Title: Motivation and Emotion
1Chapter 7
Motivation and Emotion
2What Is Motivation?
- The driving force within individuals that impels
them to action - It is produced by a state of arousal or tension,
which exists as the result of an unfulfilled need - Individuals strive consciously and subconsciously
to reduce the tension through behavior they
anticipate will fulfill their needs and thus
relieve of the stress they feel
3Implications for marketers
- Ads and promotions are aimed at stimulating the
state of tension - To be successful, ads have to also provide
direction to the advertised brand
4Classifying Consumer Motivations
- Researchers put motivation into five categories
- Conscious vs. Unconscious
- High vs. Low Urgency
- Positive vs. Negative Polarity
- Intrinsic vs. Extrinsic
- Rational vs. Emotional
51. Conscious vs. unconscious
- Conscious motives are motives we are aware of,
the reasons for our behavior are clear, and these
motives do not need to be aroused - Sometimes we are unaware of the reason why a
particular behavior was undertaken our
motivation is unconscious
62. High vs. low urgency
- High urgency needs must be satisfied immediately
and may make comparison shopping impossible - Low urgency needs can be postponed and enable
consumers to shop for the best product at the
best price
73. Positive and negative motivation
- Positive motivation drives consumers toward some
object or condition - Negative motivation (e.g., fear/guilt) drives
consumers away from a consequence
84. Intrinsic vs. extrinsic
- Intrinsic motivation is engaging in behavior for
the pleasure of the behavior itself the behavior
is the reward - Extrinsic motivation is engaging in behavior for
a reward that is independent of the activity
95. Rational v. emotional motives
- Rationality implies consumers select goals based
on totally objective and utilitarian criteria,
such as size, weight, price, miles per gallon,
etc. - Ads that provide factual information are aimed at
this motivation - Emotion implies the selection of goals according
to personal or subjective criteria, such as
pride, fear, affection or status - Ads that identify products with a particular
lifestyle target emotional motivation
10Needs and goals as elements of motivation
- Every individual has needs
- Innate/primary needs are physiological they
include needs for sustenance (air, food, water,
sex) - Acquired/secondary needs are learned in response
to our culture or environment they result from
our individual psychological state and
relationships with others
11Goals
- All human behavior is goal-oriented
- Generic goals are the general classes of goals
that will satisfy human needs - Product-specific goals are the specifically
branded products and services consumers select as
their goals
12- The selection of goals depends on a number of
factors related to the person or situation - Physical, financial and emotional condition
- Cultural values and norms
- Social acceptance of the goal
13Types and systems of needs
- For many years, psychologists and others
interested in human behavior have attempted to
develop exhaustive lists of human needs - Lists of human motives often are too long to be
of practical use to marketers - The most useful kind of list is a limited one, in
which needs are sufficiently generic to subsume
more detailed human needs
14- Some psychologists have suggested that people
have different need priorities based on their
personalities, experiences, environments, etc. - Others believe that most humans experience the
same basic needs, to which they a assign a
similar priority ranking
15Maslows hierarchy of needs
- Maslow formulated a widely accepted theory of
human motivation based on a universal hierarchy
of needs - Holds that individuals seek to satisfy
lower-level needs before higher-level needs
emerge - The lowest level of chronically unsatisfied need
serves to motivate behavior - When that need is satisfied, a new and higher
need emerges, and so on
16Five basic needs (in order)
- Physiological needs
- Safety needs
- Social needs
- Egoistic needs
- Self-actualization needs
17- Some overlap exists between the levels
- No need is ever totally satisfied, thus multiple
levels of needs may affect consumers
simultaneously
181. Physiological needs
- The most basic needs, required to sustain
biological life - the same as the primary needs listed earlier
(food, water, air, shelter, clothing, sex) - Physiological needs are dominant when they are
chronically unsatisfied
192. Safety needs
- After the first needs are met, safety and
security become the driving force behind behavior - Involve much more than physical safety
- Order
- Stability
- Routine
- Familiarity
- Control over ones life and environment
203. Social needs
- Include love, affection, belonging and acceptance
- People seek warm and satisfying human
relationships with others and are motivated by
love for their families
214. Egoistic needs
- Inwardly-directed ego needs reflect an
individuals need for self-acceptance,
self-esteem, success, independence, personal
satisfaction with a job well done - Outwardly-directed ego needs include needs for
prestige, reputation, status and recognition from
others
225. Self-actualization
- Maslow most people never fully satisfy ego
needs thus dont reach this level - Refers to persons desire to fulfill potential
23Maslows Hierarchy of Needs
Safety and Security Needs (Protection,
order, stability)
Social Needs (affection, friendship,
belonging)
Ego Needs (Prestige, status, self esteem)
Self-Actualization (Self-fulfillment)
Physiological Needs (Food, water, air,
shelter, sex)
24Implications for Marketers
- Consumer goods often serve to satisfy each of the
need levels - Enables marketers to focus appeals on a need
level shared by a large segment of the population
25Segmentation applications
- Specific advertising appeals are directed to one
or more need-segment levels
26Positioning applications
- Key to positioning is to find a nichean
unsatisfied need that is not occupied by a
competing product or brand - Maslow postulated that no need is ever fully
satisfied - Thus needs will always be a motivating force
- Marketers can identify an unsatisfied need which
their competition appears not to be meeting
27Social motivation theories
- Some psychologists have identified a trio of
needs that, while subsumed within Maslows
hierarchy, considered individually have unique
relevance to consumer behavior - Power
- Affiliation
- achievement
281. Power
- Relates to an individuals desire to control his
or her environment - Closely related to the ego need in that many
individuals experience increased self-esteem when
they exercise power over objects or people
292. Affiliation
- Suggests that behavior is strongly influenced by
desire for friendship, acceptance and belonging - People with high affiliation needs tend to be
socially dependent on others - They often select goods they believe will meet
with the approval of peers
303. Achievement
- Persons with strong need for achievement often
regard personal accomplishment as an end in
itself - Tend to be more self-confident, enjoy taking
calculated risks, actively research their
environments, and value feedback - Monetary rewards provide an important type of
feedback
31- Seek activities that provide the opportunity for
self-evaluation - Products that appeal to them include innovative
products and do-it-yourself projects - Individuals who have achieved success in highly
challenging activities (e.g., ocean yacht racing,
mountaineering) are appealing as endorsers of
products
32Motivational conflict
- Occurs when multiple needs arise and fulfilling
one goal conflicts with another - The end result is frustration
- Conflict can involve both positive and negative
motivation
33- Lewin identified three types of motivational
conflict - Approach-approach conflicts
- Avoidance-avoidance conflicts
- Approach-avoidance conflicts
341. Approach-approach conflicts
- Arise when consumers face a choice among
desirable optioni.e., two positive goals or
motivations - the more equal the positives, the greater the
conflict - Marketers can use tactics designed to ease the
conflict by making one option more attractive or
creating conditions where consumers can have both
352. Avoidance-avoidance conflicts
- Arise when consumers must choose between two
options with unfavorable consequences - Marketers seek ways to minimize the negative
aspects of purchasing their product - Marketers may also emphasize the negatives
related to avoiding the purchase of the product
363. Approach-avoidance conflicts
- Most typical conflict because every purchase
requires parting with something (time, money,
energy, risk) - Consumers only purchase products when they
believe the benefits outweigh the costs - It is the job of marketers to convince consumers
that their products value exceeds its costs
37Emotions
- Recall that motives can be rational or emotional
- Love, fear, anger, envy, loneliness, sorrow
- These emotions influence our behavior
- In recognition, marketers use emotions to sell
products
38How emotional ads work
- Emotional ads trigger physiological and
psychological reactions - Marketers use the emotions aroused by the ad to
create a bond between the consumer and the
product - Marketers can then activate the need for the
product by stirring the relevant emotion