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Diversity, equity, inclusion, and brand outcomes: a case of higher education

  • Thuy D. Nguyen
  • , Majed Yaghi
  • , Gopala Ganesh
  • , Charles Blankson
  • , Audhesh K. Paswan
  • , Robert Pavur
  • University of North Texas

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

6 Scopus citations

Abstract

Purpose: Diversity, equity and inclusion ideology is the latest appeal of individual compassion, institutional legitimacy and enlightened society. Specific to higher education, diversity, equity and inclusion is an honorable ideology, value and mission. This paper aims to (1) empirically recognize the differences in the level of importance between the university’s and faculty’s diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives, (2) identify the diversity, equity and inclusion outcomes, such as university brand image and student intention to engage postgraduation, (3) uncover the moderating role of university brand preference attainment and (4) validate the mediating role of student identification in diversity, equity and inclusion literature. Design/methodology/approach: A survey of 1,027 usable responses was employed to perform two moderations, four mediations and two confidence interval analyses. Findings: The university’s diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives are significantly more rewarding than the faculty’s diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives for the university brand image and students’ intention to engage postgraduation. Findings uncover the mediating role of student identification and the moderating role of brand preference attainment. Practical implications: Focusing on diversity, equity and inclusion at the institutional level is more impactful than at the faculty level. In industries where frontline employees have significant autonomy, such as higher education, the positive brand performance outcomes are related to the faculty’s diversity, equity and inclusion awareness, not the faculty’s diversity, equity and inclusion advocacy. Diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives should align with the student’s shared values. Originality/value: The study relies on institutional theory to underscore the asymmetric importance of the university’s and faculty’s diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives in achieving perceived brand image and engagement.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)949-967
Number of pages19
JournalJournal of Product and Brand Management
Volume33
Issue number8
DOIs
StatePublished - 26 Nov 2024
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Brand preference attainment
  • Diversity
  • Equity
  • Inclusion
  • Student identification
  • Student intention to engage postgraduation

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