Consumers Rule - Dr. Aziz Madi
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Transcript Consumers Rule - Dr. Aziz Madi
Consumer Behavior:
How and Why People Buy
Chapter Objectives
• Define consumer behavior and explain why consumers
buy what they buy
• Describe the prepurchase, purchase, and postpurchase
activities that consumers engage in when making
decisions
• Explain how internal factors influence consumers’
decision-making processes
• Show how situational factors at the time and place of
purchase influence consumer behavior
• Explain how consumers’ relationships with other people
influence their decision-making processes
• Show how the Internet offers consumers opportunities to
participate in consumer-to-consumer marketing
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Decisions, Decisions
• Consumer behavior:
The process we use to
select, purchase, use,
and dispose of goods,
services, ideas, or
experiences to satisfy
needs/desires
• Internal, situational,
and social influences
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Steps in Consumer
Decision Process
• Extended problem-solving versus habitual
decision-making
• Involvement: relative importance of
perceived consequences of the purchase
• Perceived risk: choice of product has
potentially negative consequences
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Decision-Making Process
Problem Recognition
Brandon is fed up with
driving old clunker
Information Search
Brandon talks to friends,
visits car showrooms, etc.
Evaluation of Alternatives
Brandon looks at 3 models
with good/bad features
Product Choice
Brandon chooses one car
based on feature/image
Postpurchase Evaluation
Brandon drives car and is
happy with choice
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Step 1: Problem Recognition
• Occurs when
consumer sees a
significant difference
between current state
and ideal state
• Marketers can develop
ads that stimulate
problem recognition
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Activity
• Marketing activities can create problem
recognition, by showing consumers
benefits of a new product or pointing out
problems with products they already own
• For the following, suggest a creative way
to stimulate problem recognition through
marketing :
Videogames
A hamburger
An airline
Furniture
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Step 2: Information Search
• Consumers need adequate information to make
a reasonable decision
• Search memory and the environment for
information
• Internet: search engines, portals, or “shopping
robots”
• Behavioral targeting: Marketers deliver ads for
products consumers look for, by watching what
they do
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Step 3: Evaluation of Alternatives
• Consumers are interested in a small number of
products, then narrow choices and compare
pros/cons
• Evaluative criteria: product characteristics
consumers use to compare competing
alternatives
• Marketers point out their brand’s superiority on
most important evaluative criteria.
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Discussion
• Do you agree that having too many
choices is a bigger problem than not
having enough choices?
• Is it possible to have too much of a good
thing?
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Step 4: Product Choice
• Deciding on one product and acting on
choice
• Heuristic: a mental rule of thumb used for a
speedy decision, such as:
Price equals quality
Brand loyalty
Country of origin
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Step 5: Postpurchase Evaluation
• Consumer satisfaction/dissatisfaction after
purchase of product
• Expectations of product quality are
met/exceeded or not
• Ads/communications must create accurate
expectations of product
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Figure 5.4: Influences on Consumer
Decision Making
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Internal Influences
on Consumer Behavior
• Factors that cause us
each to interpret
information about the
outside world differently:
Perception
Motivation
Learning
Attitudes
Personality
Age group
The family life cycle
Lifestyle
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Perception
• Process by which we select, organize, and
interpret information from outside world
• Necessary for perception to occur
• Exposure: capable of registering a
stimulus
• Attention: mental processing activity
• Interpretation: assigning meaning to a
stimulus
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Discussion
• Most researchers believe
subliminal techniques are
not much use in
marketing.
• Assuming some forms of
subliminal persuasion
may influence
consumers, do you think
their use is ethical? Why
or why not?
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Motivation
• Internal state that drives us to satisfy
needs by activating goal-oriented behavior
• Once we activate a need, a state of
tension exists that drives the consumer
toward some goal that will reduce this
tension by eliminating the need.
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Figure 5.5: Maslow’s Hierarchy of
Needs and Related Products
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Learning
• A change in behavior caused by
information or experience
• Behavioral learning
Classical conditioning (perceiving two stimuli at once)
Operant conditioning (rewards & punishment)
Stimulus generalization (family branding)
• Cognitive learning
Observational learning
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Attitudes
• Lasting evaluations of a person, object, or issue
• Three attitude components
Affect (feeling): emotional response
Cognition (knowing): beliefs or knowledge
Behavior (doing): intention to do something
• Marketers must decide which attitude
component will drive consumer preferences
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Personality
• The set of unique psychological
characteristics that consistently
influences the way a person
responds to situations in the
environment
• Personality traits: Innovativeness,
materialism, self-confidence,
sociability, need for cognition
• Self-concept
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Discussion/Activity
• Brands and stores are thought to have
their own particular “personalities”
Pick a brand or store of interest and come up with a
description of its “personality”
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Age Group and Family Life Cycle
• Goods/services appeal to specific age group
• Family Life Cycle: The stages through which
family members pass as they grow older
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Lifestyle
• Lifestyle: A pattern of living that determines how
people choose to spend their time, money, and
energy
• Psychographics: group consumers according to
psychological and behavioral similarities
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Situational Influences
on Consumer Decisions
• Physical environment dimensions such as
décor, smells, and lighting
• Arousal and pleasure determine consumers’
reaction to store environment
• Time as a situational factor
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Social Influences
on Consumer Decisions
• We are members of many groups that
influence our buying decisions:
Culture/subcultures
Social class
Group memberships
Opinion leaders
Sex roles
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Culture
• The values, beliefs, customs, and tastes
produced or practiced by a group of people
• Rituals such as weddings and funerals
• Cultural values: deeply held beliefs about
right and wrong ways to live
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Subcultures
• A group within a society whose members
share a distinctive set of beliefs,
characteristics, or common experiences
• Subcultures important to marketers are racial
and ethnic groups.
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Social Class
• The overall rank or social standing of
groups of people within a society,
according to factors such as family
background, education, occupation, and
income.
• Status symbols such as luxury products
provide a way for people to flaunt their
membership in higher social classes.
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Group Memberships
• Reference group: a set of people a consumer
wants to please or imitate and that thus has
an effect on an individual’s evaluations,
aspirations, or behavior
• Conformity means people change behavior
due to group pressure.
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Opinion Leaders
• People who influence others’ attitudes or
behaviors because others perceive them
as possessing expertise about the product
Have high interest in product category
Update knowledge by reading, talking with
salespeople, etc.
Impart both positive and negative product information
Are among the first to buy new products
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Gender Roles
• Society’s expectations regarding
appropriate attitudes, behaviors, and
appearance for men and women
• Consumers often associate “sex-typed”
products with one gender or the other.
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Consumer-to-Consumer
E-Commerce
• Online communications and purchases that
occur among individuals without directly
involving the manufacturer or retailer
• Groups of “netizens” around the world with
similar interests, united via the Internet
• Popular online C2C formats
Gaming
Chat rooms, rings, and lists
Boards
eBay
Blogs
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Discussion
• The Internet provides a unique opportunity
for consumers to communicate and make
purchases from each other.
What do you think the future of C2C e-commerce is?
How do you think it will affect traditional marketing
firms?
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Marketing Plan Exercise
• Marketers must understand consumers and
how they select products. Pick a good or
service you like and have purchased in the
past. As part of developing a marketing plan
for this product:
List what you need to know about consumers of your
product and how they make product decisions.
How might you gather that information?
How could you use that information in developing
successful marketing strategies?
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