Chapter 3 - Marketing
Chapter 3 - Marketing
• Psychological • Culture
• Personal • Social Factors
Internal factor
Internal Factors-Psychological
Internal Factors-Personal
Internal
Psychological Factors Personal
1 Age
1. Motivation
2. Life Style
2. Perception
3. Education
Consum
er
3. Learning 4. Occupation
5. Economic
4. Beliefs &
Attitudes
7. Life style
Internal Factors-Psychological
• Cultural factor
• Social factor
Cultural factor
•Culture: is a major influence on our wants and general
behavior. Culture is the set of basic values, perceptions,
wants, and behaviors learned by a member of society from
family and other important institutions.
5. Post purchase
Evaluation
1. Problem Recognition: occurs when buyers perceive
a significant difference between their actual state
and their desired state. Thousands different stimuli
trigger the awareness of a need or a problem.
Marketers are very interested in the factors that
trigger a conscious recognition of a need.
2. Information Search
Looking for the thing that will satisfy the need.
• Internal Search: the consumer scans his or her
memory for alternatives that would satisfy the
need)
• External Search: the consumer actively engages in
a search for information that would assist in the
decision from outside self
In an active search, consumers are very likely to read
ads (commercial sources) and articles (public sources),
talk to friends and relatives (personal sources), and
visit a store (experiential sources).
Information search is affected by the level of credibility and
effort needed to acquire the information.
External
Initiators
Users
Decision- Influence
Making rs
Roles
Unit of a
Buying Include
Organizati Buyers
on is
Called Its Deciders/
Buying Gatekeepers Approvers
Center.
• Initiators: People who request that something be
purchased, (can be users or others).
• Users: Those who will use the product or service;
often, users (production, stores etc.) write purchase
requisition, proposal and help define product
requirements.
• Influencers: People who influence the buying decision,
including technical personnel. They often help define
specifications and also provide information for
evaluating alternatives.
• Deciders: Those who decide on product requirements
or on suppliers.
• Approvers: People who authorize the proposed actions
of deciders or buyers.
• Buyers: People who have formal authority to select the
supplier and arrange the purchase terms, including
high-level managers. Buyers may help shape product
specifications, but their major role is selecting vendors
and negotiating.
• Gatekeepers: People who have the power to prevent
sellers or information from reaching members of the
buying center; examples are purchasing agents,
receptionists, and telephone operators.