Additional
Additional
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Three Elements for Consumer Analysis
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Consumer Environment
Everything external to consumers that
influences what they think, feel, and do
Includes:
◦ Social stimuli
◦ Physical stimuli
Important to marketing strategy because it is
the medium in which stimuli are placed to
influence consumers
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The consumer decision process helps you understand the
steps people go through when they are deciding whether
and what to buy. Many different factors can influence the
outcomes of purchasing decisions.
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Demographics are an important set of factors that marketers should not
overlook when trying to understand and respond to consumers. Demographics
include variables such as age, gender, income level, educational attainment,
and marital status. Each of these can have a strong influence on consumer
behavior.
For example, as Baby Boomers head into their retirement years, marketers
target them with messages about prescription drugs and other health care
products, insurance, home and financial security—all issues of growing
concern for people as they age.
Generational differences can also be factors in they ways people use media
and where they go for information to inform their consumer choices. A 2013
study found that Millennial moms (birth years 1981–1997) were online
“followers” of 22.5 brands, on average, while Generation X moms (birth years
1965–1980) followed just 13.7 brands online. Understanding differences like
these can be essential to developing the right marketing mix whenever age is
an identifying factor in market segmentation.
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Gender is also a defining characteristic for many consumers, as is the
marketing that targets them. You have only to watch TV ads during an NFL
game and the TV ads during the women-oriented talk show The View to see
how the different needs and wants of men and women are translated into
marketing messages and imagery.
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Life Stage
Linked to demographics is the concept of life stage: consumer behaviour is tied
to the significant life events and circumstances people are experiencing at any
given moment. Moving out of your parents’ home, going to college, getting
married, buying a house, starting a family, sending children to college, retiring:
all of these are life events that shape consumer attitudes, behaviours, and
decisions.
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Personality and Self Concept
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What Is Personality
Consumer Culture
Popular culture - The culture of the
masses in a nation, with norms, rituals,
and values that have a mass appeal.
Enculturation - The process of
learning one’s own culture
Acculturation - The process of
learning a new culture.
What is a Culture then?
- A shared system of
meanings,
beliefs,
values
behaviours
through which experience is
interpreted and carried out
Culture Is ..
Relative
Learned
Collective
Changesover time
Complex responsive process
Subcultures
Rewards:
Price:
Levels of
Loss of freedoms
acceptance
Time commitment Advancement within
Financial the group
commitment etc., Prestige gained
More on conformity
Positive outcomes Negative outcomes
◦ Personal knowledge ◦ Materialism
◦ Greater certainty ◦ Conspicuous
◦ Better choices consumption
◦ Charitable, ◦ Theft
philanthropic, ◦ Drugs
humanitarian ◦ Smoking
behaviors ◦ Alcohol
◦ Values consistent ◦ Gangs
with higher social ◦ The media and
good violence
Other Facets of Social Group
Influence
ASPIRATIONAL
Reference
Groups
ASSOCIATIVE
DISSOCIATIVE
Examples??
Linking Reference Group with
Self Concept Theory
When a brand is perceived to be consistent with an
in group, self-brand connections go up
The negative effect of out group brand association
on self-brand connection is higher for consumers
with independent selves than for those with
interdependent selves.
Consumers are likely to develop a stronger brand-
self connection, when there is a strong association
between a reference group and the brand and there
is a strong connection between the reference group
and consumers’ self-concept
Source: Escalas, J., and Bettman, J. R., (2005), Self-construal, reference groups
and brand meaning, Journal of Consumer Research, Vol. 32 (3), pp. 378-389.
Social grouping at macro level
The tribe metaphor is used to depict the dynamics
of our societies - the way people behave collectively
and produce social forces
Tribe - an ephemeral and unstable group of
consumers who are joined together by sharing
emotions, feelings and passions on a relatively
small scale.
Tribes concentrate on the bonding or linking
element that keeps individuals in the group
» Brand Communities
Interaction among people interested in same brand
Reasons: a forum of exchange, an opportunity to
develop relations etc.,
Good for Marketers – use as market research tool
Problems for Marketers - Brand fanatics can hijack a
brand’s ideology, use and persona; ownership issues
Family Influences on Consumer
Behaviour
Family Members can act as a reference group
Nuclear family comprises two spouses and a
small number of children
Extended family Two spouses, children
including grown up children, grandparents all
living together as one family unit
- A different environment for interaction and
interpersonal influence
- Multiple sources of influences based on
observation and interaction
- Influence of family members on consumption
behaviour is higher; family members are of
greater importance than outsiders
Family/Household Context is Important for the
Socialization Process
Young Person
Other Family
Friends
Members