perception
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PERCEPTIONBy shashi
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Marketing is not a battle of products
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it is a battle of perceptions.
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Sergio Zyman, Former Chief Marketing Officer, Coca Cola Company, says in his recent book “End of Marketing” :
“They (consumers) are, quite possibly, the only thing worth thinking about…….Every thing that happens to consumers and every thing that consumers do should affect your marketing decisions……You have to understand the whole environment in which people live…….Anything that happens in that environment is going to change what consumers do and don’t do.”
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Sensation and Perception
• Sensation:– The immediate response of our sensory receptors (eyes,
ears, nose, mouth, fingers) to basic stimuli such as light, color, sound, odors, and textures
• Perception:– The process by which sensations are selected, organized,
and interpreted
• The Study of Perception:– Focuses on what we add to raw sensations to give them
meaning
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An Overview of the Perception Process
Figure 2.1
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5-7
Building blocks of Perception Process
Insert ex. 5-2, p. 147
Consumer perception flow chart
Position = center horiz, 1.5” vertical
Size = 8.2” WIDE
Resolution = 300 dpi
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5-8
Perception Process
Harley Davidson ad capitalizes on the consumer’s self-perception
Insert photo 5.9, p. 149
Harley temporary tattoo
Position = 2.9” horiz., 1.5” vertical
Size = 4.6” TALL
Resolution = 300 dpi
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5-9
Perception Process
Ad for Columbia sportswear aims to build brand interest
Insert photo 5.10, p. 152
Columbia, man holding flowers
Position = 2.9” horiz, 1.5” vertical
Size = 4.6” TALL
Resolution = 300 dpi
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Sensory Systems
• External stimuli, or sensory inputs, can be received on a number of different channels.
• Inputs picked up by our five senses are the raw data that begin the perceptual process.
• Hedonic Consumption:– The multisensory, fantasy, and emotional aspects
of consumers’ interactions with products
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Increased Sensory Input
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Advertisements Appeal to Our Sensory Systems
• This ad for a luxury car emphasizes the contribution made by all of our senses to the evaluation of a driving experience.
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Sensory Systems - Vision
• Marketers rely heavily on visual elements in advertising, store design, and packaging.
• Meanings are communicated on the visual channel through a product’s color, size, and styling.
• Colors may influence our emotions more directly.– Arousal and stimulated appetite (e.g. red)– Relaxation (e.g. blue)
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Using Imagery
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This ad targets which senses?
• This Finnish ad emphasizes the sensual reasons to visit the city of Helsinki.
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Sensory Perceptions - Vision
• Some reactions to color come from learned associations.– (e.g. Black is associated with mourning in the
United States, whereas white is associated with mourning in Japan.)
• Some reactions to color are due to biological and cultural differences.– (e.g. Women tend to be drawn to brighter tones
and are more sensitive to subtle shadings and patterns)
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Perceptions of Color
This ad campaign bythe San FranciscoBallet uses colorperceptions to get urbansophisticates to addclassical dance to theirpacked entertainmentitineraries.
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Sensory Perceptions - Vision
• Color plays a dominant role in Web page design.• Saturated colors (green, yellow, orange, and cyan)
are considered the best to capture attention.– Don’t overdo it. Extensive use of saturated colors can
overwhelm people and cause visual fatigue.• Trade Dress:
– Colors that are strongly associated with a corporation, for which the company may have exclusive rights for their use.
• (e.g. Kodak’s use of yellow, black, and red)
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Perceptions of Color
• As this Dutch detergent ad demonstrates (Flowery orange fades without Dreft), vivid colors are often an attractive product feature.
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• First Heinz gave us “Blastin’ Green” ketchup in a squeeze bottle. Now they have introduced “Funky Purple” ketchup.
• What sensory perception is Heinz trying to appeal to? Do you think this product will be successful? Why or why not?
Twisters
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Snapple
• Snapple drinks were revived by the Whipper Snapple product, thanks to consumers forming their own perceptions about the product.
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Sensory Perceptions - Smell
• Odors can stir emotions or create a calming feeling.• Some responses to scents result from early
associations that call up good or bad feelings.• Marketers are finding ways to use smell:
– Scented clothes– Scented stores– Scented cars and planes– Scented household products– Scented advertisements
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Smell in Advertising
• This ad pokes fun at the proliferation of scented ads. Ah, the scent of sweat.
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Sensory Perceptions - Sound
• Advertising jingles create brand awareness.• Background music creates desired moods.• Sound affects people’s feelings and behaviors.• Muzak uses a system it calls “stimulus progression”
to increase the normally slower tempo of workers during midmorning and midafternoon time slots.
• Sound engineering:– Top-end automakers are using focus groups of consumers
to help designers choose appropriate sounds to elicit the proper response.
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Sensory Perceptions - Touch
• Relatively little research has been done on the effects of tactile stimulation on the consumer, but common observation tells us that this sensory channel is important.
• People associate textures of fabrics and other surfaces with product quality.
• Perceived richness or quality of the material in clothing is linked to its “feel,” whether rough or smooth.
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Applications of Touch Perceptions
• Kansai engineering: A philosophy that translates customers’ feelings into design elements.
• Mazda Miata designers discovered that making the stick shift (shown on the right) exactly 9.5 cm long conveys the optimal feeling of sportiness and control.
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Tactile Quality Associations
Table 2.1
Tactile Oppositions in Fabrics
Perception Male Female
High class Wool Silk Fine
Low class Denim Cotton
Heavy Light Coarse
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Sensory Perceptions - Taste
• Taste receptors contribute to our experience of many products.
• Specialized companies called “flavor houses” are constantly developing new concoctions to please the changing palates of consumers.
• Changes in culture also determine the tastes we find desirable.
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Exposure
• Exposure:
– Occurs when a stimulus comes within the range of someone’s sensory receptors
• Consumers concentrate on some stimuli, are unaware of others, and even go out of their way to ignore some messages.
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Sensory Thresholds• Psychophysics:
– The science that focuses on how the physical environment is integrated into our personal subjective world.
• Absolute Threshold:– The minimum amount of stimulation that can be detected
on a given sensory channel.• Differential Threshold:
– The ability of a sensory system to detect changes or differences between two stimuli. The minimum difference that can be detected between two stimuli is known as the j.n.d. (just noticeable difference).
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Weber’s Law• The amount of change that is necessary to be noticed is
systematically related to the intensity of the original stimulus
• The stronger the initial stimulus, the greater a change must be for it to be noticed.
• Mathematically:
– K = A constant (varies across senses)– Δi = The minimal change in the intensity required to produce j.n.d.– I = the intensity of the stimulus where the change occurs
I
iK
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Subliminal Perception
• Subliminal perception:– Occurs when the stimulus is below the level of the
consumer’s awareness.
• Subliminal techniques:– Embeds: Tiny figures that are inserted into magazine:
advertising by using high-speed photography or airbrushing.
• Does subliminal perception work?– There is little evidence that subliminal stimuli can bring
about desired behavioral changes.
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Subliminal Messages in Ads
• Critics of subliminal persuasion often focus on ambiguous shapes in drinks that supposedly spell out words like S E X as evidence for the use of this technique. This Pepsi ad, while hardly subliminal, gently borrows this message format.
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Attention
• Attention:– The extent to which processing activity is devoted
to a particular stimulus.• Attention economy:
– The Internet has transformed the focus of marketers from attracting dollars to attracting eyeballs.
• Perceptual selection:– People attend to only a small portion of the
stimuli to which they are exposed.
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The Unexpected Attracts
Attention
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Attention and Advertising
• Nike tries to cut through the clutter by spotlighting maimed athletes instead of handsome models.
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Personal Selection Factors
• Experience:– The result of acquiring and processing stimulation over
time• Perceptual vigilance:
– Consumers are aware of stimuli that relate to their current needs
• Perceptual defense:– People see what they want to see - and don’t see what
they don’t want to see• Adaptation:
– The degree to which consumers continue to notice a stimulus over time
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Factors that Lead to Adaptation
• Intensity: Less-intense stimuli habituate because they have less sensory impact.
• Duration: Stimuli that require relatively lengthy exposure in order to be processed tend to habituate because they require a long attention span.
• Discrimination: Simple stimuli tend to habituate because they do not require attention to detail.
• Exposure: Frequently encountered stimuli tend to habituate as the rate of exposure increases.
• Relevance: Stimuli that are irrelevant or unimportant will habituate because they fail to attract attention.
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Stimulus Selection Factors
• Size:– The size of the stimulus itself in contrast to the
competition helps to determine if it will command attention.
• Color:– Color is a powerful way to draw attention to a product.
• Position:– Stimuli that are present in places we’re more likely to look
stand a better chance of being noticed.• Novelty:
– Stimuli that appear in unexpected ways or places tend to grab our attention.
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• What technique does this Australian ad rely on to get your attention?
• Does the technique enhance or detract from the advertisement of the actual product?
Discussion Question
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Attention to Stimuli
• Interpretation:– The meaning that we assign sensory stimuli.
• Schema:– Set of beliefs to which the stimulus is assigned.
• Priming:– Process by which certain properties of a stimulus
typically will evoke a schema, which leads consumers to evaluate the stimulus in terms of other stimulus they have encountered and believe to be similar.
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Schema-Based Perception
• Advertisers know that consumers will often relate an ad to preexisting schema in order to make sense of it.
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Stimulus Organization
• A stimulus will be interpreted based on its assumed relationship with other events, sensations, or images.
• Closure Principle:– People tend to perceive an incomplete picture as
complete.• Principle of Similarity:
– Consumers tend to group together objects that share the same physical characteristics.
• Figure-ground Principle:– One part of a stimulus will dominate (the figure) and other
parts will recede into the background (the ground).
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Gestalt Principle
• This Swedish ad relies upon gestalt perceptual principles to insure that the perceiver organizes a lot of separate images into a familiar image.
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Principle of Closure
• This Land Rover ad illustrates the use of the principle of closure, in which people participate in the ad by mentally filling in the gaps in the sentence.
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Figure-ground Principle
• This billboard for Wrangler jeans makes creative use of the figure-ground principle.
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Semiotics: The Symbols Around Us
• Semiotics: Field of study that examines the correspondence between signs and symbols and their role in the assignment of meaning.
• A message has 3 components:– 1) Object: the product that focuses the message– 2) Sign: the sensory imagery that represents the
intended meanings of the object– 3) Interpretant: the meaning derived
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Semiotic Components
Figure 2.2
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Semiotics (cont.)
• Signs are related to objects in one of three ways:– 1) Icon: a sign that resembles the product in some
way– 2) Index: a sign that is connected to some object
because they share some property– 3) Symbol: a sign that is related to a product
through conventional or agreed-upon associations• Hyperreality: The becoming real of what is
initially simulation or “hype”
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Perceptual Positioning
• Positioning Strategy– A fundamental part of a company’s marketing
efforts as it uses elements of the marketing mix to influence the consumer’s interpretation of its meaning.
– Many dimensions can establish a brand’s position in the marketplace:
• Lifestyle • Competitors
• Price Leadership • Occasions
• Attributes • Users
• Product Class • Quality
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Perceptual Map
• Figure 2.3: HMV Perceptual Map
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