Title: Arnould
1Chapter
7
Consumer Motives, Goals Involvement
2Objectives
- Explain relationships among consumer involvement,
motivation, needs, and goals - Explain involvement and how it influences CB
- Understand how marketers use the concept of
involvement - Explain different types of human motivations and
need - Understand how marketers uncover needs
- Understand why motivational conflict occurs
- Explain consumer goals and how they differ
cross-culturally
3Key Terms
- Involvement
- Personal importance
- Motivation
- Inner drive goal striving
- Needs
- People are motivated by their needs
- Biological
- Psychological
- Goals
- ends or aspirations that direct action.
4Consumer Involvement
- the perceived personal importance and/or
interest attached to the acquisition,
consumption, and disposition of a product.
5Can be Involved with Any Number of Phenomena
- Possessions (act of having)
- Shopping activities (act of doing)
- Experience (act of being)
- Brand
- Product or product class
- Celebrity or sports team
- Place
- Affiliation groups
- People
- Pets
- Job/career
6Consumer involvement varies in intensity (or
level)
- Involvement exists on a continuum of low to high
- Low ?-----?high
- Low involvement (less important, relevant)
- High involvement (more important, relevant)
7Consumers Level of Involvement Depends Upon
- Lower Involvement ???? Higher Involvement
- Personal Factors
- Symbolic meanings regarding self
- few self meanings many self meanings
-
- Time commitment to the purchase
- short long
8Consumers Level of Involvement Depends Upon
- Lower Involvement ???? Higher Involvement
- Product Factors
- Price
- low high
-
- Potential harm to self and others
- low high
- Potential for poor performance
- small larger
9Consumers Level of Involvement Depends Upon
- Lower Involvement ???? Higher Involvement
- Situational Factors
- Receiver of purchase
-
- Social visibility of consumption
- not visible visible
10As Involvement Levels Increase
- Consumers perceive more RISK in their actions,
decisions and their consequences - Consumers have a greater motivation to comprehend
and elaborate on information (e.g., thinking
about sales attempts or advertising messages) - Consumers give more diligent consideration and
attention (care more, think more). - More likely to search more, evaluate more
alternatives
11Marketing Implications of Different Levels of
Involvement
- High-Involvement Purchase and Consumption
- Complex purchase process by highly involved
consumers - Attention is increased and more importance is
attached to the stimulus object. - Low-Involvement Purchase and Consumption
- Minimal decision making for low-involvement
products - Attention is low and less importance is attached
to the stimulus object
12Low-Involvement Marketing Strategies
- Strategies that increase consumers involvement
with a product or brand over a short period or
for longer period - Use creative marketing strategies, such as
effective advertising or product usage campaigns - Link low-involvement products with
high-involvement issues - Adapt the advertising medium to the product
category. - Use extensive distribution networks, clever
in-store displays.
13Two Main Types of Involvement
- Situational
- Occurs over a short time period and is usually
associated with a specific situation (e.g., the
need to replace something that broke) - Varies low to high, depending on situational
factors - Enduring
- Occurs when consumers show a high-level of
interest in a product and frequently spend time
thinking about the product - Represents a TYPE of high involvement with a
product
14Measuring Involvement
- Focused on different types of involvement as well
as behaviors or outcomes of involvement - Different quantitative measures
- use of multi-item scales.
- Revised Personal Involvement Inventory (RPII)
- contains only 10 items easy to include in a
survey - divided into two overall factors--cognitive and
affective - can measure involvement with a wide variety of
stimulus objects, including products, ads, or
purchase decisions.
15Exhibit 7.4The Revised Personal Involvement
Inventory
Arnould et al. slide 2004
16Involvement Scale on Importance of Corporate
Partnership Decisions
- Assume you are asked to make a decision about how
you feel about a corporate partnership involving
UW, please mark the space that describes how you
would evaluate this decision. - Very important Very unimportant
- Decision __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ decision
- Decision requires Decision requires
- a lot of thought __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ little
thought - A lot to love if Little to lose if
- wrong decision __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ wrong
decision
17Involvement as a Segmentation Variable
- Brand loyalists
- those who are highly involved both with the
product category and with particular
brands. - Information seekers
- those who are highly involved with a product
category but who do not have a
preferred brand. - Routine brand buyers
- those who are not highly involved with the
product category but are involved with a
particular brand in that category. - Brand switchers
- those who are not involved with the product
category or with particular brands.
18Consumer Motivation
- Represents the drive to satisfy both
physiological and psychological needs through
product purchase and consumption - Drive is an internal stimulus directed by
consumer needs - Gives insights into why people buy certain
products
19Consumer Needs
- Marketing seeks to satisfy consumers needs by
creating value - Marketing researchers seek to uncover unmet needs
(e.g., through ethnography and laddering) - Entire industries have been built around
fulfilling consumers needs
20Types of Motives and Needs
- Motive/Need Example Product
- The Achievement Motive
- The Power Motive
- The Uniqueness/Novelty Motive
- Need for Variety
- The Affiliation Motive
- Love and Companionship Needs
- Need to Give
- The Self Esteem Motive
21Types of Motives and Needs
- Motive/Need Example Product
- Physiological Needs
- Safety and Health Needs
- Financial Resources Security
- Pleasure
- To Possess
- Need for Information
- Social Image
22Social Image Needs
- Powerful motivator desire status and social
acceptance - Conspicuous consumption
- Trickle down sometimes trickle up
23Maslows Hierarchy of Needs
Arnould et al. slide 2004
24Implications of Maslows Theory of Marketing
- Reminds us that people prioritize their needs
- Provides useful summary of human needs that may
guide marketing managers to understand consumer
behavior and needs. - List of needs can serve as a key input for
product design - Marketing communications can be designed to
appeal to one or more of the needs
25Murrays Theory of Motivation and Its
Implications for Marketing
- Basic list of 22 major human needs
- People differ in their priority ranking of these
needs. - Criticism
- Lengthy inventory of needs makes it difficult and
impractical for marketers to use. - Murrays detailed list identifies several needs
specifically associated with objects - Acquisition needs
- Order needs
- Retention needs
26Motivational hierarchy, conflict intensity
- People tend to satisfy their most basic needs
first.but not always - Sometimes our motives conflict with one another
motivational conflict - Approach approach
- Avoidance avoidance
- Approach avoidance
- The intensity of our motivation depends upon our
involvement
27Exhibit 7.3Motivational Dynamics and Conflict
Arnould et al. slide
28Consumer Goal Hierarchies
- Goals can be thought of at many different levels
- Focal goal what the consumer is striving for
- Superordinate goals reasons why consumer wants
to achieve the focal goal - Subordinate goals actions that contribute to
the focal goal - Varies among consumers and situations
- Marketing managers can learn what goals to
emphasize in advertising and personal selling by
identifying goals and linkages that relate best
to consumer preferences or intentions
29A Cross-Cultural Examination of Goals
- One important difference among how consumers
interpret their world is whether they grew up in
a culture that stresses - Independent goals (Americans and many western
Europeans) - Interdependent goals (Japanese, other Asians,
Africans, Latin-Americans, and some southern
Europeans)
30Life Themes and Life Projects
- Life themes
- Basic concerns that consumers address in everyday
life (e.g., being educated, being
cosmopolitan, showing good taste) - Life projects
- The construction and maintenance of key life
roles and identities (e.g., being a responsible
mother, a loyal employee, a successful
teacher)
31Student Life Themes and Projects
- Can you name some life themes or projects that
are important to you? - Can you think of ways they influence your
consumption behavior? - Can you see your life themes in your consumer
collage?
32Why Haggle? Case
- How might Maslows hiearchy help to position
Priceline and other similar services more
effectively? - How might Murrays theory be used to improve
marketing communications for Priceline and other
similar services? - In what ways will a knowledge of consumer
involvement be relevant to the success of
offerings such as Priceline and other similar
services?