Chenglu Wang’s research while affiliated with University of New Haven and other places

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Publications (1)


Pretest, Study 1, and Study 3 Stimuli. (a) Utilitarian appeals. (b) Value‐expressive appeals. English translations are shown for illustrative purposes. Stimuli used in the experiments featured only the Chinese text.
Stimuli for Study 2. (a) Utilitarian appeals. (b) Value‐expressive appeals. English translations are shown for illustrative purposes. Stimuli used in the experiments featured only the Chinese text.
Product type manipulation. (a) Dolce and Gabbana (D&G) watch (Study 2). (b) Ray‐Ban sunglasses (Study 1 (the right part); Study 3).
Value‐expressive manipulation. Utilitarian manipulation. Counterfeit manipulation. Copycat manipulation.
Combating lookalike product through adapting advertising appeals to consumer value: Strategic implications to brand imitation management
  • Article
  • Publisher preview available

July 2024

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59 Reads

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2 Citations

International IJC

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Yanfei Tang

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Chenglu Wang

Lookalike” products, including counterfeits and copycats, are increasingly common in today's global marketplace. Four lab experiments were conducted involving 653 participants, and data were analyzed through SPSS 26. Based on social representation (SR) theory and self‐construal theory, this research examines how advertising for original brands impacts purchase intent for counterfeits and copycats differently. The results suggest that ads for the original product using value‐expressive (vs. utilitarian) appeals result in lower intent to purchase copycat versions. However, ads for the original product using utilitarian (vs. value‐expressive) appeals lead to lower purchase intent for counterfeit versions. The results also show that consumer need fulfillment mediates the interactive effect between ad appeal type and product type. The current research provides useful insights for marketers or retailers grappling with ongoing competitive threats posed by lookalike products and underscores the strategic utilization of various advertising tactics to reduce the demand for copycats and counterfeits.

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Citations (1)


... Several types of studies have examined the widely used strategies of leading brands, in response to copycat packaging, such as negotiation, redesigning the package, releasing a fighter brand, taking legal action, using advertisements and using specific design features to restrict copycat practice (Schnaars, 2002;Collins-Dodd and Zaichkowsky, 1999;Wang et al., 2024a). Although these strategies are relevant and partially successful, they only become effective after the imitation has occurred. ...

Reference:

Understanding copycat packaging: a systematic review and research directions
Combating lookalike product through adapting advertising appeals to consumer value: Strategic implications to brand imitation management

International IJC