Consumer Behaviour... Mar' Assign
Consumer Behaviour... Mar' Assign
esearch on consumer behavior examines how individuals, groups, and organizations choose,
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purchase, use, and discard goods, services, ideas, or experiences to meet their needs and
desires. Marketers need to fully grasp consumer behavior theory and reality to deliver customer
value.
he offering and market context are shaped by consumer culture, social factors, and personal
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perspectives, along with consumer motivation, perception, emotions, and memory.
CONSUMER CHARACTERISTICS
CULTURAL FACTORS
culture is a way of life among a group of people—the behaviors, beliefs, values, and symbols
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that they accept, generally without thinking about them, and that are passed along by
communication and imitation from one generation to the next. Culture, subculture, and social
class are particularly important influences on consumer buying behavior. Culture is a
fundamental determinant of a person’s wants and behavior.
eference groupsare the groups that directly or indirectly influence a person's beliefs,
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decisions, and behavior. Family members, especially parents and siblings, have a major
influence on an individual's beliefs, values, and behavior.
An opinion leader, or an influencer, is a person whooffers informal advice or information about a
pecific product or product category, such as which of several brands is best or how a particular
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product may be used.
Family.The family, as the most influential primaryreference group,16 is the most important
onsumer buying organization in society. There are two families in the buyer’s life. The family of
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orientation consists of parents and siblings.
PERSONAL FACTORS
ersonal characteristics that influence buyers’ decisions include age, stage in the life cycle,
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occupation, economic circumstances, personality, self-concept, lifestyle, and values. Marketers
need to closely follow these factors as they directly impact consumer behavior.
ur preferences for food, clothes, furniture, and activities areoften influenced by our age, family
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life cycle, and psychological life-cycle stages. Adults adapt their behavior during different life
stages and transitions.
roduct and brand choices are influenced byeconomic factorssuch as income, savings,
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assets, debts, borrowing power, and attitudes towards spending and saving.
ersonality and Self-Concept.- Consumers usually choose brands with a personality that
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matches their actual self-concept, ideal self-concept, or how they think others perceive them.
CONSUMER PSYCHOLOGY
hen marketing and environmental stimuli enter the consumer’s consciousness, a set of
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psychological processes combine with certain consumer characteristics to result in decision
processes and purchase decisions.
Cunsumer Needs: people prioritize satisfying their most important needs first and then move on
to the next ones.
- Needs become wants when directed to specific objects that might satisfy the need.
-Marketers do not create needs: Needs pre-exist marketers. Marketers might promote the idea
that a Samsung satisfies a person’s need for social status.
efinition of Consumer Motivation- We all have needs that become motivations when they
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drive us to act. Motivation involves selecting a goal and pursuing it with vigor.
ERCEPTION- is the process by which we select, organize, and interpret information inputs to
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create a meaningful picture of the world.
eople emerge with different perceptions of the same object because of three perceptual
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processes:
elective attention,
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selective distortion, and
selective retention.
elective Attention.-It’s estimated that the average person may be exposed to thousands of ads or
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brand communications every day. Because we cannot possibly attend to all these, we screen out most
stimuli, a process called selective attention.
x- People are more likely to notice stimuli that relate to a current need. A person who is motivated to buy
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a smartphone will notice smartphone ads and be less likely to notice non-phone-related ads.
Selective distortion -is the tendency to interpret information to fit our preconceptions. Consumers will
often distort information to make it consistent with prior brand and product beliefs and expectations.
Selective retention-Even after distorting the message, people can only recall about five percent of the
riginal verbal message. Recall increases with more visual stimulus and is highest with audio-visual
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messages.
MOTIONS -Emotions are spontaneous mental states reflecting positive or negative reactions
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to stimuli.
n emotion-filled brand story can encourage people to share information about brands through
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word of mouth or online. Companies are making their communications more human to connect
with consumers through their brand stories.
ust as products and brands can evoke emotions, different emotional states can influence
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people’s judgments and decisions. For example, fear can impact the effectiveness of marketing
strategies involving social proof and scarcity.
MEMORY-
emantic memory is responsible for storing information about the world, such as facts,
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meanings, and concepts.
rocedural memory is responsible for knowing how to perform certain procedures such as
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walking, talking, and riding a bike.
he firm needs to understand the buyer and adapt its marketing strategy accordingly.
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However, the buyer's behavior can be unpredictable, and their decision-making process
is often seen as a black box. Marketers provide stimuli, but the buyer's response is
uncertain. These stimuli include product, brand name, color, style, packaging, services,
merchandising, display, advertising, distribution, and publicity.
Search Dynamics.- The consumer gathers information about competing brands and
their features. Initially, they become aware of a subset of available brands. From this
subset, only some brands meet their initial buying criteria, forming the consideration set.
As the consumer gathers more information, only a few options, the choice set, remain
as strong contenders, and the final choice is made from these.
arketers need to identify the hierarchy of attributes that guide consumer decision
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making in order to understand different competitive forces and how various decision
sets are formed. The process of identifying this attribute hierarchy is calledmarket
partitioning.
earch behavior can vary online based on how product information is presented, such
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as displaying product alternatives in order of predicted attractiveness. This can
influence consumers' search behavior.
amsung's collaborative filtering algorithm analyzes customer purchases and online
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behavior to provide personalized product recommendations. These recommendations
appear in various places on Amazon and are responsible for over a third of consumer
purchases on the platform.
EVALUATION OF ALTERNATIVES
he way consumers decipher the pros and cons of available options is affected
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by the beliefs and attitudes they hold, whether these are valid or erroneous.
These perceptions and the differing ways in which consumers process
information weigh heavily in the purchase decision.
eliefs and Attitudes-Attitudes frame our liking or disliking of things and guide our behavior. They are
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hard to change, so it's best for a company to align its product with existing attitudes. However, if attitudes
become too negative, the company may need to take more active steps.
Information Processing- The consumer forms judgments largely on a conscious and rational basis.
xpectancy-Value Model -The consumer forms attitudes towardsbrands by evaluating their attributes
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and combining positive and negative brand beliefs based on importance.
PURCHASE DECISION-In the evaluation stage, the consumer forms preferences among the brands
in the choice set and may also form an intention to buy the most preferred brand. In executing a purchase
intention, the consumer may make as many as five purchase decisions: brand (Brand A), distribution
channel (Retailer X), quantity (one phone), timing (weekend), and payment method (credit card).
ecision Heuristics- Consumers often use mental shortcuts, called heuristics, when making decisions,
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especially when short on time or cognitive resources. Factors like brand knowledge, number of choices,
time pressure, and social context influence the use of choice heuristics. Consumers may use different
decision rules, such as non-compensatory ones.
he Level of Consumer Involvement- Richard Petty and John Cacioppo’s elaboration likelihood model,
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an influential model of attitude formation and change, describes how consumers make evaluations in both
low- and high-involvement circumstances.
he two means of persuasion are the central route, which involves thoughtful consideration of important
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product information, and the peripheral route, which involves less thought and is influenced by peripheral
cues like celebrity endorsements or emotional responses.
Intervening Factors- Even if consumers form an evaluation, two general factors can intervene
between the purchase intention and the purchase decision
fter making a purchase, consumers may experience dissonance due to noticing certain
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unsettling features or hearing positive things about other brands. Post-purchase satisfaction,
actions, product uses, and disposal should be monitored.
atisfaction depends on the closeness between consumer expectations and the product's
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perceived performance. It influences post-purchase actions, with satisfied consumers more
likely to repurchase and speak positively about the brand.
Financial Decisions -
hen making financial decisions, consumers use a specific form of framing called mental
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accounting.
Mental accounting is based on a set of core principles: