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CONSUMER BEHAVIOR

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Achievement, success, involvement, efficiency, progress, individualism, ... Sears, Proctor & Gamble, Coca-Cola and JC Penny have started going after this market ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: CONSUMER BEHAVIOR


1
CONSUMER BEHAVIOR
  • MARKETING

2
Cultural Factors
  • Deepest influence on consumer behavior
  • It is learned
  • Growing up in a society a child learns
  • Basic values
  • Perceptions
  • Wants
  • Behaviors
  • US children are exposed to values
  • Achievement, success, involvement, efficiency,
    progress, individualism, freedom, fitness, health

3
Culture cont.
  • Cultural influences buying behavior
  • Varies from country to country
  • So businesses need to adjust to these differences
  • Marketers try to spot cultural shift in order to
    discover new products
  • Health/fitness huge demand for exercise
    equipment
  • Casual Friday demands for casual clothing

4
Subculture
  • Each culture contain smaller subcultures
  • People who have shared value systems based on
    life experiences/situations
  • Subcultures Include
  • Nationalities, religions, racial groups

5
Hispanic Consumers!
  • Marketers market Hispanics for food, beverages,
    and household care products.
  • They are also a good market for computers,
    financial services, photography equipment, large
    appliances, life insurance, and cars!

6
Hispanic Consumers (continued)
  • Sears makes a big effort to market towards
    Hispanics
  • They have bright colors and different sizes
    because that is what the Hispanics wear!

7
African American Consumers
  • 218 billion total purchasing power
  • Spend more money on clothing, personal care, home
    furnishings and fragrances
  • Brand loyal
  • Sears, Proctor Gamble, Coca-Cola and JC Penny
    have started going after this market

8
Asian American Consumers
  • Fastest-growing and most affluent U.S.
    demographic segment
  • Chinese-largest
  • Filipinos, Japanese, Asian Indians and Korean
  • Language and cultural traditions stop marketers
    from going after them
  • Packaged goods firms, automobile companies,
    retail companies and fast food chains have
    started marketing to them.

9
Mature Consumers
  • Ages 65 and older
  • They spend around 200 Billion each year
  • They have 2x as much disposable income.

10
Mature Consumers (Cont.)
  • Most are healthy and active
  • Dont want to be stereotyped
  • Like things that are geared towards them

11
Social Class
  • Societys relatively permanent and ordered
    divisions whose members share similar values,
    interests, and behaviors.

12
Social Class Cont.
  • Measured as a combination of occupation, income,
    education, wealth, etc.
  • People can move to a higher social class or fall
    to a lower one (in USA).
  • People in different social classes tend to
    exhibit similar buying habits.
  • Social classes show distinct product and
    brand preferences such as clothing, home
    furnishings, leisure activity, and automobiles.

13
Three of Seven Major American Social Classes
  • Upper Uppers- Consist of what we consider as the
    social elite. They occupy only 1 percent of U.S.
    pop. A long with their wealth they have well
    known and distinguished family backgrounds. At
    times they really want to show their wealth by
    purchasing expensive products. But then at times
    there are kind of conservatively about their
    wealth by dressing down and driving everyday
    pickup trucks.
  • The Lower- Are 2 percent of the U.S. pop. They
    have earned their wealth from their success in
    their profession. Which is usually white collared
    and business related. Since they werent always
    at this point of status they tend to want to show
    it more by keeping up with the trends, and as
    well as buying whats the best on the market.

14
Three of Seven Major American Social Classes
  • Upper Middles- Hold 12 percent of the U.S. pop.
    Though they are considered to be pretty well of.
    They still remain primarily concerned with their
    carrier. They continue to strive hard at work to
    get ahead and attain better positions. They also
    stress the importance of education to their
    children. As well as purposely avoid excessively
    spending money on anything.
  • All of these classes consist of Americas top 15
    percent. So they have plenty of money to spend.
    They are conservative about they wealth. And they
    recognize where they came from. So they have o
    conscious on how much money they spend and what
    they spend it on.

15
The Middle Class(32 percent)
  • Made up of average-pay white- and blue-collar
    workers who live on the the better side of town
    and try to do the proper things..
  • To keep up with the trends, they often buy
    products that are popular.
  • Most are concerned with fashion, and are seeking
    brand names.
  • They live in a nice neighborhood with good
    schools.

16
Working Class (38)
  • The working class consists of those who lead a
    working-class lifestyle, whatever their income,
    school background, or job.
  • They depend heavily on relatives for economic
    and emotional support, for advice on purchases,
    and for assistance in times of trouble.
  • The working class maintains sharper sex role
    divisions and stereotyping.

17
Lower Lowers (7 )
  • Welfare
  • Poverty stricken
  • Dependent on public aid/charity
  • Homes, clothes, possessions
  • Dirty, raggedy, broken down

18
Upper lowers (9)
  • Upper lowers are working (are not on welfare)
  • Their living standards are just above poverty.
  • They perform unskilled work for little pay and
    they strive for more.
  • They often lack education.
  • They still maintain some effort at cleanliness.

19
Groups
  • Behaviors are influenced by many small groups.
  • Membership Groups
  • Have direct influence and creates belonging
  • Primary Groups
  • Have regular formal interaction

20
Groups (cont.)
  • Secondary Groups
  • Have irregular formal interaction
  • Reference Groups
  • Form a persons attitudes and behavior
  • Aspirational Groups
  • Group which individual wishes to belong

21
Leaders
  • Opinion Leaders
  • Within reference groups
  • Have special skills, knowledge, and character
  • Exert strong influence on others
  • Huge targets for marketers

22
Family
  • wife traditionally has been purchasing agent
  • women now work outside home
  • this changes familys purchasing
  • husband/wives make expensive joint purchases
  • women buy 45 of cars
  • men buy 40 of food

23
Roles and Status
  • Person belongs to family, clubs
  • Role activities people perform according to
    people around them
  • Status shows position in society

24
Personal Factors / Age Life-Cycle Stage
  • A buyers decisions are influenced by personal
    characteristics such as
  • Age
  • Life Cycle Stage
  • Occupation
  • Economic Situation
  • Lifestyle
  • Buying is shaped by the stage of the family life
    cycle
  • Marketers are increasingly catering to a growing
    number of non-traditional stages such as
  • Unmarried couples
  • Couples marrying later in life
  • Childless couples
  • Single parents
  • Extended parents

25
Family Life Cycle Stages
  • Young Middle-Aged Older
  • Single Single Older Married
  • Married w/o Children Married w/o Children
    Older Unmarried
  • Married w/Children Married w/Children
  • Divorced w/Children Married w/o dep. Children
  • Divorced w/o Children
  • Divorced w/Children
  • Divorced w/Children
  • Divorced w/o dep. Children

26
Occupation
  • Blue-collar workers tend to buy more rugged work
    clothes .
  • Whit collar workers buy more business suits and
    nicer clothes.
  • A company can even specialize in making products
    that are needed by a given occupational group.

27
Economic Situation
  • A persons economic situation will affect product
    choice.
  • Marketers of income-sensitive goods watch trends
    in personal income, savings, and interest rates.
  • If economic indicators point to a recession,
    marketers can take steps to redesign, reposition,
    and reprice their products.

28
Lifestyle
  • There are five live style stages which have a
    huge effect on the consumers during each stage
    their needs and wants change.
  • Single
  • Married
  • Fullnest
  • Empty nest
  • Sole survivor

29
Psychographics
  • This involves peoples activities, interests, and
    opinions which effect their purchasing. Some of
    these categories consist there work, hobbies,
    sports, food, fashion, family, social issues,
    business, and more.
  • Basically these things make us who we are and
    therefore tell companies how to advertise to us
    along with what to try to sell us. With out the
    Psychographics part of advertising companies
    would not know how to advertise to specifics
    types of people along with different age groups
    therefore making the add less efficient. For
    instance you would not always advertise to a 10
    year old the same way you would to a 50 year old.
    They just do not have the same values and guild
    lines for purchasing.

30
Lifestyle
  • Lifestyle- is a persons pattern of living as
    expressed in his or her psychographics. The
    technique used to measure ones lifestyle
    involves there AIO dimensions.

31
How Marketers benefit
  • When used carefully, the lifestyle concept can
    help the marketer.
  • They understand the constant change of consumers
    values and there buying behavior.
  • This is a good concept to understand, it makes
    the marketer easy to target the right group.

32
Personality and Self-Concept
  • Personality influences their buying behavior
  • Described in terms of traits
  • Such as self-confidence, sociability, dominance,
    etc.
  • Marketers use a concept, related to personality
  • Peoples possessions reflect their identities

33
Personality
  • Personality- useful to analyze behavior for
    products
  • EX
  • Heavy coffee drinkers tend to be highly sociable
  • Thus, Maxwell house shows
  • people relaxing and socializing with cup of coffee

34
PERCEPTION
  • Is the process by which people select, organize,
    and interpret information to form a meaningful
    picture of the world.
  • People perceive the same situation differently.
  • Different people have different perceptions.
  • There are three perceptual processes
  • Selective attention
  • Selective distortion
  • Selective retention

35
PerceptualProcesses
  • Selective Attention
  • The tendency for people to screen out most of the
    information to which they are exposed
  • Selective Distortion
  • The tendency of people to interpret information
    in a way that will support what they already
    believe
  • Selective Retention
  • The tendency for people to retain information
    that supports their attitudes and beliefs.

36
Learning
  • Describes changes in an individuals behavior
  • Drive-a strong internal stimulus that calls for
    action
  • Cues-minor stimuli that determine the ws

37
Beliefs and attitudes
  • Belief-descriptive thought a person has about
    something
  • Based on knowledge , opinion, or faith
  • People believe in certain products
  • Attitude-persons relatively consistent
    evaluations
  • Buy the best
  • Attitudes are very hard to change

38
Belief
  • A descriptive thought that a person has about
    something.
  • Influences their buying power.
  • Make up product and brand images.
  • Ex A person thinks that a Nikon camera takes
    great pictures and stands up well under hard
    use. They will pay more for that camera b/c of
    their belief.

39
Attitude
  • Describes a persons relatively consistent
    evaluations, feelings, and tendencies regarding
    an object or idea.
  • Put people in a frame of mind of liking or
    disliking
  • Company should always adjust its products to
    existing attitude instead of trying to change
    attitudes.

40
Motivation- Freuds Theory (TPS Report)
  • A person fully does not understand his or her
    motivation.
  • There is a deeper meaning behind why people buy
    things than what they say.
  • Motivation researchers collect in-depth
    information from small samples of consumers to
    uncover the deeper motives for their product
    choices.

41
Motivation- Freuds Theory (TPS Report)
  • Researchers did a study on why consumers dont by
    prunes.
  • They concluded that consumers resist prunes
    because they are wrinkled looking and remind
    people of sickness and old age.

42
Maslows Hierarchy
  • 1. Self-actualization needs Self-development and
    Realization
  • 2a. Esteem Needs (Status)
  • 2b. Social Needs (Belonging)
  • 3. Safety Needs (Security)
  • 4. Physiological Needs (Hunger/Thirst)

43
Perception
  • The process by which people select, organize, and
    interpret information to create a meaningful
    picture
  • Three Perceptual processes
  • Selective attention
  • Selective distortion
  • Selective retention
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