Consumer Behavior
Consumer Behavior
An Introduction to
Consumer Behavior
What is Consumer Behavior
• These needs can only be satisfied to the extent that marketers understand
the people or organizations that will use the products and services they
offer, and that they do so better than their competitors.
• Data about consumers help marketers to define the market and to identify
threats and opportunities in their own and other countries that will affect
how consumers receive the product.
• Recent research found that today’s teens see portable cassette players as
dinosaurs.
• Now, even portable CD players seem obsolete and not cool – with the
consumer movement to removable ‘memory sticks’ instead of a CD player
that can work with MP3 files. T
Market segmentation: To whom are we marketing
3) Age
• Consumers in different age groups have very different needs and wants,.
4) Gender
• In the past most marketers assumed that men were the primary decision-
makers for car purchases, but this perspective is changing with the times.
5) Family structure
• In Europe, most of the evidence points to the fact that cultural differences persist in
playing a decisive role in forming our consumption patterns and our unique
expressions of consumption.
• At the same time, global competition tends to have a homogenizing effect in some
markets such as music, sports, clothing and entertainment, and multinational
companies such as Sony, Pepsi, Nintendo, Nike and Levi Strauss continue to
dominate or play important roles in shaping markets.
• With the creation of the single European market, many companies have begun to
consider even more the possibilities of standardized marketing across national
boundaries in Europe.
• The increasing similarity of the brands and products available in Europe does not
mean that the consumers are the same, however! Variables such as personal
motivation, cultural context, family relation patterns and rhythms of everyday life,
all vary substantially from country to country and from region to region.
Relationship marketing: building bonds with consumers
• Marketers are carefully defining customer segments and listening to people as never
before.
• Many of them have realized that the key to success is building lifetime
relationships between brands and customers. Marketers who believe in this
philosophy – so called relationship marketing – are making an effort to keep in
touch with their customers on a regular basis, and are giving them reasons to
maintain a bond with the company over time.
• Various types of membership of retail outlets, petrol companies and co-operative
movements illustrate this.
• One co-operative chain offers reductions to its members on such diverse goods as
travelling, clothing, home appliances, electronics and garden furniture. Some
companies establish these ties by offering services that are appreciated by their
customers.
• Many companies donate a small percentage of the purchase price to a charity such
as the Red Cross or the World Wildlife Fund, or for the care of the poor and
marginalized in society.
• This cements the relationship by giving customers an additional reason to continue
buying the company’s products year after year.
• Another revolution in relationship building is being brought to
us by courtesy of Database marketing.
• These include: