7, Notes
7, Notes
LECTURE 7
DECISION MAKING PROCESS
HYPERCHOICE
Information Overload (Mick et al, 2004), Choice Overload (Scheibehenne et al, 2010),
Overchoice Effect (Gourville and Soman, 2005), Too-Much-Choice Effect (Scheibehenne
et al, 2009)
• Too much choice can be demotivating (paralysing effect) and can decrease the likelihood of
purchase (Lyengar & Lepper, 2000).
↑ Analysis Paralysis
↑ Expectations of freedom ↑ Opportunity cost
↑ Regret
↓ Satisfaction
CONSUMER GROUPS
The three buckets are NOT mutually exclusive and impacted by self- regulation
Promotion Motivation –focuses on hopes and aspirations (approach)
Prevention Motivation – focuses on responsibilities & duties (avoidance)
Feedback Loops help self-regulate actions
Marketers are trying to understand feedback loops that help regulate our actions
COGNITIVE
DECISION-MAKING PROCESS, a maximising solution
Personal factors
Involvement
Perceived risk
Value of search effort
Time availability
Attitudes toward shopping
Situational influencers
Previous product experience
Price and quality are intrinsically linked
Heuristics,
Biases In DMP
Products Categories
Consumers must make sense of information and place it in the context of a familiar
category
Basic level category — typically most useful; items have a lot in common (points of parity)
but broad range of alternatives can be considered
Location within Store —Consumers often expect to find certain products within
certain places within a store environment.
The older we get, we get a reduced ability to deal with online information search
activities
Over 50s conduct less online searching and online reading compared to younger
adults (e.g. Cole & Balasubramanian, 1993; Lin & Lee, 2004).
Older adults exhibit a diminished working memory capacity and therefore have
difficulty in storing information.
Schlosser (2003) found that products bought online induce more extensive
information processing than the same products in printed adverts.
The web has a strong search attribute advantage - ease of gathering information
Cross-channel synergy - searching for information online can enhance the purchase
experience in store
The web often lacks channel lock-in - ability to retain customers across different
stages of the decision making process
MOMENTS OF TRUTH
However the model has changed since the rise of digital – Zero Moment of Truth is
a new addition to the classic three-step process
What was a message is now a conversation
No MoT is too big or too small
As mobile devices grow – zero, first and second MOTs are converging
- Brought
up by
google
LECTURE RECAP