Modeling transitions in nation brand equity: An empirical assessment of the nation equity power grid
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Abstract
The purpose of this study is to assess longitudinal nation brand performance by modeling transitions
in nation brand equity and to develop a method for nation brand performance assessment. This
study has two objectives: (1) to empirically test Steenkamp’s nation equity power grid conceptual
framework; its categories (dominant, receding, niche, emerging, and weak nation brands), and
their expected development trajectories, and (2) to identify new types of nation brands and
development patterns to complement the framework. To do this, this study used objective
secondary data and applied the smooth transition technique. We assessed 41 countries’ nation
brand performance over the 1995–2017 period to understand the development of their nation
brand equity. Particular attention was paid to countries that had significantly improved their
performance and countries that had lost their brand strength. Our findings support the categories
proposed by Steenkamp, but we provide a more nuanced approach to analyzing countries’ brand
strength and the possible development trajectories, and introduce new categories of nation
brands called volatile nation brands and booming nation brands. Our approach to using the nonlinear
smooth transition demonstrated how countries’ brand strength evolved over time, and also
detected the speed of any transitions; in other words, how fast nation brands moved from one
level to another. Our findings benefit country brand managers, enabling them to better determine
their country’s positioning and the necessary means to improve brand equity. Understanding the
mechanisms behind transitions in brand equity can also help researchers link these transitions
back to various economic, social, cultural, and political transitions that have occurred in nations.
Our method therefore has powerful explanatory value for a wide range of marketing, economics,
and other social science studies.