2014/2015 KAN-SVW New Frontiers in Branding: From static to dynamic branding approaches
English Title | |
New Frontiers in Branding: From static to dynamic branding approaches |
Course information |
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Language | English |
Course ECTS | 7.5 ECTS |
Type | Elective |
Level | Full Degree Master |
Duration | One Quarter |
Course period | Second Quarter |
Timetable | Course schedule will be posted at calendar.cbs.dk |
Max. participants | 100 |
Study board |
Study Board for MSc in Economics and Business
Administration
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Course coordinator | |
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Main academic disciplines | |
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Last updated on 25-04-2014 |
Learning objectives | ||||||||||||||||||||||
The course supports students in understanding the
evolution from static to more dynamic branding approaches. Students
will learn to understand brands as complex, dynamic phenomena and
will be provided with theoretical and methodological input to deal
with this complexity. The course helps students (a) to enhance
their ability of expressing themselves academically and (b) equips
them with relevant knowledge for pursuing a career as “state of the
art” marketing manager or communications expert.
At the end of the course, the excellent student should be able to
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Examination | ||||||||||||||||||||||
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Course content and structure | ||||||||||||||||||||||
In today’s business environment brand management
is no longer in the position to unilaterally “manage” brands while
perceiving consumers and other brand-interested stakeholders (e.g.,
employees, investors, or suppliers) as passive recipients of brand
messages. Empowered by new social media, brand-interested
stakeholders actively contribute to brands that affect their
personal lives.
This course confronts student with and prepares them for a complex branding reality in which brands can no longer be “managed” in the conventional sense. The course reviews conventional static branding approaches and supports students in understanding the recent evolution towards a more dynamic, process-oriented understanding of brands. Students will be provided with theoretical input which helps them making sense of brands as complex social phenomena in constant flux. For this purpose, interdisciplinary insights (e.g., from philosophy and organization theory) into process theories will be provided; formerly static brand-related concepts will be discussed from a dynamic perspective (e.g., brand knowledge / meaning, brand identity, brand manifestations, etc.); relevant concepts like multi-stakeholder brand co-creation and social brand discourse will be introduced. Furthermore, this course will provide students with methodological input which supports them in gaining empirical insights into brands as complex social phenomena (e.g., netnographic methods, observation, discourse analysis). The theoretical and methodological discussion will be complemented with input from managers who are confronted with this “new branding reality” on an everyday basis and have developed successful ways to deal with this complexity. |
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Teaching methods | ||||||||||||||||||||||
This is a fully online course. The course will run over 8 weeks. The course will consist of asynchronous and/or synchronous online lectures, asynchronous and/or synchronous online discussions, quizzes and individual and/or group assignments. Research articles on the specific topics will be assigned for reading during the quarter. They will also build the foundation on which we will discuss cases online, and they provide the necessary knowledge to work with home assignments. The lecturer will be available for asynchronous and/or synchronous online discussions throughout the 8 weeks in which the course runs. | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Further Information | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Online course | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Expected literature | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Indicative literature (more literature will be
announced upon enrollment):
1. Csaba, F. F. & Bengtsson, A. 2006. Rethinking Identity in Brand Management. In: Schroeder, J. E. & Mörling, M. (eds.) Brand Culture. London: Routledge, 118-135. 2. Gregory, A. 2007. Involving Stakeholders in Developing Corporate Brands: The Communication Dimension. Journal of Marketing Management, 23 (1-2), 59-73. 3. Hatch, M.J. & Schultz, M. 2010. Toward a Theory of Brand Co-creation with Implications For Brand Governance. Journal of Brand Management, 17 (8), 590-604. 4. Jones, R., & Kornum, N. (2012). Managing the co-created brand: Value and cultural complementarity in online and offline multi stakeholder ecosystems. Journal of Business Research, Special Issue on Virtual Dialogue. Volume 66, Issue 9, 5. Kozinets, R. V. 2002. The Field Behind the Screen: Using Netnography for Marketing Research in Online Communities. Journal of Marketing Research, 39 (1), 61-72. 6. Merz, M. A., He, Y. & Vargo, S. L. 2009. The Evolving Brand Logic: a Service Dominant Logic Perspective. Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science, 37 (3), 328-344. 7. Muehlbacher, Hans and Andrea Hemetsberger (2013). Brands as processes and their outcomes – a social representations perspective. in Scholderer, Joachim and Karen BrunsØ (Eds.) Marketing, Food and the consumer. Festschrift in Honour of Klaus G. Grunert. Essex: Pearson Custom Publishing, pp. 31-46. 8. Vallaster, Christine; von Wallpach, Sylvia (2013). An online discursive inquiry into the social dynamics of multi-stakeholder brand meaning co-creation. Journal of Business Research, Special Issue on Virtual Dialogue. Volume 66, Issue 9, pp. 1505-1515. 9. Vargo, S. L., & Lusch, R. F. (2008a). Service-dominant logic: continuing the evolution. Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science, 36 (1), 1-10. |
Last updated on
25-04-2014