6533b855fe1ef96bd12afe57

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Creation of a brand model through SEM to predict users' loyalty and recommendations regarding a public sports service.

Paloma Escamilla-fajardoJuan Núñez-pomarF. CalabuigI. Staskeviciute-butieneMario Alguacil

subject

0301 basic medicineValue (ethics)Science (General)media_common.quotation_subjectWord of mouthQ1-39003 medical and health sciencesLoyalty0302 clinical medicineCongruence (geometry)Word-of-mouthPerceptionLoyaltyCredibilityQuality (business)media_commonH1-99MarketingMultidisciplinaryBrand perceptionAdvertisingSocial sciences (General)030104 developmental biologyService (economics)Psychology030217 neurology & neurosurgeryResearch ArticleSports services

description

Brand perception is a key element in achieving business success: how a brand is perceived by current and potential users determines what they think and their disposition towards the brand. The users' perception also determines whether they will perceive the sports service as offering a greater quality or value than other services, whether they will be more loyal, or whether they will recommend the service. This paper analyses the brand perception of users of a public sports service, creating a model of structural equations that analyses how credibility and trust influence a user's congruence with the brand and the generation of positive attitudes towards the brand and how these variables influence loyalty levels and recommendations. The results indicate that the proposed model can explain the variables of trust, congruence, attitudes, loyalty and word of mouth by more than 60%. The study finds that credibility influences trust but that credibility in itself does not cause a congruence with the brand, whereas trust does. Similarly, trust does not generate attitudes towards the brand but credibility and congruence do. Congruence generates loyalty but attitudes do not, and congruence, attitudes and loyalty influence recommendation to a similar extent, with congruence having the highest influence.

10.1016/j.heliyon.2021.e07163https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34141926