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Brand, business mix, sense-of-place: do they matter downtown?

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published

Standard

Brand, business mix, sense-of-place: do they matter downtown? / Sneed, Christopher T.; Runyan, Rodney; Swinney, Jane L. et al.
In: Journal of Place Management and Development, Vol. 4, No. 2, 01.2011, p. 121-134.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Sneed, CT, Runyan, R, Swinney, JL & Lim, H 2011, 'Brand, business mix, sense-of-place: do they matter downtown?', Journal of Place Management and Development, vol. 4, no. 2, pp. 121-134. https://doi.org/10.1108/17538331111153142

APA

Sneed, C. T., Runyan, R., Swinney, J. L., & Lim, H. (2011). Brand, business mix, sense-of-place: do they matter downtown? Journal of Place Management and Development, 4(2), 121-134. https://doi.org/10.1108/17538331111153142

Vancouver

Sneed CT, Runyan R, Swinney JL, Lim H. Brand, business mix, sense-of-place: do they matter downtown? Journal of Place Management and Development. 2011 Jan;4(2):121-134. doi: 10.1108/17538331111153142

Author

Sneed, Christopher T. ; Runyan, Rodney ; Swinney, Jane L. et al. / Brand, business mix, sense-of-place : do they matter downtown?. In: Journal of Place Management and Development. 2011 ; Vol. 4, No. 2. pp. 121-134.

Bibtex

@article{87e82622d69a4636b25c123e28f8cf91,
title = "Brand, business mix, sense-of-place: do they matter downtown?",
abstract = "Purpose – This study aims to examine the extent to which consumers' perceptions of their downtown's brand identity (composed of image and positioning), business mix, and sense-of-place predict consumers' intention to patronize downtown. Design/methodology/approach – A survey of residents (n=836) from four communities in Michigan and four communities in Oklahoma was conducted. The survey included scales measuring brand identity, business mix, sense-of-place, and patronage intention. Findings – Positioning, image, and business mix are significant, positive predictors of consumer patronage intentions downtown. Sense-of-place, however, has a significant, negative effect on patronage intention. Research limitations/implications – Though limited to eight communities in two states, this study does broaden the research in place branding by examining consumers' perceptions of location as a brand and the influence of those perceptions on patronage intentions. Validity for scales measuring brand identity, business mix, and sense-of-place is provided. The study provides a springboard for additional downtown branding research. Practical implications – The negative effect of sense-of-place on patronage intention is troubling, indicating that a downtown which pays too much attention to preservation, walkability, etc. and not enough to brand image and business mix may suffer. Originality/value – Despite renewed focus on retailing downtown, there exists a paucity of research examining how consumers perceive their downtown. Of the current literature, most is narrowly focused in examining consumers' perceptions in limited domains. This study seeks to broaden the research literature by ascertaining consumers' perceptions of downtown in three areas – brand identity, business mix, and sense-of-place.",
keywords = "Business mix, Consumer behaviour, Downtown, Historic preservation, Marketing mix, Place branding, Shopping intention, United States of America",
author = "Sneed, {Christopher T.} and Rodney Runyan and Swinney, {Jane L.} and Hee-jin Lim",
year = "2011",
month = jan,
doi = "10.1108/17538331111153142",
language = "English",
volume = "4",
pages = "121--134",
journal = "Journal of Place Management and Development",
issn = "1753-8335",
publisher = "Emerald Group Publishing Ltd.",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Brand, business mix, sense-of-place

T2 - do they matter downtown?

AU - Sneed, Christopher T.

AU - Runyan, Rodney

AU - Swinney, Jane L.

AU - Lim, Hee-jin

PY - 2011/1

Y1 - 2011/1

N2 - Purpose – This study aims to examine the extent to which consumers' perceptions of their downtown's brand identity (composed of image and positioning), business mix, and sense-of-place predict consumers' intention to patronize downtown. Design/methodology/approach – A survey of residents (n=836) from four communities in Michigan and four communities in Oklahoma was conducted. The survey included scales measuring brand identity, business mix, sense-of-place, and patronage intention. Findings – Positioning, image, and business mix are significant, positive predictors of consumer patronage intentions downtown. Sense-of-place, however, has a significant, negative effect on patronage intention. Research limitations/implications – Though limited to eight communities in two states, this study does broaden the research in place branding by examining consumers' perceptions of location as a brand and the influence of those perceptions on patronage intentions. Validity for scales measuring brand identity, business mix, and sense-of-place is provided. The study provides a springboard for additional downtown branding research. Practical implications – The negative effect of sense-of-place on patronage intention is troubling, indicating that a downtown which pays too much attention to preservation, walkability, etc. and not enough to brand image and business mix may suffer. Originality/value – Despite renewed focus on retailing downtown, there exists a paucity of research examining how consumers perceive their downtown. Of the current literature, most is narrowly focused in examining consumers' perceptions in limited domains. This study seeks to broaden the research literature by ascertaining consumers' perceptions of downtown in three areas – brand identity, business mix, and sense-of-place.

AB - Purpose – This study aims to examine the extent to which consumers' perceptions of their downtown's brand identity (composed of image and positioning), business mix, and sense-of-place predict consumers' intention to patronize downtown. Design/methodology/approach – A survey of residents (n=836) from four communities in Michigan and four communities in Oklahoma was conducted. The survey included scales measuring brand identity, business mix, sense-of-place, and patronage intention. Findings – Positioning, image, and business mix are significant, positive predictors of consumer patronage intentions downtown. Sense-of-place, however, has a significant, negative effect on patronage intention. Research limitations/implications – Though limited to eight communities in two states, this study does broaden the research in place branding by examining consumers' perceptions of location as a brand and the influence of those perceptions on patronage intentions. Validity for scales measuring brand identity, business mix, and sense-of-place is provided. The study provides a springboard for additional downtown branding research. Practical implications – The negative effect of sense-of-place on patronage intention is troubling, indicating that a downtown which pays too much attention to preservation, walkability, etc. and not enough to brand image and business mix may suffer. Originality/value – Despite renewed focus on retailing downtown, there exists a paucity of research examining how consumers perceive their downtown. Of the current literature, most is narrowly focused in examining consumers' perceptions in limited domains. This study seeks to broaden the research literature by ascertaining consumers' perceptions of downtown in three areas – brand identity, business mix, and sense-of-place.

KW - Business mix

KW - Consumer behaviour

KW - Downtown

KW - Historic preservation

KW - Marketing mix

KW - Place branding

KW - Shopping intention

KW - United States of America

U2 - 10.1108/17538331111153142

DO - 10.1108/17538331111153142

M3 - Journal article

VL - 4

SP - 121

EP - 134

JO - Journal of Place Management and Development

JF - Journal of Place Management and Development

SN - 1753-8335

IS - 2

ER -