Title: Why Customers Buy and Use
1Why Customers Buy and Use
- Psychological characteristics
- Motivation
- Learning
- Personality
- Attitudes
- Decision making
- Recognition of need
- Search for information
- Evaluate alternatives
- Make purchase
Experience
2So, What Motivates?
- State of tension, dissatisfaction
- Satisfy lower level needs first
- Many needs learned through socialization
- Rational
- Emotional
3Learning
- Cognitive thought and awareness
- Behavioral association with past events
- Motivation needs and goals
- Cue shows a way toward a goal
- Response
- Negative/Positive reinforcement
4Learning
- Classical conditioning
- Pair with something that brings positive feelings
- Instrumental conditioning
- Cause Effect
5Attitudes
- Enduring disposition
- Cognitive component
- Affective component
- Behavioral component
- Centrality
- Intensity
6Types of decisions
- Complex Decision
- Recognition of need
- Information search
- Evaluation of alternatives
- Purchase decision
- Post-evaluation
- Simple Decision
- Recognition of need
- Evaluation of alternatives
- Purchase decision
- Post-evaluation
7Consumer Recognizes Need
- Latent needs
- Unmet needs
- Problems
- Magnitude of difference between have and need
- Importance
- Adequate definition
8Motivating Consumers
- Finding the correct appeal
- Rational
- Emotional
- Conflicting motives
- Approach/approach
- Approach/avoidance
- Avoidance/avoidance
9Information Search Processing
- Internal and external
- Processing
- Exposure
- Attention
- Perception
- Retention
- Retrieval application
10Identifying Alternatives
- How much to search
- Cost in time and money
- Internal information
- Risk of making wrong decision
- Ability to make a choice
- What is the consumer looking for
- Ideal
- Evaluation of individual brand
11Theory of Reasoned Action
- Best predictor of behavior is intention to act
- Why will the consumer act?
- Consumers beliefs
- Relevant others opinion about behavior
- Change consumer attitude to product
- Change product to match the consumer attitude
toward it
12Purchase and After
- Simplify the act of buying
- Package, make it available
- 300 AM? Dell Computer
- Cognitive dissonance
- At time of purchase
- After purchase
13Organizational Purchases
- Many people involved
- Subject to both rational and emotional factors
- Technical factors present
- More time to make the decision
- Organizations have unique characteristics
14Managing the Product
- What is being sold?
- Whats the buyer like?
- What changed?
- Message
- Product
15Marketing Communications
- Advertising
- Public Relations
- Publicity
- Community Relations
- Sales Promotions
- Customer Relations
- Customer Meetings
- Sales Force
- Collateral
- Trade Show
- Internet
- Telemarketing
16Marketing Communications
Internal
External
- Employees
- Stockholders
- Departments
- Customers
- Resellers
- Companies
- Other
- Government agencies
- Experts
17Human Communications
- Beginning, middle and end
- No intent required
- Process p. 245
18Types of Communication
- Interpersonal
- Organizational
- Public
- Mass
- Persuasive
19Characteristics of the Source
- Highly credible source tend to create an
immediate change in attitude - Expertise
- Honesty
- Attractiveness
- Power of the source
- Word-of-mouth
20Message Variables
- Whats said
- Non-verbals
- Readability
- Order
- Repetition
- Counter arguments
21Content
- Rational
- Emotional
- Hope
- Fear
- Humor
- Sex
- Music
22Audince
- Think specifically in terms of the audience
- Level of understanding
- Environmental setting
- Focus of attention
- Needs, wants
- Ability to process complex in formation
23Advertising
- Non-personal, paid for by advertiser
- Directed to target audiences
- Large group of people
- Has specific objectives
- Improved recall
- Change attitude
- Product sampling
24Classification
- Audience
- Advertiser
- Intention or objective
- Product advertising
- Institutional advertising
25Function of Advertising
- Unfortunately, it does not produce immediate
buyers
26Advertising Weak Force
- Stimulates existing
- memory
- Reminds
- Seldom convinces
27Measurement of Advertising
- One simply cannot discount or control packaging
or - trade dress or shelf position or in-store signage
or the distribution channel - or even the history and experience of the
consumer enough to isolate the - single and individual effects of advertising.
- International Journal of
Advertising, Determining How Brand Communication
Works in the Short and LongTerms, 1998
28Strong Force Brand Experience
- Use
- Observation
- Trial
- Demonstration
- Vicarious -
- Experience
29Total Brand Communication
- sales promotion
- direct marketing
- public relations
- publicity
- events marketing
- brand experience
- research advertising
30PG Bounty Kitchen Towels Most Irritating
Advertisement of1999
- "Pan-Europeanisation in above-the-line
communication is a - waste of time. Anyone chasing the holy grail of
an ad which will - appeal to a Brit, a German and Frenchman is a
jerk."
31Steps to Making Purchase
- Unaware
- Aware
- Knowledge
- Liking
- Prefer
- Conviction
- Buy
32The PersuasiveHierarchy of Effects Model --
Strong, or Persuasive Theory
Action Desire Interest Attention
Awareness
33Message to HeadsIncentive to Hands
- Messages ideas, concepts and information
delivered to consumers. - Incentives immediate response generators,
typically for purchase.
International Journal of Advertising, 1998
34Advertising Players
- Multinational Ad Agencies
- Local Agencies
- In-house agencies
- Client-agency relationship
35Intel Inside Marketing
- What is the role of the advertising agency?
- What is the Intel advertising message?
- How did Intel extend its budget?