Consumer Behaviour1
Consumer Behaviour1
Need to study? ‘You cannot take the consumer for granted any more.’
Peter Drucker 1954 – there is one valid purpose of doing business – ‘to
create a customer.’
Perspectives
1. Consumer influence – Logical Positivism
a) Understand and predict Consumer Behaviour
b) Cause and effect – relationships that govern persuasion/education
2. Post Modern – to understand consumption behaviour without any intent
of influencing it.
Cultural Relevance
Basic consumer needs and decision processes are universal.
To understand prospective customers and meet their needs with culturally
relevant alternatives.
Eg. ‘thumbs up’ - bad sign for Poles and Russians
‘belching’ – sign of appreciation in the Middle east.
Why is this so important?
A new product must satisfy consumer needs, not the needs and expectations
of a management team. Therefore understanding and adapting to consumer
motivation and behaviour is not an option – it is an absolute necessity for
competitive survival.
Fortune Editor - ‘MEET THE NEW CONSUMER and smile when you do
because she is your boss. It may not be the person you thought you knew.
Instead of choosing from what you have to offer, she tells you what she
wants. You figure out how to give it to her.’
Motivation Research
Ernest Dichter was the father of motivation Research. It seeks to learn what
motivates people in making choices. The techniques are such as to delve into
the conscious, subconscious and the unconscious.
Marketing strategies
1. Concentrated marketing – single segment marketing
2. Differentiated marketing – Multisegmented marketing
3. Undifferentiated marketing – caters to all segments
Use of segmentation
Positioning
Promotion
Distribution
Pricing
Direct marketing
Unless managements act, the more successful a firm has been in the past, the
more likely it is to fail in the future. Why?
Empty nesters – Children grown up and living outside (45 to 55 and 55 – 64)
‘Young again’ – Chronological age high; but feel and think young
Finding countries with the largest populations is not the only challenge
facing companies wanting to expand their profits. From a market
perspective, the greatest challenge for the ‘rich’ countries that hope to have
growing markets for their products in the future is to assist the ‘poor’
countries in developing themselves to where they also are rich enough to be
economically strong markets.
Focus groups
In fact, one management consulting firm has concluded that accepting the
word of a customer as to what she wants is ‘the least reliable index the
manufacturer can have on what he ought to do to win customers.’
Eg.
Beer light vs regular Preferred light over regular 3:1. Reality was that
regular sold 9:1 over light and still demand was not met.
Consumption Options
Whether to consume or not
When to consume
How to consume
Divestment Options
Outright disposal
Recycling
Remarketing (resale of used items)
Individual Differences
1) Consumer Resources – time, money, information reception and
processing capabilities
2) Knowledge
3) Attitudes
4) Motivation
5) Personality,values,lifestyle
Environmental Influences
1) Culture
2) Social class
3) Personal influence
4) Family
5) Situation
Psychological Processes
1) Information processing – selective processing(consumers see and hear
what they want to see and hear)
2) Learning
3) Attitude and behaviour change
Complexity
High Low
Degree of Complexity
Variety Seeking
Activation of variety seeking as a motive.
This happens when there are many
- similar alternatives
- frequent brand shifts
- high purchase frequency
Need Recognition
Need Activation – Such factors operate by altering the persons actual/desired
states
- Time
- Changed circumstances
- Product acquisition
- Product consumption
- Individual differences
- Marketing influences
Search
Internal – from memory, knowledge, habit, purchase, degree of satisfaction
External – when internal search is inadequate
Dimensions of Search
Degree of Search
- How many brands?
- How many stores?
- How many attributes?
- No. of information sources?
- How much time?
Direction of Search
- Which brands? Advertising
- Which stores? In – store information
- Which attributes? Sales people
- Which information sources? General purpose
Sequence of Search
- In what order of brands considered? Brand Search Sequence
- In what order of stores visited?
- In what order of product attributes considered? Attribute Search sequence
- In what order of information sources processed?
Determinants of Search
- Situational
- Product
- Retail
- Consumer - Knowledge, Involvement, Beliefs and Attitudes,
Demographic Statistics
The use of cut – off on attribute values. A brand that fails to meet a cut – off
may be rejected regardless of how well it performs on other dimensions.
Consumers make trade – offs between quality of their choice and the amount
of time and effort necessary to reach a decision.
Purchase
Not all purchase intentions are fulfilled.
Reasons could be
- Changed motivations
- Changed circumstances
- New Information
- Desired alternatives are no longer available
Purchase Intentions
Fully planned purchase – extended problem solving and high involvement
Partially planned purchase – Brand selected at time of purchase
Unplanned purchase – 50% of purchases are like this
Relationship Marketing
- Consumer value addition
- Personal selling (Dyadic interaction)
- Sales promotion
- Data based marketing
Consumption research
- Profit motivated Consumption research
- Post – Modern Consumption research
Divestment
Environmental Concerns
- Outright disposal
- Recycling
- Remarketing
Individual Differences
Consumer resources
- Economic Resources – Income, GDP, Consumer confidence, Whose
Income, Where is the income?,
Temporal resources
Knowledge
Price knowledge
Marketers would be more motivated to hold prices down and respond to
price cuts when they believe consumers are knowledgeable about the prices
charged in the market. Low levels of price knowledge enable marketers to be
less concerned about significant price differences relative to competition.
Organisation of Knowledge
Associative network – memory consists of a series of nodes and links
A link between two nodes forms a belief or proposition. These beliefs or
propositions can be combined to create a higher order knowledge structure
called a schema.
Attitude
Properties of Attitudes
Finally not all attitudes are held with the same degree of confidence , which
represents a person’s belief that his/her attitude is correct.
Fishbein’s Model
n
A = ∑ biei
i=1
Self – Monitoring
- Concern for social appropriateness of behaviour
- Attention to social comparision as cues for for appropriate self expression
- Ability to modify self presentation and expression across situations
Need for Cognition – although everyone engages in thinking there are real
differences in the extent to which individuals exhibit a desire to know,
understand, systematize and prioritise.
The most important buying motive may be one that for varying reasons , the
consumer does not want to knowledge consciously. When this happens , to
let him off the hook , it is better to provide a more socially acceptable
motive , making it seem objective or rational.
Eg. An adult having a fetish for chocolates can rationalise that the doctor has
asked him to balance out the sugar levels in his system.
Personality, Values, Lifestyle
Phycological Processes
This refers to the physical and psychological processes that govern buying
behaviour of individuals and groups.
Information Processing
- Exposure – achievement of proximity to a stimulus to activate the senses
- Attention – allocation of processing capacity to stimulus
- Comprehension – interpretation of stimulus
- Acceptance – persuasive impact of stimulus
- Retention – transfer of stimulus interpretation to memory
Adaptation Level
Span of attention – the time your mind is focussed to a thing before
wandering
Acceptance
Cognitive Response – Acceptance is enhanced as SAs increases but is
reduced by greater Cas.
Affective Response – Feelings +ve more acceptance , -ve less acceptance
Retention
This is the last stage in Information Processing.
Left Brain – logical, abstract, conceptual
Right Brain – creative, intuitive, imaginal
Memory
- Sensory – iconic (visual), echoic ( auditory )
- ST memory
- LT memory
Learning
Cognitive learning – Mental processes which include learning of information
to problem solving are the focus under cognitive learning.
Motivation
- Direct learning
- Incidental learning
Forgetting
- Decay – memory trace will fade with passage of time
- Interference – caused by learning new information over time
Classical conditioning
Conditioned response – Pavlovian response
Extinction – occurs when the CS no longer evokes the CR. It will disappear
when the relationship between CS and US is broken.
Applications in marketing
- Sampling
- Trials
- Demonstrations
- Test drives
Research has proved that there is 60% more penetration for products where
free sampling is done.
No person is an island.
Influenced by culture
- Sense of self and space
- Communication and language
- Dress and appearance
- Food and feeding habits
- Time and time consciousness
- Relationships
- Values and norms
- Beliefs and attitudes
- Mental processes and learning
- Work habits and practices
Socialisation
The process by which people develop their values, motivations and habitual
activity
Consumer socialisation – is the acquisition of consumption related
cognitions, attitudes and behaviour.
Personal Influence
- Reference group
- Comparative
Primary vs Secondary
- Family vs society
- Industry vs rest
- Company vs industry
- National vs foreign
Aspirational vs Dissociative
Aspirational – exhibit a desire to adopt the norms, values, behaviour of
others with whom the individual aspires to associate
Dissociative – when individual is motivated to avoid association
Formal vs.Informal
People will not share their experience with products or services unless it
produces some gratification.
What are these drives ?
- Involvement – experience product – tell others
- Self – enhancement – enhance status by giving information precious to
others
- Concern for others – to help others genuinely in making a good purchase
- Message intrigue – to talk about certain ads or appeals
- Dissonance reduction – to reduce cognitive dissonance . Reassure
consumers on their purchase.
Creating Influentials
Family
- Nuclear
- Extended (joint)
- Initiator/Gatekeeper
- Influencer
- Decider
- Buyer
- User
Family Marketing Model
Late marriages
Divorce rates – Divorce creates markets. Both parties learn new pattern of
consumer behaviour.
Marketing to singles
Situation Influences
Perfumed counters sell more – research finding
Communication Situations
Those settings in which the consumer is exposed to either personal and non
– personal communications.
Purchase Situations
Dimensions of information
- Availability
- Load – extent and amount of detail
- Format – list or separate
- Form – numeric or semantic
Time
- May lead consumers to rely on existing knowledge and experience ; than
collecting additional information
- Pressure may lead to purchasing lesser no. of items than planned
- Depends on when you had your last meal, especially for food items.
Usage Situations
Macromarketing - Issues
1. Valuable resources are wasted that might have been chanelled toward
more productive uses.
2. Products that might have helped people do things more productively or
attain higher levels in their quality of life, fail to be used.
Micromarketing
Diffusion Variables
Types of Innovations
- Continuous
- Dynamically continuous
- Discontinuous
Ethical perspectives
- Utilitarianism
- Justice and fairness
- Theory of personal rights
Utilitarianism
Impartiality and fairness are the criteria for ethical decision making. Justice
is attained when the benefits and burdens of society are distributed fairly to
stakeholders.
Rights are powerful devices whose main purpose is that of enabling the
individual to choose freely whether to pursue certain interests or activities
and of protecting those choices.
Consumer Rights
- Right to safety
- Right to be informed
- Right to choose
- Right to be heard
- Right to enjoy a clean and healthful environment
- Right of the poor and other minorities to have their interests protected
Deception
A represention omission or practice that is likely to mislead the consumer
acting reasonably in the circumstances, to the consumer’s detriment.