3.9 Article

A semiotic analysis of consumer-generated antibranding

Journal

MARKETING THEORY
Volume 15, Issue 2, Pages 243-264

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/1470593114540677

Keywords

Antibranding; branding; brand semiotics; consumer-generated branding; and digital semiotics; semiotics

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This study is a semiotic analysis of consumer-generated antibranding efforts and reveals tacit semiotic rules used by digital antibranders. A broad theoretical discussion about the semiotic characteristics of branding and antibranding is provided and digital antibranding semiotics is defined. The semiotics of consumer digital antibranding efforts are investigated in two studies examining a sample of antibranding images targeted at valuable corporate brands. The first study reveals that antibranders use drama and humor to demonize, criminalize, dehumanize, and Hitlerize the targeted brands, creating strong antibrand voices and positioning themselves against corporate greed and wrongdoing. The second study found that consumers successfully decode antibranding semiotic representations and classify them in terms of message clarity, fact finding, and hostility versus entertainment values. These findings reveal that both antibranding images with dark humor and clear messages and an aggressive and intriguing message have the potential to influence consumers.

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