PICH, Christopher, ARMANSDOTTIR, Guja, DEAN, Dianne, SPRY, Louise and VAIN, Varsha (2019). Problematizing the presentation and reception of political brands: The strategic and operational nature of the political brand alignment model. European Journal of Marketing. [Article]
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EJM political brand alignment model.pdf - Accepted Version
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution Non-commercial.
EJM political brand alignment model.pdf - Accepted Version
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Abstract
Purpose – There are explicit calls for research devoted to how political actors present their brand to the
electorate and how this is interpreted. Responding to this, the purpose of this paper is to build an
understanding of how political brand messages and values are received and aligned with voter expectations,
which in turn shapes the consistency of a political brand.
Design/methodology/approach – Using an interpretivist perspective, this two-stage approach first
focuses on semi-structured interviews with internal stakeholders of the UK Conservative Party and second
uses focus group discussions with external stakeholders (voters) of age 18-24 years. Data was collected
between 1 December 2014 and 6 May 2015.
Findings – The findings suggest that the UK Conservative brand had recovered from the “nasty party”
reputation. Further, the Conservative brand was perceived as credible, trustworthy and responsible, with
positive associations of “economic competence”. However, while the nasty party imagery has declined, the UK
Conservative brand continues to face challenges particularly in terms of longstanding negative associations
perceived by both internal and external markets.
Research limitations/implications – It must be acknowledged that all research methods have their
own limitations, and acknowledging these will strengthen the ability to draw conclusions. In this study, for
example, due to time constraints during the election campaign period, 7 participants supported stage one of
the study and 25 participants supported stage two of the study. However, participants from stage one of the
study represented all three elements of the UK Conservative Party (Parliamentary, Professional and
Voluntary). In addition, the elite interviews were longer in duration and this provided a greater opportunity to
capture detailed stories of their life experiences and how this affected their brand relationship. Similarly,
participants for stage two focussed on young voters of age 18-24 years, a segment actively targeted by the UK
Conservative Party.
Practical implications – The brand alignment framework can help practitioners illuminate components
of the political brand and how it is interpreted by the electorate. The increasing polarisation in politics has
made this a vital area for study, as we see need to understand if, how or why citizens are persuaded by a more
polarised brand message. There are also social media issues for the political brand which can distort the
carefully constructed brand. There are opportunities to evaluate and operationalize this framework in other
political contexts.
Originality/value – The brand alignment model extends current branding theory first by building on an
understanding of the complexities of creating brand meaning, second, by operationalizing differences
Presentation and reception of political brands between the brand and how it is interpreted by the electorate, finally, by identifying if internal divisions
within the political party pose a threat to the consistency of the brand.
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