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PART III: INTERNAL INFLUENCES

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Title: PART III: INTERNAL INFLUENCES


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PART III INTERNAL INFLUENCES
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10
Week
ATTITUDES AND ATTITUDE CHANGE
4
The Power of Attitudes
  • Attitude a lasting, general evaluation of
    people, objects, advertisements, or issues
  • Attitude object (AO)
  • Help to determine a number of preferences and
    actions

5
Functional Theory of Attitudes
  • Katz Attitudes exist because they serve some
    function
  • Determined by a persons motives
  • Attitude functions
  • Utilitarian
  • Value-expressive
  • Ego-defensive
  • Knowledge
  • Marketers emphasize the function a product serves
    for consumers

6
ABC Model of Attitudes
  • Three interrelated attitude components
  • Affect
  • Behavior
  • Cognition
  • Hierarchy of effects
  • Relative impact/importance of attitude components
    depends on consumers motivation toward attitude
    object

7
Hierarchy of Effects
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Hierarchy of Effects
  • Standard Learning Hierarchy
  • Results in strong brand loyalty
  • Assumes high consumer involvement
  • Low-Involvement Hierarchy
  • Consumer does not have strong brand preference
  • Consumers swayed by simple stimulus-response
    connections
  • Experiential Hierarchy
  • Consumers hedonic motivations and moods
  • Emotional contagion
  • Cognitive-affective model vs. independence
    hypothesis

9
Attitude Toward the Ad
  • We form attitudes toward objects other than the
    product that can influence our product selections
  • We often form product attitudes from its ads
  • Aad attitude toward advertiser evaluations of
    ad execution ad evoked mood ad arousal
    effects on consumer viewing context

10
Ads Have Feelings Too
  • Commercials evoke emotion
  • Pleasure
  • Arousal
  • Intimidation

11
Consistency Principle
  • Principle of cognitive consistency
  • We value/seek harmony among thoughts, feelings,
    and behaviors
  • We will change components to make them consistent

12
Cognitive Dissonance Harmony
  • Conflict of attitudes and behavior motivates us
    to reduce dissonance
  • We make them fit by eliminating, adding, or
    changing elements
  • Explains why evaluations of products increase
    after purchase

13
Self-Perception Theory
  • We use observations of our own behavior to
    determine what our attitudes are
  • We must have a positive attitude toward a product
    if we freely purchase it, right?
  • Low-involvement hierarchy
  • Foot-in-the-door technique
  • Low-ball technique
  • Door-in-the-face technique

14
Social Judgment Theory
  • We assimilate new information about attitude
    objects in light of what we already know/feel
  • Initial attitude frame of reference
  • Latitudes of acceptance and rejection
  • Assimilation and contrast effects
  • Choosy mothers choose Jif peanut butter

15
Balance Theory
  • Triad attitude structures
  • Person
  • Perception of attitude object
  • Perception of other person/object
  • Perception can be positive or negative
  • Balanced/harmonious triad elements
  • Unit relation and sentiment relation

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Multi-attribute Attitude Models
  • Three elements
  • Attributes of AO (e.g., college)
  • e.g., Scholarly reputation
  • Beliefs about AO
  • e.g., University of North Carolina is strong
    academically
  • Importance weights
  • e.g., Stressing research opportunities over
    athletics

17
Fishbein Model
  • Most influential multi-attribute model
  • Three components of attitudes
  • Salient beliefs about AO
  • Object-attribute linkages
  • Evaluation of each important attribute
  • Aijk SßijkIik
  • Overall Attitude Score (consumers rating of
    each attribute for all brands) x (importance
    rating for that attribute)

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Saundras College Decision
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Fishbein Model (Contd)
  • Marketing applications
  • Capitalize on relative advantage
  • Strengthen perceived product/attribute linkages
  • Add a new attribute
  • Influence competitors ratings

20
Extended Fishbein Model
  • Research low correlation between reported
    attitude and actual behavior
  • We love commercials, yet still not buy!
  • Theory of reasoned action
  • Intentions vs. behavior
  • Conviction and past purchase behavior
  • Behavioral intentions
  • Social pressure
  • SN NB MC
  • Attitude toward act of buying

21
Obstacles to Predicting Behavior
  • Many researchers do not use Fishbein Model
    appropriately
  • A few of the many obstacles
  • Actual behavior vs. outcomes of behavior
  • Outcomes beyond consumers control
  • Voluntary vs. nonvoluntary acts across cultures
  • Relative impact of SNs vary across cultures

22
Trying to Consume
  • Theory of trying
  • Criterion should be trying to reach goal
  • Intervening factors between intent and
    performance
  • Several new components to account for act of
    trying

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Theory of Trying
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Discussion
  • Construct a multi-attribute model for a set of
    local restaurants
  • Based on your findings, suggest how restaurant
    managers can improve an establishments image.

25
Communications and Attitude Change
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Elements in the Communication Process
SENDER
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Interactive Communications
  • The traditional communications model doesnt tell
    the whole story
  • Consumers have many more choices available and
    greater control to process messages
  • Permission marketing

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Changing Attitudes
  • Persuasion effectiveness of marketing
    communications to change attitudes
  • Reciprocity
  • Scarcity
  • Authority
  • Consistency
  • Liking
  • Consensus

29
Tactical Communications Options
  • Who will be source of message?
  • How should message be constructed?
  • What media will transmit message?
  • What target market characteristics will influence
    ads acceptance?

30
The Source
  • Source effects the same words by different
    people can have very different meanings
  • Source credibility
  • Source attractiveness
  • Match between consumers needs and offered rewards
    of source
  • Match between source and type of product
  • Experts for utilitarian products
  • Celebrities for social risk/impression products
  • Typical consumers for everyday/low-risk products

31
Source Credibility
  • A sources perceived expertise, objectivity, or
    trustworthiness
  • Consumers beliefs that communicator is competent
    and provides competitor information
  • Credible source is persuasive when consumer has
    no formed opinion about product
  • Endorsement contract large profits

32
Sleeper Effect
  • Over time, disliked sources can still get a
    message across effectively
  • We forget about negative source while changing
    our attitudes

33
Building Credibility
  • Relevant qualifications of source to the product
    can enhance credibility of message

34
Source Biases
  • Consumer beliefs about product can be weakened by
    a source perceived to be biased
  • Knowledge bias
  • Reporting bias (hired gun)

35
Hype vs. Buzz
  • Corporate paradox

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Hype vs. Buzz (Contd)
  • Stealth buzz building

37
Source Attractiveness
  • Perceived social value of source
  • Physical appearance
  • Personality
  • Social status
  • Similarity

38
What Is Beautiful Is Good
  • Halo effect
  • Good-looking people are thought to be smarter,
    cooler, and happier
  • Consistency principle
  • Physically attractive source leads to attitude
    change
  • Directs attention to marketing stimuli (ads with
    attractive models)
  • Beauty source of information (especially for
    attractiveness - relevant products)

39
Star Power
  • Celebrities as communications sources
  • Tiger Woods 62 million/year in endorsements!
  • Famous faces capture attention and are processed
    more efficiently by the brain
  • Enhance company images and brand attitudes
  • Celebrities embody cultural and product meanings
  • Q-Score for celebrity endorsers
  • Match-up hypothesis

40
Discussion
  • Many, many companies rely on celebrity endorsers
    as communications sources to persuade.
    Especially when targeting younger people, these
    spokespeople often are cool musicians,
    athletes, or movie stars
  • In your opinion, who would be the most effective
    celebrity endorser today, and why?
  • Who would be the least effective, and why?

41
Nonhuman Endorsers
  • Often, celebrities motives are suspect as
    endorsers of mismatched products
  • Thus, marketers seek alternative endorsers
  • Cartoon characters
  • Mascots/animals

42
The Message
  • Positive and negative effects of elements in TV
    commercials
  • Most important feature stressing unique product
    attribute/benefit

43
The Message (Contd)
  • Selected message issues facing a marketer
  • Message Is it conveyed in words or pictures?
  • How often should message be repeated?
  • Should it draw an explicit conclusion?
  • Should it show both sides of argument?
  • Should it explicitly compare product to
    competitors?

44
Sending the Message
  • Visual vs. verbal communication of message
  • Visual images big emotional impact
  • Verbal message high-involvement situations
  • Factual information
  • More effective when reinforced by a framed
    picture
  • Require more frequent exposures (due to decay)

45
Dual Component of Brand Attitudes
46
Vividness
  • Powerful description/graphics command attention
    and are strongly embedded in memory
  • Active mental imagery (vs. abstract stimuli)
  • Concrete discussion of product attribute

47
One- vs. Two-sided Arguments
  • One-sided supportive arguments
  • Two-sided both positive and negative information
  • Refutational arguments increase source
    credibility by reducing reporting bias
  • Positive attributes should refute presented
    negative attributes
  • Effective with well-educated and not-yet-loyal
    audiences

48
Drawing Conclusions
  • Should argument draw an explicit conclusion for
    consumer?
  • Yesif argument is hard to follow or consumers
    motivation is lacking
  • Noif message is personally relevant

49
Comparative Advertising
  • Message compares two recognizable brands on
    specific attributes
  • New OcuClear relieves three times longer than
    Visine
  • Butconfrontational approach can result in source
    derogation
  • Effective for a new product that
  • Does not merely say it is better than leading
    brand
  • Does not compare itself to an obviously superior
    competitor

50
Emotional vs. Rational Appeals
  • Appeal to the head or to the heart?
  • Many companies use an emotional strategy when
    consumers do not find differences among brands
  • Especially brands in well-established, mature
    categories (e.g., cars and greeting cards)
  • Recall of ad contents tends to be better for
    thinking ads

51
Sex Appeals
  • The prevalence of sexual appeals varies from
    country to country
  • Nudity/undressed models in print ads generates
    negative feelings/tension among same-sex
    consumers
  • Erotic ad content draws attention, but strong
    sexual ad imagery may make consumers less likely
    to
  • Buy a product (unless product is related to sex)
  • Process and recall ads content

52
Discussion
  • Think of ads that rely on sex appeal to sell
    products
  • How often are benefits of the actual product
    communicated to the reader?

53
Humorous Appeals
  • Specific cultures have different senses of humor
  • Overall, humorous ads do get attention
  • Funny ad as source of distraction
  • Inhibits counterarguing, thus increasing message
    acceptance

54
Humorous Appeals (Contd)
  • Humor is more effective when it
  • Doesnt swamp message of clearly defined brand
  • Doesnt make fun of potential consumer
  • Is appropriate to products image

55
Fear Appeals
  • Emphasize negative consequences that can occur
    unless consumer changes behavior/ attitude
  • Fear is common in advertising (especially in
    social marketing)
  • Most effective
  • Moderate threat
  • Presented solution to problem
  • Highly credible source
  • Not all threats are equally effective at inducing
    a fear response
  • The strongest threats are not always the most
    persuasive

56
Forms of Story Presentation
  • Commercials as a lecture vs. a drama
  • Lecture is an attempt at persuasion
  • Drama is similar to play or movie
  • Draws viewer into action or emotional response
    (transformational advertising)

57
ELM
  • Receiver will follow one of two routes to
    persuasion

58
ELM Steak or Sizzle?
  • ELM research indicates that relative
    effectiveness of a strong message and favorable
    source depends on consumers level of involvement
    with advertised product
  • Highly involved consumers look for steak
  • Strong message arguments
  • Those less involved look for sizzle
  • Packaging colors/images, celebrity endorsers
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