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Copyright © 2006 by South-Western, a division of Thomson Learning, Inc. All rights reserved. 5-1 Consumer Consumer behavior behavior

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Page 1: Consumer Behaviour Ppt

Copyright © 2006 by South-Western, a division of Thomson Learning, Inc. All rights reserved. 5-1

Consumer Consumer behaviorbehavior

Page 2: Consumer Behaviour Ppt

Copyright © 2006 by South-Western, a division of Thomson Learning, Inc. All rights reserved. 5-2

Customer vs. Consumer BehaviorCustomer vs. Consumer Behavior

Customer behavior:Customer behavior: a broad term that covers both individual consumers who buy goods and services for their own use and organizational buyers who purchase business products

Consumer behavior:Consumer behavior: the process through which the ultimate buyer makes purchase decisions

Page 3: Consumer Behaviour Ppt

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Interpersonal Determinants ofInterpersonal Determinants ofConsumer BehaviorConsumer Behavior

Why People Buy New Products

Page 4: Consumer Behaviour Ppt

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Cultural InfluencesCultural InfluencesCulture: values, beliefs, preferences, and

tastes handed down from one generation to the next

It is important to recognize the concept of ethnocentrism, or the tendency to view your own culture as the norm, as it relates to consumer behavior.

Page 5: Consumer Behaviour Ppt

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Core Values in the CultureCore Values in the CultureWhile some cultural values change over

time, basic core values do notExamples of core values include:

Importance of family and home lifeEducationYouthfulnessIndividualism

Page 6: Consumer Behaviour Ppt

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International Perspective on Cultural International Perspective on Cultural InfluencesInfluencesCultural differences are particularly important

for international marketersSuccessful strategies in one country often

cannot extend to other international markets because of cultural variations

Page 7: Consumer Behaviour Ppt

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Subcultures:Subcultures: subgroup of culture with its own, distinct modes of behaviorCultures are not homogeneous entities with

universal values.Subcultures can differ by:

Ethnicity or NationalityAge or GenderReligionSocial class or Profession

Ethnic and Racial Minorities as a Percentage of the Total Population

Page 8: Consumer Behaviour Ppt

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83% Hindu

12% Muslims

5% Christians, Sikhs, Jains, Buddhists, Parsis

Page 9: Consumer Behaviour Ppt

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Social InfluencesSocial InfluencesGroup membership influences an individual’s purchase decisions and behavior in both overt and subtle ways.Norms: are the values, attitudes, and

behaviors that a group deems appropriate for its members

Status: is the relative position of any individual member in a group

Roles define behavior that members of a group expect of individuals who hold specific positions within the group

Page 10: Consumer Behaviour Ppt

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The Asch Phenomenon:The Asch Phenomenon: the effect of a reference group on individual decision-making

Reference groups:Reference groups: groups whose value structures and standards influence a person’s behaviorRequires two conditions:

The purchased product must be one that others can see and identify

The purchased item must be conspicuous; it must stand out as something unusual, a brand or product that not everyone owns

Page 11: Consumer Behaviour Ppt

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Social classes:Social classes: groups whose rankings are determined by occupation, income, education, family background, and residence location

W. Lloyd Warner identifiedsix classes:

1. Upper-upper

2. Lower-upper

3. Upper-middle

4. Lower-middle

5. Working class

6. Lower class

Page 12: Consumer Behaviour Ppt

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Opinion leaders:Opinion leaders: trendsetters who purchase new products before others in a group and then influence others in their purchases

Figure Figure : Alternative Channels for Communications Flow

Page 13: Consumer Behaviour Ppt

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Family InfluencesFamily InfluencesAutonomic role is when the partners

independently make equal numbers of decisions.

Husband-dominant role is when the husband makes most of the decisions.

Wife-dominant role is when the wife makes most of the decisions.

Syncratic role is when both partners jointly make most decisions.

Page 14: Consumer Behaviour Ppt

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Children and Teenagers in Family Children and Teenagers in Family PurchasesPurchasesGrowing numbers are assuming

responsibility for family shoppingThey also influence what parents buyThey represent sizeable consumers in

their own right

Page 15: Consumer Behaviour Ppt

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Personal Determinants of Personal Determinants of Consumer BehaviorConsumer Behavior

Page 16: Consumer Behaviour Ppt

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Needs and MotivesNeeds and MotivesNeed: an imbalance between a consumer’s

actual and desired statesMotives: inner states that direct a person

toward the goal of satisfying a felt need

Page 17: Consumer Behaviour Ppt

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Maslow’s Hierarchy of NeedsMaslow’s Hierarchy of Needs

Esteem Needs

Social Needs

Safety Needs

Physiological Needs

Self-Actualization

Page 18: Consumer Behaviour Ppt

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Physiological Needs

Products Vitamins, herbal supplements, medicines, food, exercise equipment, fitness clubs

Marketing themes

Pepcid antacid—”Just one and hearburn’s done”

Puffs facial tissues—”A nose in need deserves Puffs indeed”

Jiyo Jee Bhar Ke

Safety Needs

Products Cars and car accessories, burglar alarm systems, retirement investments, insurance, medicines

Marketing themes

Jeetay Raho

Volvo—“Protect the body. Ignite the soul.”

Yogakshema Vahamyahum

Page 19: Consumer Behaviour Ppt

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Belongingness

Products Beauty aids, entertainment, clothing, cars

Marketing themes

Old Spice —”The Mark of a Man”

TJ Maxx clothing store—”You should go”

Esteem Needs

Product Clothing, cars, jewelry, hobbies, beauty spa services

Marketing themes

? Automobiles— Count on us”Van Cleef & Arpels—“The pleasure of perfection.”? - Be Morekitchen appliances—“The sign of a great cook.”

Self-Actualization

Products Education, cultural events, sports, hobbies, luxury goods, technology, travel

Marketing themes

Nike – Just Do it

IES

Dodge cars and trucks—”Grab life by the horns”

Page 20: Consumer Behaviour Ppt

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Perceptions:Perceptions: the meaning that a person attributes to incoming stimuli gathered through the five senses – sight, hearing, touch, taste, and smell.

Perceptual screens:Perceptual screens: the filtering processes through which all inputs must pass

Page 21: Consumer Behaviour Ppt

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Subliminal Perception:Subliminal Perception: subconscious receipt of informationAlmost 50 years ago, a movie theater tried to

boost concession sales by flashing the words Eat Popcorn and Drink Coca-Cola.

Subliminal advertising is aimed at the subconscious level of awareness.

Subliminal advertising has been universally condemned as manipulative, and is exceedingly unlikely that it can induce purchasing.

Research has shown that subliminal messages cannot force receivers to purchase goods that they would not consciously want.

Page 22: Consumer Behaviour Ppt

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AttitudesAttitudesA person’s enduring favorable or

unfavorable evaluations, emotional feelings, or action tendencies toward some object or idea

Attitude components:CognitiveAffective Behavioral

Page 23: Consumer Behaviour Ppt

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Changing Consumer AttitudesChanging Consumer AttitudesAttempt to produce consumer attitudes that

will motivate the purchase of a particular product

Evaluate existing consumer attitudes and then make the product characteristics appeal to them

Modifying the Components of AttitudeModifying the Components of AttitudeAttitudes change in response to

inconsistencies among the three componentsMarketers can work to modify attitudes by

providing evidence of product benefits and by correcting misconceptions

Page 24: Consumer Behaviour Ppt

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LearningLearningAn immediate or expected change in

behavior as a result of experience.The learning process includes the

component of:DriveCueResponseReinforcement

Page 25: Consumer Behaviour Ppt

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Applying Learning Theory to Marketing Applying Learning Theory to Marketing DecisionsDecisionsShaping: process of applying a series of

rewards and reinforcements to permit more complex behavior to evolve over time

Page 26: Consumer Behaviour Ppt

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Self-ConceptSelf-ConceptA person’s multifaceted picture of himself or

herself, composed of the:Real selfSelf-imageLooking-glass selfIdeal self

Page 27: Consumer Behaviour Ppt

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The Consumer Decision ProcessThe Consumer Decision Process Consumers complete a step-by-step

process when making purchase decisionsHigh-involvement purchase

decisions are those with high levels of potential social or economic consequences

Low-involvement decisions are routine purchases that pose little risk to the consumer

SearchSearch

Alternative Alternative EvaluationEvaluation

Purchase Purchase DecisionDecision

Purchase Purchase ActAct

Post-Post-purchase purchase

EvaluationEvaluation

Problem Problem Opportunity Opportunity RecognitionRecognition

Page 28: Consumer Behaviour Ppt

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Integrated Model of the Consumer Decision Process

Page 29: Consumer Behaviour Ppt

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Problem or Opportunity RecognitionProblem or Opportunity RecognitionConsumer becomes aware of a

significant discrepancy between the existing situation and the desired situation

Motivates the individual to achieve the desired state of affairs

Page 30: Consumer Behaviour Ppt

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SearchSearchConsumer gathers information related to

their attainment of the desired state of affairsIdentifies alternative means of problem

solutionMay cover internal or external sources of

informationBrands that a consumer actually considers

buying before making a purchase decision are known as the evoked set

Page 31: Consumer Behaviour Ppt

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Evoked Set Evoked Set ModelModel

All All BrandsBrands

All All BrandsBrands

Unknown Unknown BrandsBrands

Unknown Unknown BrandsBrands

Known Known Brands Brands

Known Known Brands Brands

OverlookedOverlookedBrandsBrands

OverlookedOverlookedBrandsBrands

UnacceptableUnacceptableBrandsBrands

UnacceptableUnacceptableBrandsBrands

AcceptableAcceptableBrandsBrands

AcceptableAcceptableBrandsBrands

Rejected Rejected Brands Brands

Rejected Rejected Brands Brands

PurchasedPurchasedBrandBrand

PurchasedPurchasedBrandBrand

EvokedEvokedSetSet

EvokedEvokedSetSet

InertInertSetSet

InertInertSetSet

Page 32: Consumer Behaviour Ppt

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Evaluation of AlternativesEvaluation of AlternativesConsumer evaluates the evoked setDifficult to completely separate the second

and third steps, since some evaluation takes place as the search progresses

Outcome of the evaluation stage is the choice of a brand or product (or possibly a decision to renew the search)

Evaluative criteria: features that a consumer considers in choosing among alternatives

Page 33: Consumer Behaviour Ppt

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Purchase Decision and Purchase ActPurchase Decision and Purchase ActConsumer narrows the alternatives

down to oneThe purchase location is decided

Page 34: Consumer Behaviour Ppt

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Postpurchase EvaluationPostpurchase EvaluationAfter the purchase, consumers are either

satisfied or experience post-purchase anxiety

Cognitive dissonance: Post-purchase anxiety that results from an imbalance among an individual’s knowledge, beliefs, and attitudes after an action or decision is taken

Page 35: Consumer Behaviour Ppt

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Classifying Consumer Problem-Solving Classifying Consumer Problem-Solving ProcessesProcessesThree categories of problem-solving

behaviorRoutinized Response BehaviorLimited Problem SolvingExtended Problem Solving