Plagiarism, Trade-Dress and the Value of Design

The distinctive identity of a brand has enormous commercial importance. When a competitor copies that identity with a cheaper inferior product, it can jeopardize the heavy investment in creating and designing products. The identification of the original versus a plagiarized knockoff is a critical i...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Tore Kristensen, Gorm Gabrielsen, Ricky Wilke, Judy Zaichowsky
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Vilnius University Press 2002-12-01
Series:Ekonomika
Online Access:https://www.journals.vu.lt/ekonomika/article/view/17016
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spelling doaj-71c19e0766a84084b53328fe62fd1abd2020-11-25T03:16:36ZengVilnius University PressEkonomika1392-12582424-61662002-12-0159Plagiarism, Trade-Dress and the Value of DesignTore Kristensen0Gorm Gabrielsen1Ricky Wilke2Judy Zaichowsky3Copenhagen Business SchoolCopenhagen Business SchoolCopenhagen Business SchoolCopenhagen Business School The distinctive identity of a brand has enormous commercial importance. When a competitor copies that identity with a cheaper inferior product, it can jeopardize the heavy investment in creating and designing products. The identification of the original versus a plagiarized knockoff is a critical issue in the marketplace. However; even when the identity is clear; a remaining issue is whether consumers are willing to pay a premium price for the original product. We use conjoint analysis to investigate the identification and valuation of an original vs. a copy. The willingness to pay for the original depends on the competence or knowledge of the consumer. We suggest ways of identifying “trade dress” by distinguishing among the utilitarian, systemic or symbolic aspects of a product. https://www.journals.vu.lt/ekonomika/article/view/17016
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tore Kristensen
Gorm Gabrielsen
Ricky Wilke
Judy Zaichowsky
spellingShingle Tore Kristensen
Gorm Gabrielsen
Ricky Wilke
Judy Zaichowsky
Plagiarism, Trade-Dress and the Value of Design
Ekonomika
author_facet Tore Kristensen
Gorm Gabrielsen
Ricky Wilke
Judy Zaichowsky
author_sort Tore Kristensen
title Plagiarism, Trade-Dress and the Value of Design
title_short Plagiarism, Trade-Dress and the Value of Design
title_full Plagiarism, Trade-Dress and the Value of Design
title_fullStr Plagiarism, Trade-Dress and the Value of Design
title_full_unstemmed Plagiarism, Trade-Dress and the Value of Design
title_sort plagiarism, trade-dress and the value of design
publisher Vilnius University Press
series Ekonomika
issn 1392-1258
2424-6166
publishDate 2002-12-01
description The distinctive identity of a brand has enormous commercial importance. When a competitor copies that identity with a cheaper inferior product, it can jeopardize the heavy investment in creating and designing products. The identification of the original versus a plagiarized knockoff is a critical issue in the marketplace. However; even when the identity is clear; a remaining issue is whether consumers are willing to pay a premium price for the original product. We use conjoint analysis to investigate the identification and valuation of an original vs. a copy. The willingness to pay for the original depends on the competence or knowledge of the consumer. We suggest ways of identifying “trade dress” by distinguishing among the utilitarian, systemic or symbolic aspects of a product.
url https://www.journals.vu.lt/ekonomika/article/view/17016
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AT gormgabrielsen plagiarismtradedressandthevalueofdesign
AT rickywilke plagiarismtradedressandthevalueofdesign
AT judyzaichowsky plagiarismtradedressandthevalueofdesign
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