Title: Consumer Behaviour Models
1Chapter 3
- Consumer Behaviour Models
2Chapter Objectives
- To understand the role consumer behaviour plays
in the development and implementation of
advertising and promotion programs. - To understand the consumer decision-making
process and how it varies for different types of
purchase.
3Chapter Objectives
- To understand various internal psychological
processes, their influence on consumer decision
making, and implication for advertising and
promotion. - To recognize external factors such as culture,
social class, group influences, and situational
determinants and how they affect consumer
behaviour.
4Consumer Decision Making Process
5Consumer Decision Process
6Sources of Need Recognition
- Out of stock.
- Purchase decision is routine.
- Resolved by choosing familiar brand.
- Dissatisfaction.
- Dissatisfied with current state of
product/service. (I.E. Comfort/style). - Advertising is used to help consumers recognize
need for new product.
7Sources of Need Recognition
- New needs or wants.
- Created by life changes. (I.E. Graduation,
employment status, financial situation). - Wants are desired but not essential.
- Related product purchase.
- Purchase of a new product will most likely
trigger purchase of accessories. (I.E. New
camera will require film).
8Sources of Need Recognition
- Marketer-induced recognition.
- Marketers encourage discontentment with current
state or situation. - Brand switching is encouraged by sales promotion.
- New products.
- Innovative products may stimulate a need.
- Consumers may not see a need for what the
marketer is selling.
9Examining Consumer Motivations
- Marketers recognize need recognition will
influence the remainder of the decision process. - To better understand consumers reasoning
marketers devote considerable attention to
motives. - Motives - factors that compel a consumer to take
a particular action.
10Maslows Hierarchy of Needs
Physiological needs (hunger, thirst)
11Market Research Methods
- In-depth interviews.
- The consumer talks freely in an unstructured
interview to obtain insights into his or her
motives, ideas or opinions. - Projective techniques.
- Methods allowing consumers to project values,
motives, attitudes or needs on some external
object.
12Market Research Methods
- Association tests.
- Consumers respond with the first thing that comes
to mind when presented with some verbal or
pictorial stimulus. - Focus groups.
- A group of consumers with similar backgrounds or
interests discuss a product, idea or issue.
13Information Search
- Internal search
- The scanning of information stored in memory
regarding various purchase alternatives - External search
- Engaged when internal search does not yield
enough information (external sources of
information are used.)
14External Information Search
- Personal sources
- Friends, relatives, co-workers
- Market-controlled sources
- Ads, salespeople, displays
- Public sources
- Print articles, news reports
- Personal experience
- Handling, examining, testing, using
15Perception
- The process by which individuals receive, attends
to, interprets and stores information to create a
picture of the world. - Selective perception
- Filtering process in which internal and external
factors influence what is received and how it is
processed. - Occurs in all 4 stages of perception process.
16Stages in Perceptual Process
- Stage 1 sensation.
- Immediate direct response of the senses to a
stimulus. - Selective exposure.
- Consumers choose whether or not to make
themselves available for information.
17Stages in Perceptual Process
- Stage 2 selecting the information.
- Personality, needs, motives, expectations will
affect information that is selected. - Selective attention.
- Consumer focuses on certain stimuli while
excluding others.
18Stages in Perceptual Process
- Stage 3 interpreting the information.
- Organizing, categorizing, and interpreting the
incoming information. - Selective comprehension.
- Interpreting information based on their own
attitudes, beliefs, motives and experiences.
19Stages in Perceptual Process
- Stage 4 retaining the information.
- Storage of information into short-term and
long-term memory. - Selective retention.
- Consumers do not remember everything they see,
hear, or read.
20The Selective Perception Process
Selective Exposure
Selective Attention
Selective Comprehension
Selective Retention
21Evaluation of Alternatives
22Evaluative Criteria
- Dimensions or attributes of a product or service
used to compare alternatives. - (I.E) purchase of an automobile.
- Objective criteria - price, warrantee, etc.
- Subjective criteria - style, appearance, image.
23Evaluative Criteria
- Marketers view their product as a bundle of
attributes - Consumers view the product as a set of
consequences - Functional consequences are concrete, tangible
outcomes - Psychological consequences are abstract and
subjective
24Consumer Attitudes
- Learned predispositions to respond toward an
objectan individuals overall feelings toward or
evaluation of an object. - Summarize consumers evaluation of an object and
represent positive or negative feelings and
behaviours.
25Consumer Attitudes
- Consumers hold attitudes toward
- Individuals
- Brands
- Companies
- Organizations
- Product categories
- Retailers
- Advertisements
- Media
26Attitude Change Strategies
- Increase or change the strength or belief rating
of a brand on an important attribute - Change consumers perceptions of the importance
or value of an attribute - Add a new attribute to the attitude formation
process - Change perceptions of belief ratings for a
competing brand
27Purchase Decision
- At some point consumer stops evaluating
alternatives and makes purchase decision. - Consumer develops a purchase intention or
predisposition to buy a certain brand. - Purchase decisions will be different depending on
the complexity of the product.
28Integration Processes
- The way product knowledge, meanings and beliefs
are combined to evaluate two or more
alternatives. - Consumers make purchase selections by using
formal integration strategies. - Process involves deliberate evaluation of the
alternatives attribute by attribute.
29Postpurchase Evaluation
- After consumption the consumer assesses level of
performance of the product or service. - Feedback acquired from actual use of a product
influences the likelihood of future purchases. - Advertising is used to reinforce consumer
decisions to purchase their brands.
30Satisfaction/Dissatisfaction
- A judgment consumers make with respect to the
pleasurable level of consumption-related
fulfillment. - Satisfaction occurs when expectations are either
met or exceeded. - Dissatisfaction results when performance is below
expectations.
31Behavioral Learning Theory
- Classical conditioning
- Assumes that learning is an associative process
with an already existing relationship between a
stimulus and a response. - Operant conditioning
- The individual must actively operate or act on
some aspect of the environment for learning to
occur. - Response is positive reinforcement (reward) or
negative reinforcement (punishment)
32Classical Conditioning Theory
33Operant Conditioning Process
Behavior (consumer uses product or service)
34Environmental Influences on Consumers
35Roles in Family Decision-Making Process
- Initiator - initiates purchase decision.
- Information provider - gathers information to be
used in making decision. - Influencer - influences criteria used in
selection process.
36Roles in Family Decision-Making Process
- Decision maker(s) - makes the purchase decision.
- Purchasing agent - physically makes the purchase.
- Consumer - user of the product.