Title: Professor S.J. Grant
1Overview Marketing and Consumers
- Professor S.J. Grant
- Spring 2007
BUYER BEHAVIOR, MARKETING 3250
2Outline
- What is strategy?
- Strategy starts with analysis
- 3 Cs
- SWOT
- What is consumer behavior?
- How does consumer behavior impact marketing?
- STP
- 4Ps
3Marketing Strategy
- What is the goal of strategy?
- To develop and maintain strategic fit between the
companys abilities and changing market
opportunities - Strategy positions the firm to optimize
- Strategy must consider alignments of internal,
external factors - Internal company
- External competitors, consumers
4Marketing Management
Competition
Market Opportunity
Consumers
Company
5SWOT Analysis
- Basic approach starts with evaluating
- Internally
- Strengths
- Weaknesses
- Externally
- Opportunities
- Threats
6What is Consumer Behavior?
7What Affects Consumer Behavior?
Psychological Core
Process of Making Decisions
Consumers Culture
Consumer Behavior Outcomes
8What Affects Consumer Behavior?
- Having motivation, ability, and opportunity
- Exposure, attention, and perception
- Categorizing and comprehending information
- Forming and changing attitudes
- Forming and retrieving memories
Psychological Core
9What Affects Consumer Behavior?
Psychological Core
- Problem recognition and search for information
- Making judgments and decisions
- Making post-decision evaluations
Process of Making Decisions
10What Affects Consumer Behavior?
Psychological Core
- External processes
- Regional and ethnic influences
- Age, gender, and household influences
- Reference groups
Process of Making Decisions
Consumers Culture
11What Affects Consumer Behavior?
Psychological Core
- Consumer behaviors can symbolize who we are
- Consumer behaviors can diffuse within a market
Process of Making Decisions
Consumers Culture
Consumer Behavior Outcomes
12Implications Segmentation
- Developing a customer-oriented strategy starts
with a segmentation scheme - What is known about the market?
- How is the market segmented?
- Different types of consumers
- Different needs
- Perception of value
- Willingness to pay
13Implications Targeting
- Choose a target
- How profitable is each segment?
- What are the characteristics of consumers in each
segment? - Are customers satisfied with existing offerings?
14Implications Positioning
- Positioning
- How are competitive offerings positioned?
- How should our offerings be positioned?
- Should our offerings be repositioned?
15Implications Product
- Developing products or services
- What are consumers ideas for new products?
- What attributes can be added to or changed in an
existing offering? - What about guarantees? Post-purchase service?
Repeat-buying opportunities - Any consumer trends that can inspire development?
16Implications Promotion
- Making promotion decisions
- Sales promotion objectives and tactics (push)
- When should sales promotions happen?
- Have our sales promotions been effective?
- How many salespeople are needed to serve
customers? - How can salespeople best serve customers?
- Advertising (pull)
- What should our advertising look like?
- Where should advertising be placed?
- When should we advertise?
- Has our advertising been effective?
17Implications Price
- Making pricing decisions
- What price should be charged?
- How sensitive are consumers to price and price
changes? - What is price elasticity?
- When should certain price tactics be used?
- How do price changes affect the firm?
18Implications Place
- Making distribution decisions
- Where are target consumers likely to shop?
- How should stores be designed?
19Perception, Memory Learning
- Professor S.J. Grant
- Spring 2007
BUYER BEHAVIOR, MARKETING 3250
20Outline
- Perception
- A model of memory
- What are the types of memory?
- Organization of memory
- How memory works
- Storage
- Retrieval
- Learning
21Perception
Hemispheric lateralization
22Perception
- When do we perceive stimuli?
- Absolute and differential thresholds
- Just noticeable difference
- Webers law
- Selective cocktail party
- Subliminal perception
- Does subliminal perception affect consumer
behavior?
23Perception
- Does subliminal messaging make people buy?
- 1956 N.J. movie theater flashed subliminal
messages, Hungry? Eat popcorn. Drink Coca-Cola. - Increased popcorn sales 58 and Coca-Cola sales
18, but results were not replicated - Erotic stimuli and sexual symbols in ads
purported to increase receptivity to suggestions
in the ad
24A Model of Memory
- Perceived information is encoded
- Explicit
- Implicit
- Then stored in memory
- Short-term store
- Long-term store
- Retrieval involves calling up stored bits from
memory
25A Model of Memory
Stimulus
Short-Term Memory
Recall
Consolidation
Retrieval
Long-Term Memory
26A Model of Memory
- Sensory
- Short-term
- Long-term
27A Model of Memory
- Sensory
- Echoic
- Iconic
- Characteristics of sensory memory
28A Model of Memory
- Short-term memory (STM)
- Imagery processing
- Discursive processing
- Characteristics of short-term memory
- Short-term memory is limited (72)
- Short-term memory is short-lived
29A Model of Memory
- Long-term memory (LTM)
- Autobiographical (episodic) memory
- Semantic memory
- Characteristics of long-term memory
- Stable memory of events of more distant past
- Unlimited capacity
- Organized by nodes
30A Model of Memory
- Converting short-term memories to long-term store
is physically located in the hippocampus - Elaboration, or rehearsal, of information
increases consolidation - Recall from long-term storage is a function of
recency and availability - Availability is aided if memory is organized into
a well-defined associative network of nodes - Categories
- Hierarchies
31A Model of Memory
Beverages
Carbonated
Non-carbonated
Mixers
Colas
Juices
Water
Pepsi
Coke
Evian
Poland Spring
32A Semantic (or Associative) Network
33How Memory Is Enhanced
- Chunking
- Rehearsal
- Recirculation
- Elaboration
34What Is Retrieval?
- Semantic network
- Trace strength
- Accessibility
- Spreading of activation
- Priming
- Retrieval failures
- Decay
- Interference
- Primacy and recency effects
- Retrieval errors
35What Are the Types of Retrieval?
- Explicit memory
- Recognition
- Recall
- Judgments
- Implicit memory
- Judgments
36Retrieval
- Perceptual
- His name started with a J . . .
- Conceptual
- A brand of personal computers that competes with
IBM . . .
37How Retrieval Is Enhanced
- Characteristics of the stimulus
- Salience
- Prototypicality
- Redundant cues
- The medium in which the stimulus is processed
38How Retrieval Is Enhanced
- What the stimulus is linked to
- Retrieval cues
- Where do retrieval cues come from?
- The brand name as a retrieval cue
- Other retrieval cues
- Consumer implications
- Consideration set
39How Retrieval Is Enhanced
- How a stimulus is processed in short-term memory
- Dual coding
- Consumer characteristics affecting retrieval
- Network of associations
- Expertise
- Mood
40Information Processing Selective
41A Model of Learning