Title: Quiz 1
1Quiz 1
- 8 questions, 2.5 points each, 10 minutes
- When you are done with your quiz, please hand it
in to me - No talking/discussion until all quizzes are
submitted - No referring to the text book or other materials
after you have turned in your quiz until all
quizzes are submitted - Please circle the right answer option
- Please dont forget to put your names and IDs on
the quiz
2Question 5 on Quiz
- A typical consumer would most likely use ___ in
choosing toothpaste, a pencil or a soft drink. - Routine problem solving
- Limited problem solving
- Extended problem solving
- Simulated problem solving
- Integrated problem solving
3Reminder
- First experiment this week.
4Information search
- Second stage of decision making process
- Motivated activation of knowledge stored in
memory (internal search) or acquisition of
information from the environment (external
search) - If internal search provides sufficient
information, then external search is unnecessary
5Information Sources Internal
- Memory
- Important for routine, habitual purchases
- Examples
- We may buy the same brand of toothpaste
repeatedly - We recognize certain brands of cereal each time
we visit the store - Recall and recognition of brands is therefore
important
6Information Sources External
Personal Sources
Commercial Sources
- Family, friends, neighbors
- Very credible source of
- information
Public Sources
- Advertising, salespeople
- Receives most information from these sources
Experiential Sources
- Mass Media
- Consumer-rating groups
- Handling the product
- Examining the product
- Using the product
7College decision process Information search
8Information Search Marketing strategy
- We try to understand information search so we can
provide information about our product to
consumers when they are looking for it - Many companies have web pages because they
realize that consumers are increasingly turning
to the web for information about goods and
services
9Alternative evaluation Consideration/evoked set
- Subset of available products that is evaluated
when making a choice - Inclusion in set
- Internal (memory)
- External
Available Products
Recognized
Recalled
Considered
10College decision process Consideration set
- What was the size of your consideration set for
colleges?
11Alternative evaluation
Product Attributes Identify key attributes --
quality, price, features, etc.
Attribute Importance Which attributes matter most
to me?
Product (Brand) Beliefs How do products (brands)
stack up on specific attributes?
Project Total Satisfaction Based on what Im
looking for, how satisfied would I be with each
product (brand)?
Evaluation Procedures Choose a product (brand)
based on one or more attributes.
12College Decision Process Alternative Evaluation
- List the colleges that were included in your
consideration set - List the features of colleges that were important
to you - Allocate 100 points across those features to
indicate which attributes are more important to
you than others - For each attribute, allocate 100 points across
the colleges to indicate how that college
performs on that feature - Multiply importance weights times scores to get
brand rating
13Alternative evaluation
- We study this stage to understand the basis by
which consumers make brand choices - The outcome of this analysis helps us in
developing our product strategy especially
which attributes to emphasize in the product
14Purchase decision
- Purchase Intention
- Desire to buy the most preferred brand/product
- Purchase Decision
- Choice of the store/brand/product/quantity/timing
- Intent to purchase does not always result in an
actual purchase - College decision process
15Post purchase
- Consumers Expectations of
- Product Performance
- Consumers Perceptions of
- Product Performance
Satisfied Customer ?
Dissatisfied Customer ?
Cognitive Dissonance Regret
16Cognitive dissonance
- Feeling of post purchase tension/anxiety
- Did I make the right choice?
- Higher for close alternatives
- Focus on positives of the alternative given up
- To resolve dissonance
- Make claims that faithfully represent product
performance. - Place advertisements showing satisfied brand
owners. - Contact buyers via letter or phone call
congratulating them on being a new brand owner. - Post purchase communications result in fewer
product returns
17Purchase and Post Purchase
- Purchase behaviors helps us in distribution and
promotion strategy - Lays potato chips are bought in the supermarket
only 50 of the time. Rest of the time, they are
bought in sandwich shops, vending machines and
convenience stores - Companies offer coupons on weekends when many
consumers undertake their weekly grocery shopping - Product use helps in product positioning
18Purchase and Post Purchase
- Post-purchase processes helps us in after-sales
strategy - Product disposal is also important in order to
understand issues/concerns/opportunities - Cars/ Furniture
19Involvement
- The effort that consumers put into decisions
depends on their level of involvement with the
decision - Involvement is a function of
- Monetary outlay
- Personal Risk
- Social Risk
- Involvement impacts information search and
alternative evaluation - Types of problem solving
- Routine
- Limited
- Extended
20Involvement and marketing strategy
- Low involvement products
- Maintain quality
- Ensure availability
- Link brand attributes with high involvement
issues
21- How involved are consumers in the orange juice
purchase decision process? - What implications does this have for Tropicana's
marketing strategy?
22Influences on consumer behavior
23Situational influences
- Purchase task
- Physical surroundings
- Social surroundings
- Temporal effects
- Antecedent states