Ch04 Handout
Ch04 Handout
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An Overview of Consumer Behavior
Consumer Behavior
• Process and activities people engage in with relation to products and
services to satisfy their needs and desires.
• Searching for.
• Selecting.
• Purchasing.
• Using.
• Evaluating.
• Disposing of.
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Figure 4-1 Basic Model of Consumer Decision Making
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Problem
The Consumer Decision-Making Process 1 Recognition
Problem Recognition
• ( )
• Caused by difference between consumer’s ideal state and actual
state.
• Sources:
• Out of stock.
• Dissatisfaction.
• ( )
• Related products or purchases.
• ( )
• New products.
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The Consumer Decision-Making Process 2 Examining Consumer
Motivations
• Hierarchy of needs
• Lower-level physiological and safety needs must be satisfied before
higher-order needs become meaningful.
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Figure 4-2 Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs Examining Consumer
Motivations
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Figure 4-2 Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs Examining Consumer
Motivations
Friends..
Clothes, house
Water, foods
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Figure 4-2 Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs Examining Consumer
Motivations
① Physiological: ( )
for things required to sustain life such as food, water,
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Figure 4-2 Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs Examining Consumer
Motivations
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Information
The Consumer Decision-Making Process 6 search
Information Search
• Internal search: Information retrieval that involves recalling:
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Information
Exhibit 4-7 search
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Information
The Consumer Decision-Making Process 7 search
• Time available.
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The Consumer Decision-Making Process 8 Perception
Perception
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Consumer’s information process Perception
stimulus(sensory)
exposure
Perceptual
process
attention
Interpretation/
comprehension
Memory/knowledge
Attitude
Purchase behavior
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The Consumer Decision-Making Process 9 Perception
Perception continued
• Sensation:
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The Consumer Decision-Making Process 10 Perception
Perception continued
• Interpreting the information:
• Organizing and categorizing information influenced by:
• Internal psychological factors.
• Nature of the stimulus.
• Selective perception:
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The Consumer Decision-Making Process 11 Perception
Perception continued
▪ Selective Perception continued
• Selective exposure
– Consumers choose whether or not to make
themselves available to information.
• Selective attention
–(
)
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The Consumer Decision-Making Process 12 Perception
Perception continued
▪ Selective Perception continued
• Selective comprehension
– Consumers interpret information on the basis of their own
attitudes, beliefs, motives, and experiences
– Consumers interpret info in a manner that supports their
own position.
• Selective retention
– Consumers do not remember all the information they see,
hear, or read even after attending to and comprehending it
– Mnemonics: Symbols, rhymes, associations, and images
that assist in the learning and memory process
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The Consumer Decision-Making Process 13 Perception
Perception continued
• Subliminal Perception
– Ability to perceive a stimulus that is below the level of
conscious awareness
– Controversial tactic with strong ethical implications
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Consumer’s information process Perception
stimulus(sensory)
exposure
Perceptual
process
attention
Interpretation/
comprehension
Memory/knowledge
Attitude
Purchase behavior
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The Perceptual Process Perception
Influences
• Sensory thresholds(critical point)
• Physical limit s on attention
• Voluntary attention selectivity
• Involuntary attention selectivity
• Personal/situational factor
Sensory Exposure
Sight
Attention Comprehension
Sound
Smell
Taste
Touch
Alternative Evaluation
• Comparing brands that have been identified as capable of:
• Solving the consumption problem.
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Alternative
Evaluation
What is the Evoked set?
Once a need has been recognized, consumers are
motivated to search for solutions to satisfy the need.
Several alternatives may come to mind.
They are the evoked set.
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Alternative
Evaluation
Consideration Set
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Alternative
The Consumer Decision-Making Process 15 Evaluation
• Objective or subjective.
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Alternative
The Consumer Decision-Making Process 16 Evaluation
• Subprocesses:
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The Consumer Decision-Making Process 17 Attitude formation
Attitudes
• Learned ( ) to respond to an object.
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Alternative
The Consumer Decision-Making Process 18 Evaluation
Attitudes continued
• Multiattribute attitude model:
• Attributes of product or brand provide basis on which consumers form
attitudes.
• Salient beliefs:
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Alternative
The Consumer Decision-Making Process 19 Evaluation
Attitudes continued
n
AB = Bi Ei
i =1
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Sum of weight=1
Ei Bi Attitude formation
Weight Café A Café B
Price 0.5 7 3
Taste 0.3 5 7
Convenience 0.2 2 7
Total 1 w/o weight 14 w/o weight 17
Attitudes continued
• Attitude change strategies:
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The Consumer Decision-Making Process 21 Integration Processes
• (i.e) When you meet someone on a blind date, you can see what kind
of personality this person sitting on the other side is by looking at the
attire or posture.
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CHOICE HEURISTICS Integration Processes
weight A B C “Price” is
the most
Price 0.5 6 4 4
important
Perceived 0.3 4 5 5 attribute
quality
Design 0.2 3 5 6
The Consumer Decision-Making Process 22 Purchase Decision
Purchase Decision
• Purchase intention:
• Predisposition to buy a certain brand by matching purchase motives with
attributes of brands considered.
• Brand loyalty:
• ( )
• (
• )
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Figure 4-5 Brands That Have the Most Brand Loyalty
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Postpurchase
The Consumer Decision-Making Process 23 Evaluation
Postpurchase Evaluation
• ( )
• ( )
• Cognitive dissonance: Psychological tension experienced after a
difficult purchase choice.
• Postpurchase communication is important.
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Postpurchase
Expectancy Disconfirmation Evaluation
expectation Satisfaction
Dissatisfaction
Actual Actual
performance performance
The Consumer Decision-Making Process 24
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Environmental Influences on Consumer Behavior 1
Culture
• Complexity of learned meanings, values, norms, and customs shared
by members of society.
Subcultures
• Smaller segments within a culture, whose beliefs, values, norms, and
patterns of behavior set them apart from the larger cultural
mainstream.
• Social class:
• Homogeneous divisions in a society into which people sharing similar
lifestyles, values, norms, interests, and behaviors can be grouped.
LO4-5
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Exhibit 4-18
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Environmental Influences on Consumer Behavior 2
Reference Groups
• Group whose presumed perspectives or values are being used by an
individual as basis for judgments, opinions, and actions.
• Types: Associative, aspirational, or dissociative.
• Can include families.
Situational Determinants
• Specific situation in which consumers plan to use the product or brand
directly affects their perceptions, preferences, and purchase
behaviors.
• Types: Usage, purchase, and communications situation.
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Figure 4-11 Roles in the Family Decision-Making Process
The initiator. The person responsible for initiating the purchase decision process—
for example, the mother who determines she needs a new car.
The information provider. The individual responsible for gathering information to
be used in making the decision—for example, the teenage car buff who knows
where to find product information in specific magazines or collects it from dealers.
The influencer. The person who exerts influence as to what criteria will be used in
the selection process. All members of the family may be involved. The mother may
have her criteria, whereas others may each have their own input.
The decision maker(s). The person (or persons) who actually makes (make) the
decision. In our example, it may be the mother alone or in combination with another
family member.
The purchasing agent. The individual who performs the physical act of making the
purchase. In the case of a car, a husband and wife may decide to choose it together
and sign the purchase agreement.
The consumer. The actual user of the product. In the case of a family car, all family
members are consumers. For a private car, only the mother might be the consumer.
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Alternative Approaches to Consumer Behavior
New Methodologies
• Qualitative methods.
• Linguistic or historical perspective of communications.
• Examining symbolic meanings of advertising and facets of
consumption.
New Insights
• Leads to better understanding of:
• Cultural significance of advertising messages.
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