Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7421903 | Tourism Management | 2016 | 14 Pages |
Abstract
Tourism destinations increasingly use brand-personification strategies to evoke favorable consumer reactions. These reactions, however, may hinge on cultural differences. This paper investigates the relationships among nation brand personality perceptions, consumer brand-self congruity, and the visit intention of a country as a tourism destination. Brand-self congruity is examined as a mediator of the relationship between brand personality perception and visit intention. Of Hofstede's cultural dimensions, individualism and uncertainty avoidance are the most relevant dimensions for brand-self congruity. Based on representative samples of consumers from five countries (Italy, the UK, Czech Republic, Poland, and Russia) and using Slovakia as a sample tourism destination, the effect of individualism and uncertainty avoidance on the relationship between brand self-congruity and visit intention is studied. Individualism and uncertainty avoidance moderate the congruity - visit intention relationship - but in a negative way, contrary to our expectations. Important implications are derived for both tourism research and destination management.
Keywords
Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities
Business, Management and Accounting
Strategy and Management
Authors
Kurt Matzler, Andreas Strobl, Nicola Stokburger-Sauer, Artur Bobovnicky, Florian Bauer,