Title: CONSUMER BEHAVIOR
1CONSUMER BEHAVIOR
2Consumer Imagination Communicating Value
- Creating/moving Meanings
- Cognitive Science
- Branding Implications
Peter Olson 2007, p. 278-309 FauconnierTurner
39-67 Brown, Kozinets, Sherry (2003)
32 Approches to Exploring MEANING
- 1. The content approach (mapping cultural
meanings related to products and brands) - Cultural content analysis, Etnography, Semiotics,
Laddering, etc. (ZMET)
- 2. The process approach (creation and movement of
cultural meanings) - Product design, Marketing communication,
Distribution and Pricing
4Movement of meaning (McCracken)
Model of the cultural process in a highly
developed consumer society creation and movement
of cultural meanings
Cultural meaning is present in three locations
1. Social and physical environments (rituals,
beliefs, shared emotion)
2. Products and services (the meaning of
products, brands, etc.)
3. Individual consumers (meaning of ones life
and ones role/position)
5Movement of meaning (McCracken)
Model of the cultural process in a highly
developed consumer society creation and movement
of cultural meanings
1. Social and physical environments (meaning of
parenthood giving to children)
2. Products and services (brand meanings
Kinder, the chocolate that mothers give to their
children)
3. Individual consumers (self-image a good
parent)
6Movement of meaning
Meaning is transferred in a consumption-oriented
society in two major ways
1. Marketing strategies are designed to move
cultural meanings from the physical and social
environments into products and services in an
attempt to make them attractive to consumers
2. Consumers actively seek to acquire these
cultural meanings in products in order to
establish a desirable personal identity or
self-concept (WHY this obssesion with self and
identity?)
7Constructing identity through consumption
8EX Products as symbols of who we are and who
want to be
Status goods. (showing off/impressing) Self-actual
ization goods. (becoming/being someone)
9Implications
- Products, stores, and brands express cultural or
symbolic meaning (buying products as a way to
acquire cultural meanings to use in establishing
their self-identities)
- The cultural meanings of products are likely to
vary across different societies and different
periods of time
- Some of the cultural meanings in products are
obvious to anyone who is familiar with that
culture, but other meanings are hidden
- Many products contain personal meaning in
addition to cultural meanings
10Marketing involves
- Exploring cultural meanings
- Managing cultural meanings
- Helping consumers obtain cultural meanings
11Dilemma
Is it really all about identity
construction? Does the product-vehicle metaphor
do justice to reality?
12Some answers
- People consume products not only to construct
themselves (their identity), but the world in
general
- Consumers consume not only to relate to them
selves, but to the OTHER (other people, the
Other, nature, etc.)
- Meanings are not a property of the product but
rather derive from the consumer interaction with
products meaningful experiences
- Consumers have a lot of freedom to create
different meanings
13The Chevy Tahoe lesson
http//news.cnet.com/1606-2_3-6056633.html
14Meaning MYTHS
- AROGANT thinking
- marketers are the creators and owners of meaning
- meaning is independent of the past and the
environment - meaning can be easily produced and managed
- meaning is a boundless/unlimited resource just
like the human imagination
Meaning capacity --- The struggle over meaning
The workings of human imagination?
15Meaning MYTHS
- DUALISTIC thinking restricts the relevance of
meaning
reason
emotion
functional quality
image surface
think products
feel products
natural value
fake value
S Y M B O L I C
F U N C T I O N A L
real
fantastic
Produced by science and engineering
Produced by marketers and artists
16Consequences
- Creative block (unscientific, artsy, girly)
- unable to create value and meaningful
experiences
- Authenticity problem (fake, empty, shallow)
- trasparency of meaningless ad-ons
17Leasons from Cognitive Science (The How of
Human Imagination)
18Fauccounier Turner
- Meaning is actively constructed by complex mental
operations in the brain - These task are largely hidden (unconscious
instant processing) - The process of blending conceptual integration
19Example Same spot same time?
20The Network Model
- Mental spaces small conceptual packets for
local thinking (short-term working memory) - sets of activated neuronal assemblies
- Frames long-term schematic and specific
knowledge
input
output
21Example
22Summary
- Input spaces first and last day
- Organizing frame walking along a path
- Cross-space mapping (projectioncompression)
- Blend emergent structure (walking towards
oneself) - Running a blend simulated encounter
23Thinking involves blending
Setting up mental spaces, matching across spaces,
projecting selectively to a blend, locating
shared structures, projecting backward to inputs,
creating new structure, running operations in the
blend
CONCEPTUAL INTEGRATION (CREATION OF MEANING)
24Meaning involves blending
Meanings are not fixed. They depend on the
context and the people involved in creating
them.
The same goes for products. Meanings do no
exist independent of context and people!
25Meaning involves blending
Blending is metaphorical (projection) metony
mic (compression)
The projection and compression guides our
thinking by giving emphasis to some aspects and
hiding others.
26Meaning involves blending
27So what?
- Well, you dont have to know all this to
communicate (automatic, intuitive, stable) - But there is a huge difference between
communicating and actively managing meaning - Marketers are professional meaning creators and
meaning communicators - They often work with new meanings and try to
change the dominant meaning structures (branding
innovation) - Marketing implications?
28Application to Branding
Every brand has its own story. The job of brand
managers is to nurture this brand story, fitting
it into consumers lives (Bruce)
- Brand story (or narrative) a coherent set of
meanings attached to the brand, related to - the origin of the brand (myth of origin)
- the distinction points of the brand (brand
essence) - the brand/user/others relationship
29EX VW BEATLE
30Application to Branding
The 4 As of branding Allegory Brand
allegories are essentially symbolic stories, or
extended metaphors (moral) Arcadia idealized
community (utopic) Aura powerful sense of
"authenticity (brand essence) Antinomy
ambiguity and paradox (consumers can insert their
hopes and dreams into products)
31Application to Branding
A good brand story Has weight. (higher values
moral certainty) Fuels our dreams. (hope
appeal) Is authentic and makes sense. (brand
roots essence) Involves conflict and diversity.
(paradox, freedom)
32EX Memory Foam
- Brand story
- NASA, G-force
- Memory foam
- A good nights sleep
CONFLICT ?
33GROUP PROJECT (step 2)Brand analysis
- Use the brand story approach to analyze the ways
in which the company communicates sustainability
and incorporates it into their brand - (Analyze their communication by using FT
blending framework search for metaphor and
metonymy) - Consider the ways to improve the brand narrative
and better incorporate the sustainability message
into the overall brand essence (What is Gorenjes
brand essence to begin with?)