Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1009783 | International Journal of Hospitality Management | 2012 | 10 Pages |
This paper considers destinations and hotels operating within a gaming destination as co-branded experiential choice products. Specifically, it examines the overall and individual effects of visitors’ perceived brand equity of a gaming destination and their perceived brand equity of various hotels, including ‘flagship’ or branded hotels, in terms of influencing their reaction to a hypothetical brand loyalty scenario in which their intended and preferred hotel was unable to provide accommodation thus forcing them to either: (1) choose an alternate hotel in the destination and continue with the visit, (2) cancel the trip and choose another destination to visit, or (3) insist on staying at the preferred hotel but postpone the trip at another period. The study's expectation is that visitors’ response to such a hypothetical scenario is moderated by the relative influence of their perceived brand equity for the destination and for hotels. The emergent gaming destination of Macao is used as a case study for this purpose. The study's findings indicate that visitors’ overall destination brand equity perceptions—rather than hotel brand equity perceptions—is robustly significant when it comes to influencing visitors’ response to the brand loyalty scenario. Results of the study indicate several relevant implications for destination management organizations (DMOs) seeking to enhance their destination-branding efforts and for hotel operators, especially internationally branded hotel chains.
► We examined destination versus hotel brand equity in travel choice behavior. ► We prompted visitors with a hypothetical choice to measure the influence of each. ► We find destination brand equity to be more significantthan hotel brand equity. ► Promoting destination rather than brand loyalty seems therefore more effective. ► Branded hotels setting up in unbranded or low brand equity destinations face risk.