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Attitudes: by Michael R. Solomon

The document discusses various theories and models of consumer attitudes, including the multi-attribute model which views attitudes as being determined by beliefs about an object's attributes and the importance placed on those attributes. It also covers functional theories of attitudes, the ABC model of affect, behavior and cognition, and theories of cognitive dissonance and balance in forming attitudes. Marketers can apply these attitude theories and models to better understand consumers and influence their evaluations of brands and products.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
361 views

Attitudes: by Michael R. Solomon

The document discusses various theories and models of consumer attitudes, including the multi-attribute model which views attitudes as being determined by beliefs about an object's attributes and the importance placed on those attributes. It also covers functional theories of attitudes, the ABC model of affect, behavior and cognition, and theories of cognitive dissonance and balance in forming attitudes. Marketers can apply these attitude theories and models to better understand consumers and influence their evaluations of brands and products.

Uploaded by

suguna19
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Chapter 7

Attitudes
By Michael R. Solomon

Consumer Behavior
Buying, Having, and Being
Sixth Edition
7-1
Opening Vignette: Soccer

• How do Jan and Terri differ in their


attitudes toward soccer?
• Jan and Nancy are both soccer fans. How
are they different?
• Which one of the three is the most likely
target for ads promoting soccer?
• Is Nancy likely to convert to become a
soccer fan?
7-2
WUSA Soccer

7-3
The Power of Attitudes

• Attitude:
– A lasting, general evaluation of people (including
oneself), objects, advertisements, or issues
– Anything toward which one has an attitude is
called an object (Ao).
– Attitudes are lasting because they tend to endure
over time.

7-4
The Functions of Attitudes
• Functional Theory of Attitudes:
– Attitudes exist because they serve some function
for the person (i.e., they are determined by a
person’s motives)
• Katz’s Attitude Functions
– Utilitarian function
– Value-expressive function
– Ego-defensive function
– Knowledge function

7-5
Addressing Smoking Attitudes

• This Norwegian ad addresses young people’s smoking


attitudes by arousing strong negative feelings. The ad reads
(left panel) “Smokers are more sociable than others.” (Right
panel): “While it lasts.”
7-6
The ABC Model of Attitudes
• Affect:
– The way a consumer feels about an attitude object
• Behavior:
– Involves the person’s intentions to do something
with regard to an attitude object
• Cognition:
– The beliefs a consumer has about an attitude object
• Hierarchy of Effects:
– A fixed sequence of steps that occur en route to an
attitude
7-7
Three Hierarchies of Effects

Figure 7.1 7-8


Attitude Hierarchies
• The Standard Learning Hierarchy:
– Consumer approaches a product decision as a
problem-solving process
• The Low-Involvement Hierarchy:
– Consumer does not have strong initial preference
– Consumer acts on limited knowledge
– Consumer forms an evaluation only after product trial
• The Experiential Hierarchy:
– Consumers act on the basis of their emotional
reactions
7-9
Experiential Hierarchy
• Emotional Contagion:
– Emotions expressed by the communicator of a
marketing message affect the attitude toward the
product
• Cognitive-Affective Model:
– Argues that an affective judgment is the last step in
a series of cognitive processes
• Independence Hypothesis:
– Takes the position that affect and cognition
involve two separate, independent systems
7 - 10
Smith and Wollensky
• This ad for New York’s
famous Smith &
Wollensky restaurant
emphasizes that
marketers and others
associated with a
product or service are
often more involved
with it than are their
consumers.

7 - 11
Product Attitudes Don’t
Tell the Whole Story
• Attitude Toward the Advertisement (Aad):
– A predisposition to respond in a favorable or unfavorable
manner to a particular advertising stimulus during a
particular exposure occasion
• Ads Have Feelings Too:
– Three emotional dimensions:
• Pleasure, arousal, and intimidation
– Specific types of feelings that can be generated by an ad
• Upbeat feelings: Amused, delighted, playful
• Warm feelings: Affectionate, contemplative, hopeful
• Negative feelings: Critical, defiant, offended

7 - 12
Discussion Question
• Sexually suggestive
scenes like the one
depicted in this ad for
Union Bay clothing can
generate feelings that
affect brand attitudes.
• What specific types of
feelings or responses
can this type of
advertisement elicit?
How will this scene
affect the attitude
toward the ad?

7 - 13
Forming Attitudes
• Not All Attitudes are Created Equal:
– Levels of Commitment to an Attitude: The degree of
commitment is related to the level of involvement
with an attitude object
• Compliance
• Identification
• Internalization
– The Consistency Principle:
• Principle of Cognitive Consistency: Consumers value
harmony among their thoughts, feelings or behaviors
to be consistent with other experiences
7 - 14
Levels of Attitudinal Commitment

• By describing Cadillac as “my company,” the


woman in this ad exhibits a high level of attitudinal
commitment to her employer. 7 - 15
Forming Attitudes (cont.)
• Cognitive Dissonance and Harmony among Attitudes:
– Theory of Cognitive Dissonance: When a person is
confronted with inconsistencies among attitudes or behaviors,
he or she will take action to reduce the dissonance by
changing an attitude or modifying a behavior.
• Self-Perception Theory:
– People maintain consistency by inferring that they must
maintain a positive attitude toward a product they have
bought or consumed
• Foot-in-the-door technique:
– Sales strategy based on the observation that consumers will
comply with a request if they have first agreed to comply
with a smaller request

7 - 16
Attitudinal Commitment

• This ad for a magazine illustrates that consumers


often distort information so that it fits with what they
already believe or think they know. 7 - 17
Social Judgment Theory
• Social Judgment Theory:
– People assimilate new information about Ao’s
based on what they already know or feel.
– Attitudes of Acceptance and Rejection: People
differ in the information they find acceptable or
unacceptable.
• Assimilation effect: Messages that fall within the
latitude of acceptance tend to be seen as more
consistent with one’s position than they actually are
• Contrast effect: Messages falling within the latitude of
rejection tend to be seen as being farther from one’s
position than they actually are
7 - 18
Balance Theory
• Triad:
– An attitude structure consisting of three elements
• (1) A person and his/her perceptions of
• (2) an attitude object, and
• (3) some other person or object
• Unit relation:
– An element is seen as belonging to or being part of the
other
• Sentiment relation:
– Two elements are linked because one has expressed a
preference for the other
• Marketing Applications of Balance Theory
– Celebrity endorsements

7 - 19
Alternative Routes to
Restoring Balance in a Triad

Figure 7.2 7 - 20
Discussion Question
• Consumer researchers
understand that
consumers like to “bask
in the reflected glory” of
successful college
athletic programs by
wearing merchandise
adorned with logos like
the ones on the right.
• How do the different
attitude theories explain
this consumer
phenomenon?

7 - 21
Attitude Models
• Attitude Models:
– Specify the different elements that might work together to
influence people’s evaluations of Ao’s
• Multiattribute Models:
– Model that assumes a consumer’s Ao will depend on the
beliefs he or she has about several attributes toward the
object
• Multiattribute Models Specify 3 Elements:
– Attributes
– Beliefs
– Importance Weights

7 - 22
Attitude Models
• Choosing products:
– We often choose products because of their
association with a certain lifestyle.
• Goal of Lifestyle Marketing:
– To allow consumers to pursue their chosen ways to
enjoy life and express their social identities.
• Adopting Lifestyle Marketing:
– Implies that we must look at patterns of behavior to
understand consumers
7 - 23
The Fishbein Model
• Measures 3 components of attitude:
– (1) Salient Beliefs
– (2) Object-attribute linkages
– (3) Evaluation
• Assumptions of the Fishbein Model:
– Ability to specify all relevant choice attributes
– Identification, weight, and summing of attributes
• Affect referral:
– A process by which a consumer’s overall attitude is
formed by an overall affective response
7 - 24
The Fishbein Equation
• The Basic Formula:
Aijk = ΣβijkIik
– Where:
• i = attribute
• j = brand
• k = consumer
• I = the importance weight given attribute I by consumer k
• β = consumer k’s belief regarding the extent to which
brand j possesses attribute I
• A = a particular consumer’s (k’s) attitude score for brand j

7 - 25
The Basic Multiattribute Model

7 - 26
Strategic Applications of the
Multiattribute Model

• Capitalize on Relative Advantage


• Strengthen Perceived Product/Attribute
Linkages
• Add a New Attribute
• Influence Competitors’ Ratings

7 - 27
Using Attitudes to Predict Behavior
• In many cases, knowledge of a person’s
attitude is not a very good predictor of
behavior
• Questionable link between attitude and
behavior
– Consumers love a commercial, but don’t buy the product
• The Extended Fishbein Model
– Called the Theory of Reasoned Action
– Contains several important additions to the original, which
improve its ability to predict behavior

7 - 28
The Theory of Reasoned Action
• Intentions Versus Behavior
• Social Pressure:
– Subjective Norm (SN)
• Normative Belief (NB): Belief that others believe an
action should or should not be taken
• Motivation to Comply (MC): Degree to which
consumers take into account anticipated reactions
• Attitude Toward Buying:
– Attitude toward the act of buying (Aact):
• How someone feels about buying due to the perceived
consequences of a purchase
7 - 29
Obstacles to Predicting Behavior in the
Theory of Reasoned Action
• Model is misapplied
• Other obstacles:
– Model deals with actual behavior, not outcomes
– Some outcomes are beyond the consumer’s control
– The assumption of behavior as intentional may be invalid in
some cases
– Attitude measures don’t correspond to the behavior they are
supposed to predict
– Too large a time frame between attitude measure and
behavior measure
– Attitude accessibility perspective:
• Behavior is a function of the person’s immediate perceptions of
the Ao
7 - 30
Cultural Roadblocks to the
Theory of Reasoned Action
• Roadblocks that diminish the
universality of the theory
– Model was designed to predict voluntary acts
– The relative impact of subject norms varies across
cultures
– The model assumes that consumers are actively
thinking ahead and planning behaviors
– A consumer that forms an intention claims that he or
she is in control of his or her actions

7 - 31
Trying to Consume
• Theory of Trying to Consume
– States that the criterion of behavior in the reasoned action
model should be replaced with trying to reach a goal
• Sample issues that might be addressed:
– Past frequency
– Recency
– Beliefs
– Evaluations of consequences
– The process
– Expectations of success and failure
– Subjective norms toward trying

7 - 32
Theory of Trying (TT)

Figure 7.3 7 - 33
Tracking Attitudes over Time
• Attitude-tracking program:
– An single-attitude survey is a snapshot in time
– A program allows researchers to analyze attitude
trends during an extended period of time
• Ongoing Tracking Studies
– Attitude tracking involves administration of a survey
at regular intervals (e.g. Gallup Poll, Yankelovich
Monitor)
– This activity is valuable for making strategic
decisions

7 - 34
Gallup Poll

7 - 35
Attitude Changes over Time
• Changes to Look for over Time:
– Changes in different age groups:
• Attitudes change with age
• Historical effects
– Scenarios about the future:
• Consumers tracked in terms of future plans,
confidence in economy, and so on
– Identification of change agents:
• Social phenomena can alter people’s attitudes

7 - 36
Changing Attitudes

Percentage of 16- to 24-year-olds who agree “We must take radical


action to cut down on how we use our cars.”

Figure 7.4 7 - 37

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