearance of products
, 10

Apple Inc.
, 12, 209–211

Approach-avoidance behaviour
, 203–204

Arad, Ron
, 21

Architecture and Interior Architecture (ArcK)

and marketing research group, bridging research gaps between
, 41–42

Attention drawing
, 9, 10

Attraction-avoidance theory
, 112

Bayterek Tower
, 145

Beauty myth
, 54–55

Biophilic or Heritage site attractiveness
, 118

Body dissatisfaction
, 53, 56, 57, 60

Bolton
, 109

Brand

affinity
, 61

coherence
, 114

communication
, 199–206

communication control, female body image and
, 53–55

consistency
, 114

defined
, 5

extension
, 14–15

identity see brand identity

image
, 83

message change agent, social media as
, 55–58

platform
, 23

salience
, 6, 7

space, using virtual world to define
, 225–227

value, embedding
, 120–126

visibility
, 22

Brand identity

defined
, 5–6

and design, link between
, 5–6

dimensions of
, 6

prism
, 6

signs of
, 5–6

Branding, and innovation
, 12–15, 19

Brandscaping
, 112, 114

Brandstorms
, 57, 60

activity monitoring and responses
, 62–67

plus-size
, 59, 61, 62

Bricolage
, 138

Bury St Edmunds
, 109

Business-customer (B-C) interaction
, 197

Business innovation
, 81–85

Business-stakeholder relations
, 80–81

Buy-one-give-one (BOGO) business model
, 83–84

Capital, social
, 144

Categorization
, 9, 10

Cent Degrés
, 22–24

Central core theory
, 14

Co-branding
, 17

Co-creation
, 61, 69, 166

Collective memory
, 145

Comme des Garcon’s ‘guerrilla stores’
, 168

Computer Aided Design (CAD)
, 224

ConAgra
, 221

Consumer acceptance
, 15

Consumer as producer
, 138

Consumer behavior, product design and
, 8–9

Consumption

hyperconsumption
, 140

re-enchantment of
, 137–146

spectacularisation of
, 139–140

Corporate brand image, building
, 201, 205

Corporate social performance (CSP)
, 81

Corporate social responsibility (CSR)
, 78, 80–81

Creativity
, 15

Cultural dimension, of brand identity
, 6

Customer-based design agencies
, 20, 21

Customer-customer (C-C) interaction
, 197

Customer(s)

appreciation
, 37

employees as
, 194–197

focus
, 199–206

loyalty
, 83

satisfaction
, 196

Customization
, 138

Cyberscape
, 114

Design

and brand identity, link between
, 5–6

as creator of meaning
, 10–12

discourse
, 11

as driver of consumer attachment to brand
, 10–12

and innovation
, 15–18, 19, 23

integration
, 19

language
, 11

as signs and meanings
, 23–24

Design agencies

star-based
, 20

customer-based
, 20–21

process-based
, 21, 23, 25

Design-marketing relationship
, 4

Diesel
, 54, 68

Direct Marketing Association (DMA)
, 54

Dove
, 61, 68

Real Beauty campaign
, 53

Self-Esteem project
, 54

Eddie Bauer
, 221

Educational disciplines in retail design, gap between
, 39–40

Education gap, bridging
, 42–43

Eight Inc.
, 210

Emotional attachment to brand, design and
, 8–12

Emotional contract
, 12

Employees, as customers
, 194–197

Environmental design
, 6

Environmental stimuli
, 200, 201

dimensions of
, 208

Ergonomics
, 9, 10

Ethical Fashion Forum
, 76, 78

Evidence-based design
, 37

“Experience Design Generator”
, 42

Experienced professionals, masterclasses advanced retail design for
, 43

Experience economy
, 119

Experiential retailing

defined
, 166

pop-up stores and
, 164–167

Exterior attractiveness, key urban architecture factors of
, 116–120

External design
, 23, 111–115

Facebook
, 52, 56

Fasciae, positive and negative aspects of
, 123–125

Female body image, and brand communication control
, 53–55

FOVE®
, 227

Functionality
, 9, 10, 11

Galleries Laffayette
, 105

Goodyear
, 221

Graphic design
, 6

Halliday, Tess
, 62, 63, 65

Harrods
, 105

Hasselt University

Arck and MAR research group, bridging gap between
, 41–42

education gap, bridging
, 42–43

experienced professionals, masterclasses advanced retail design for
, 43–44

summer school seamless design
, 44–46

Herborist
, 22–24

Homo Geographicus
, 109

Hutlen’s sensory model
, 166

Hyperconsumption
, 140

Innovation

branding and
, 12–15, 19

design and
, 15–18, 19, 24

design–brand mutual influence
, 18–22

Instagram
, 52, 56

Internalizing design
, 16

Internal marketing (IM)
, 194–199

Jack Daniels
, 12

Ka De Ve
, 105

Khan Shatyr shopping mall
, 137, 146–153

re-enchanting consumption
, 153

La Rinacsente
, 105

Landscape
, 114, 122

Licensing agreement
, 17

Liverpool One
, 109

Local place degradation, and modernist retail evolution
, 110–111

Macy’s
, 105

Mall of America
, 142

Marc Jacobs
, 54, 68

Marketing promises
, 197–199

Marketscape
, 114, 122

Massively multiplayer online role playing games (MMORPGs)
, 222

McDonald’s
, 139

MEC Global
, 61

Mentalization dimension, of brand identity
, 6

Micro characteristics
, 37

Mindscape
, 114

Mister Clean
, 14

Modernist retail evolution, local place degradation and
, 110–111

Molar characteristics
, 37, 38

Moments of truth
, 198

Nazarbayev, Nursultan
, 145, 146

New product development (NPD)
, 4, 12, 13, 15–18, 20, 25

Nike
, 142

Non-western shopping malls, re-enchantment of
, 143–146

Office ergonomics
, 207

Outsourcing design
, 17

Packaging design
, 6, 7

Palace of Peace and Reconciliation
, 145–146

Peirce’s theory of signs
, 7

PepsiCo
, 221

Personality dimension, of brand identity
, 6

Physical dimension, of brand identity
, 6

Physical environmental stimuli
, 199, 207

Physical work environments
, 199, 206–209

Peirce’s theory of signs
, 7

‘Place brand’ value
, 103

Place degradation, local, and modernist retail evolution
, 110–111

Place of built environment
, 103–107

Pop-up stores

development of
, 167–168, 177–186

and experiential retailing
, 164–167

form and function of
, 168–172

global take-up of
, 172–177

origins of
, 167–168

taxonomy of
, 170–172

Postmodernism
, 137

Post-occupancy evaluation
, 37

Power
, 59

Prada
, 115

Princes Square shopping centre
, 106, 107

Printemps
, 105

Process-based design agencies
, 20, 21, 22–24

Procter & Gamble (P&G)
, 14, 221

Product appearance, roles of
, 10

Product design
, 6, 11

and consumer behavior
, 8–9

Product diffusion
, 15

Productive consumer, and re-enchantment of consumption
, 139

Promises, marketing
, 197–199

Psycho-social evolution
, 109

Real Beauty campaign
, 53

Real retail store
, 230–239

Re-enchantment of consumption
, 137–143, 153

socio-political aspects of
, 143–146

Reflection dimension, of brand identity
, 6

Relationship dimension, of brand identity
, 6

Research and practice in retail design, gap between
, 38–39, 42–43

Research disciplines in retail design, gap between
, 35–38

Retail’s historical import, in town and city place
, 107–109

Retail 1.0
, 33–34

Retail 2.0
, 33–34

Retail 3.0
, 33, 34

Retail atmospherics
, 112, 116, 119, 200

Retail design
, 33–35

case study
, 41–46

gap between educational disciplines
, 39–40

gap between research and practice
, 38–39

gap between research disciplines
, 35–38

Retail façade attention, in design literature
, 111–115

Retailtainment
, 166

Self-esteem
, 54, 57

Self-Esteem project
, 54

Selfridges
, 104–105, 106, 107, 118

Semantic interpretation
, 9

Semantics of products
, 6–8

Service encounters
, 198

Servicescape
, 121, 194–197

brand communication
, 199–206

controllable dimensions of
, 200

customer focus
, 199–206

employees as customers
, 194–197

internal marketing
, 194–197

marketing promises
, 197–199

physical work environments
, 206–209

Sharded-self
, 66

Shared value business model
, 79

Shoptainment
, 166

Signs of brand identity
, 5–6

Singularisation process
, 115

Snapchat
, 52, 56

Social capital
, 144

Social cohesion
, 145

Social comparison theory
, 53

Social entrepreneurship
, 81–83

Social media, as brand message change agent
, 55–58

Social networking interactivity
, 58–62

Social network theory
, 57

Softscape
, 118

Space of built environment
, 103–107

Spatial density
, 208–209

Spectacularisation of consumption
, 139–140

Spillover effects, on brand equity
, 20

Star-based design agencies
, 20

Starck, Philippe
, 21

Summer School in Seamless Retail Design
, 44

Sustainability
, 83, 95, 118

commercial
, 76, 78

environmental
, 78

financial
, 81, 85

social
, 78, 93

Symbiotic value of retail brand
, 103–107

Symbolic association
, 9, 11, 15

Telepresence
, 222

Tesla suit
, 223

Timberland
, 105, 106

Tobii

XL120 desk-bound system
, 232

Tod building
, 118

TOMS
, 75

One for One® business model
, 74, 84, 86–89, 91

True Cost, The
, 77

Twitter
, 52

Unreal®
, 239

Urban architecture factors, of exterior attractiveness
, 116–120

Versus Versace
, 105, 106

Virtual worlds

case study
, 230–239

to define brand space, using
, 225–227

development of
, 221

features of
, 223

inception
, 220–221

key characteristics of
, 222–223

offline effects
, 223

previous research, summary of
, 229–230

retail potential
, 221–222

Vogue Italia
, 61

Web design
, 6