“…The first is those that adopt the company's perspective and apply one of the most-cited brand definitions from the American Marketing Academy to the tourism research area; under this type of definition, a destination brand is "A name, symbol, logo, word mark or other graphic that both identifies and differentiates the place" (Ritchie & Ritchie, 1998, p. 103); Definitions in the second category adopt the consumer's perspective and use the term "destination image" to analyze destination brands from the receiver's perspective (e.g., Cai, 2002;Hankinson, 2004;Prebensen, 2007). The second perspective distinguishes the authors who consider the destination brand as an addition to the destination product, in which identification and differentiation are the main purposes of the destination brand (Sartori, Mottironi, & Corigliano, 2012), from the researchers who emphasize the experiences (Buhalis, 2000) and acknowledge the importance of the emotional component of the destination brand and the emotional connection between the visitor and the destination beyond the functional values of the brand (Quintal, Phau, & Polczynski, 2014). Previous studies have recognized the complexity of destination branding compared with product branding and corporate branding (Quintal et al, 2014) because of the involvement of many stakeholders (Morgan, Pritchard, & Piggott, 2002); a large number of products, services, and resources; and even different economic sectors (Buhalis, 2000;Murphy, Pritchard, & Smith, 2000).…”