Week 5 - Motivation and Values
Week 5 - Motivation and Values
Types of Needs
Hedonic needs. -Emotional & Sensory Utilitarian Needs – Rational & Practical
Needs?
Hedonic needs. -Emotional & Sensory Utilitarian Needs – Rational & Practical
Needs?
Motivational Conflicts
• Consumers experience different kinds of motivational
conflicts that can impact their purchase decisions.
• A goal has valence (value): consumer will seek:
• Approach positive goal: We direct our behaviour
toward goals we value positively; we are motivated to
approach the goal and to seek out products that will
help us to reach it.
• Avoid negative goal: we’re also motivated to avoid a
negative outcome – socially disapproved
Consumer #1: I want the one I read about in the latest issue
of Car and Driver magazine: It has a six-cylinder turbo
engine, a double-clutch transmission, a 90 stroke bore, and
10:1 compression ratio.
Capable A sense of
accomplishment
Self-controlled Wisdom
List of Values (LOV)
• Identifies nine consumer segments based on values they endorse;
and
• Relates each value to differences in consumption behaviors
Means-End Chain Model
• This approach assumes that people link very specific product
attributes to terminal values.
• We choose among alternative means to attain some end state we
value. Thus we value products to the extent that they provide the
means to some end we desire
• Laddering technique uncovers consumers’ associations between
specific attributes and general consequences