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Arnould

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Explain relationships among consumer involvement, ... Routine brand buyers ... of human needs that may guide marketing managers to understand consumer behavior ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Arnould


1
Chapter
7
Consumer Motives, Goals Involvement
2
Objectives
  • 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

3
Key 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.

4
Consumer Involvement
  • the perceived personal importance and/or
    interest attached to the acquisition,
    consumption, and disposition of a product.

5
Can 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

6
Consumer 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)

7
Consumers 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

8
Consumers 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

9
Consumers Level of Involvement Depends Upon
  • Lower Involvement ???? Higher Involvement
  • Situational Factors
  • Receiver of purchase
  • Social visibility of consumption
  • not visible visible

10
As 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

11
Marketing 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

12
Low-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.

13
Two 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

14
Measuring 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.

15
Exhibit 7.4The Revised Personal Involvement
Inventory
Arnould et al. slide 2004
16
Involvement 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

17
Involvement 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.

18
Consumer 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

19
Consumer 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

20
Types 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

21
Types 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

22
Social Image Needs
  • Powerful motivator desire status and social
    acceptance
  • Conspicuous consumption
  • Trickle down sometimes trickle up

23
Maslows Hierarchy of Needs
Arnould et al. slide 2004
24
Implications 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

25
Murrays 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

26
Motivational 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

27
Exhibit 7.3Motivational Dynamics and Conflict
Arnould et al. slide
28
Consumer 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

29
A 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)

30
Life 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)

31
Student 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?

32
Why 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?
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