Flagship Marketing

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Approach Behaviours
bond
branded environment design strategies
brands
buildings
Category=KJS
concept
consumer behavior theory
cultural
Cultural Flagship
Cultural Flagship Project
Cultural Quarter
cultural regeneration projects
Data Vignettes
eq_bestseller
eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Estate Car
experiential branding
Flagship Brand Stores
Flagship Buildings
Flagship Concept
Flagship Shopping
Flagship Store
interdisciplinary marketing research
Leopold Museum
London's Regent Street
London’s Regent Street
louis
Louis Vuitton
luxury
Luxury Brands
Luxury Fashion
Luxury Fashion Brands
Luxury Fashion Companies
luxury retail spaces
Out-of Town Shopping Malls
Oxford Street
Planned Shopping Mall
quarter
retail environment analysis
stores
Supermarket Buildings
UK Shopping
Virtual Flagship
vuitton
Wynn Las Vegas

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415436021
  • Weight: 600g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 12 Nov 2009
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Flagships are the physical apogee of consumerism, places where brand experiences are most defined and interactions with consumers are highly refined. This book marks the first comprehensive study of the concept of the flagship, bringing together a range of scholarly insights from the field, covering issues such as consumerism, areas of consumption and experimental marketing theory and practise. The ways in which flagship projects communicate brand values, both externally and internally, form an important part of this book, and provide new perspectives on late twentieth century commercial and cultural policy and practice.

Kent and Brown offer a truly interdisciplinary approach to the concept, offering a variety of perspectives on the debates surrounding flagship function and its role as a place of consumption. Chapters focus on the development of prestigious stores, hotels and arts and cultural centres, as showcases for branded experiences and products and as demonstrations of commercial and public policy. Cases and examples include The Eden Project in the UK, automotive showrooms in Germany, hotels in Dubai and Las Vegas, and Vienna's cultural quarter. Theoretical discussion explores the tensions between costs and profitability, conspicuous consumption and the sustainability of iconic forms. The book enables readers to explore the flagship concept from different perspectives, and while a marketing approach predominates, it provides a disciplinary challenge which will open up new ways of understanding the concept.

Tony Kent is Reader in Marketing at the University of the Arts, London. Reva Brown was the Professor of Management Research at Oxford Brookes University.