Country brand is defined as by Papadopoulos and Lee and Schaninger as “the country in which the product is manufactured or assembled.” Martin et al. expanded this into “the country where the brand was originated and from which it takes its personality, regardless of where it is manufactured or the corporate headquarters of the brand’s parent firm is located.” We follow the later definition. A country brand belongs to the public domain. It entails collective involvement to attract consumers and appeal to their related stakeholders [3]. It concerns a country’s whole image, covering political, economic, social, environmental, historical, and cultural aspects [4]. A product’s country image may affect how consumers perceive products sourced in that particular country. A negative country image is likely to greatly limit the success of products and services in the global marketplace [5].