community definition. Brand communities exist in face-to-face clubs as well as in
virtual environments facilitated where ‘imagined others’ share their passion for a
certain brand. A brand community is therefore not restricted by geography, unlike
the traditional perception of the community being a geographically bound entity.
The community in a brand context relates to a common understanding of a shared
identity. The internet is of course an important vehicle in the formation of commu-
nities based on the sense of a shared identity with ‘imagined others’.
As regards the first marker of a community: ‘consciousness of kind’ findings in
the research suggest that ‘Members feel an important connection to the brand, but
more importantly, they feel a stronger connection toward one another. Members
feel that they ‘sort of know each other’ at some level, even if they have never met’
(Muñiz and O’Guinn 2001, p. 418).
188 Seven brand approaches
Geographically bound or dispersed
Conscious-
ness of kind;
Legitimacy:
e.g. new
Saab drivers
are met with
scepticism
Oppositional
brandloyalty:
e.g. a shared
opposition
to Volvo
Shared
rituals and
traditions;
Rituals:
e.g. Saab
greeting ritual
Storytelling:
e.g. the Saab
aircraft
connection
A sense of
moral re-
sponsibility;
Integrating/
retaining
members
Assistance in
the use of the
brand:
e.g. Saab
assistance on
the highway
Brand Community
Figure 9.5Brand community construct (with examples from the Saab community) as
conceptualized by Muñiz and O’Guinn, ‘Brand community’, Journal of Consumer
Research, 27 (2001), pp. 412–31