A model specifying the role of parent brand attribute beliefs and affect in
consumer's initial evaluation of a brand extension was proposed and tested
using hypothetical extensions of different brands. This study suggests a m
ore prominent role for parent brand attribute associations than for parent
brand affect in extension attitude formation that had been presumed in the
literature. Further, the study documents the importance of an extension's f
it with the parent's image while at the same time suggesting that similarit
y of the product categories of the extension and the parent is of no conseq
uence in extension evaluation. Managers are advised to link extensions to p
arent brand attribute associations and image in consumers' minds for greate
r success. (C) 2001 Elsevier Science Inc. All rights reserved.