Nowadays the diversity in contextual society has offered customers
plenty of options during consumption, further impacting their demands and
emphasis in reference to corporate brands. For illustrating the way to
formulate authenticity, two ways of different perceptions for customers
distinguishing authenticity should be taken into concern: modern and postmodern
perception. The modern perception, according to Pedersen (2013), refers to
customer’s tendency of external objectivity in authenticity based on external
excellence such as natural, ethical, honest and sustainable features of objects
(brands), while the postmodern one constructing authenticity based on internal
subjectivity of individuals, including emotion, culture and personality (p. 2).
Hence, in order to create customers’ loyalty and the demand for brand
authenticity, companies need to know their preferences and related resulting
factors; marketers must gain an understanding of how to create brand
authenticity in respectively modern and postmodern perception (Pederson, 2013,
p. 2). For modern perception, it is sender oriented that does not admit the
consumers’ as being active participants of constructing brand authenticity
(Pedersen, 2013, p. 11). The only source for customers perceiving authenticity
solely comes from external qualities of brands in rational and logical thinking
process. With further distinction, products highly paying attention to the
heritage and utility comprised within a brand mostly belong to fall in this
perception category, such as fine wine or fine water. In contrast, the
postmodern perception deems a brand as simply not a lifeless brand but an
animated entity with characteristics. Customers start forming a holistic
perspective that perceives the creation of meaning in a brand as something
subjective that is created on foundation of emotional values (Pederson, 2013,
p. 19).
In
2013, Coca-cola company, as an instance for postmodern perception, launched a
commercial campaign with the slogan: “If crazy is being nice to strangers- Then
call me crazy- Have five everyone.” In this message this company has
transformed their core value into conveying a sense of emotional advocacy for
happiness, which is easy to be understood; most significantly, the very
advertising is no longer product-focused but tangible in norm and
interpretation absorbed by customers. Provided by the example of promodern
strategy above, Coca-cola has adjusted marketing leverage to construct customers’
positive affirmation and familiarity in their brand, thereby formulating the
authenticity. It is a highly contextual process in which customers are
vigorously co-constructers all along.
Gilmore
and Pine (2007) once implied the transitional change from modern tendency to
postmodern tendency, namely meaning customers today live in a world that is
becoming increasingly staged but also increasingly unreal, thus customers
choose to buy or not buy is dependent on how real they perceive an offering to
be (p. 1). The decisive reason causing
such change lies in the growing existence of social process or, to be more
specific, social constructivism. It indicates that customer’s are getting used
to incorporating knowledge and culture into making contact with brands; the
authenticity determined by individuals has a lot matter to do with people’s
interaction with the course of daily social life, which has challenged the viewpoint
of unbiased objectivity during consumption in the past era. The marketers
should value the nature of social constructivism to obtain further knowhow
about constructing real brand authenticity rather than always bragging the
brands’ excellence via those overused mass media channels.
Briefly speaking, in the future, the corporates and marketers seem
obligatory to think of customers neither modern or postmodern type, but instead
think of understanding what the customers want for their best in the
relationship with corporates as “purchasing partners” during consumption
(Pedersen, 2013, p. 28). In other words, the effectiveness to render
authenticity realistically depends on what the customers buy from the company
and how they view the merchandise in mindset.
*Modern perception
*postmodern perception
Gilmore, J.H., & Pine II J. B. (2007). Authenticity: What consumers really want.
Boston, USA: Harvard Business School
Pedersen, T. (2013, December). Brand
Authenticity in modern and postmodern consumption. [Web log post]. Retrieved
from http://pure.au.dk/portal/files/69756266/Brand_Authenticity_f_rdig.pdf
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