Purpose
The growing wine market in India presents a tremendous opportunity for marketers to formulate a strategy targeted at the Indian consumers. The purpose of this paper is to identify the attributes that are important for young wine drinkers in their selection of wine, the preferred option within the identified attributes and the relative importance consumers place on the identified attributes.
Design/methodology/approach
In-depth interviews were carried out to identify the attributes of primary importance in the wine selection process. Subsequently, conjoint analysis was conducted on the data collected through a survey of 252 respondents which ranked purchase intention of profiles derived from an orthogonal design.
Findings
In-depth interviews revealed five factors as important in the choice of wine, namely, price, brand, taste, origin and type of the wine. The results of conjoint analysis showed price as the most important factor, followed by the type of the wine. Red was the most preferred type. Brand, taste and origin follow up in that order of importance with millennials preferring to buy familiar brands, sweet wines and of Indian origin.
Originality/value
The study contributes to the wine consumer behaviour research by identifying the attributes that are important for marketing of wine to the large segment of Indian millennial consumers. The findings will help marketers to better position their wines in the Indian market. The study will also aid in the development of product, branding and pricing decisions.
Launching unisex or agender extension of existing brands is being increasingly practiced by marketers today. However, there is limited research that explores consumers’ responses to unisex brand extensions. The purpose of this research was to contribute to the understanding of consumer evaluation of the agender extension of brands. It uses the theory of social identity as an overarching conceptual lens to examine the influence of consumer’s biological gender, gender image of the parent brand, and product type on the evaluation of the unisex extension of brands. Hypotheses are developed and tested across three experimental studies conducted among graduate student‐participants of a management school. Our findings suggest that women compared to men are more favorable towards unisex brand extensions and unisex offerings in general. Additionally, a unisex extension of a masculine brand is preferred over feminine brands by both men and women. Finally, for products that are higher on symbolic value women evaluate unisex extension more favorably, whereas for men the evaluations worsen. The research findings will help managers in taking unisex brand extension decisions.
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