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Consumer Attitudes

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Title: Consumer Attitudes


1
Consumer Attitudes
2
Attitudes
What is an attitude?
  • Expressions of inner feelings that reflect
    whether a person is favorably or unfavorably
    predisposed to some object
  • in marketing, object can be a brand, a brand
    name, a service, a service provider, a retail
    store, a company, an advertisement, in essence,
    any marketing stimuli.

3
Why, From a Marketers point of view, is it
important to know about Attitudes?
If a consumer is favorably disposed towards your
product or service then you want to keep them so
disposed If they are unfavorably disposed then
you want to change their attitude.
  • Therefore we need to know.
  • What they are
  • How they are formed
  • What influences them
  • How they can be changed

4
Development of Attitudes
Attitudes are learned predispositions therefore,
their development is influenced by
  • personality of the individual
  • family
  • peers
  • experience
  • education
  • culture
  • subculture, nationality

5
Functions of Attitudes
  • Utilitarian guide consumers to seek out products
    for certain benefit Do they like it or not.

6
  • Value-expressive consumers attitudes guide them
    to use products that are an expression of
    themselves what does it say about them.

7
  • Ego-defensive consumers attitudes guide them to
    use products that protect their self-esteem
    What self doubts do they help overcome.

Edna's plight Bad breath. A Listerine ad from
the 1920s.
8
  • Knowledge function attitudes enable us to
    organize the information does the product meet
    the needs for order and structure

Shells ad provides reassurance
9
Three Components of Attitudes
  • The ABCs of attitudes
  • The Affective Component (based on feelings or
    overall evaluation) I feel good about myself
    when I drive a BMW
  • The Behavioral Component (likely action toward
    object e.g. from a consumer behavior point of
    view, the consumers intention to buy a product)
    I will buy a BMW next time
  • The Cognitive Component (based on beliefs what
    you think about a marketing stimulus) I think
    BMWs are quality cars

10
Hierarchy of Effects
This sweater looks so good on the mannequin that
some consumers just have to have it. In other
words, they fall in love with it and buy it. Once
they get it home they learn about it by looking
at the tag to see if it needs to be dry cleaned
etc. Whats the ABC sequence.
11
Golf Pro shops encourage shoppers to take clubs
to the driving range to try them out before
buying them. Many companies give out free
samples. Consumers first try the product, then
decide whether they like it or not. Finally they
form an opinion of it. The ABC sequence is?
12
Washing machines are about as expensive as other
major appliances but are usually hidden in the
basement, and few care about how they look.
Washing machines are functional. When buying one
it is likely consumers will visit several stores
first, talk to salesmen check the Internet etc.
i.e. Consumers gather information, consider the
alternatives and then choose a model. The ABC
sequence is?


13
  • High Involvement
  • Learn-Feel-Do
  •  
  • Low Involvement
  • Learn-Do-Feel
  •  
  • Experiential
  • Feel-Do-Learn

14
Our attitude can be influenced by the ad over and
above the product
An ad with a warm feeling
15
The Woman in This Ad Exhibits a High Level of
Attitudinal Commitment to Her Employer
16
Fishbeins Multi-attribute Theory
  • Fishbeins model argues that consumers attitudes
    towards a brand derive from their beliefs about
    the attributes of the brand and their evaluations
    of those attributes
  • Three factors influence attitude formation
  • salient attributes for an object/product
  • extent to which consumer believes product
    contains these salient attributes
  • Importance of the attribute to the consumer

17
Fishbeins Multiattribute Theory
  • Step One List of Attributes
  • Step Two Obtain the relative importance of them
    (weights).
  • Step Three Obtain the evaluation of each brand
    with respect to each attribute.
  • (6Excellent, 5Very Good, 4Good, 3Bad, 2Very
    Bad, 1Poor)
  • Step Four Obtain the mathematical solution,
    applying Fishbeins Formula.

18
Fishbeins Multi-attribute Theory
  • Aijk ? (Bijk x Iik) where
  • i attribute
  • j brand
  • k consumer
  • I Importance weighting
  • B Extent to which the brand is believed to
    possess the attribute
  • A Attitude toward brand/product/etc.

19
Example Application of Fishbeins Multi-attribute
Theory
  • In Crowfoot, there are 3 banks TD, CIBC, Royal.
  • We would like to know the degree of preference
    clients have to each
  • Step One List of Attributes quickness in
    service, office hours, localization, parking
    facilities, etc
  • Step Two Obtain the relative importance of them
    (weights). Quickness 1, Hours 4, Localization 3,
    Parking 2
  • Step Three Obtain the evaluation of each bank
    with respect to each attribute. (6 Excellent,
    5Very Good, 4Good, 3Bad, 2Very Bad, 1Poor)
  • Step Four Obtain the mathematical solution,
    applying Fishbeins Model.

20
Example Application of Fishbeins Multi-attribute
Theory
  • Importance Royal TD
    CIBC
  • Quickness 1 4 3
    1
  • Hours 4 3
    3 3
  • Localization 3 4
    3 2
  • Parking 2 1 2
    5
  • Total 30 28
    29

Which is the best Bank? Which is the worst
Bank? What would you do if you were responsible
for TD?
21
Problems with Fishbeins Model
  • Measure of Attitude not equal to Behaviour
  • Does not address situational factors
  • Not all attitudes are equal - some strongly held
    others weakly
  • Does not consider social factors
  • Some things are beyond consumer's control
  • Assumes that we have been able to specify
    adequately all the relevant attributes

22
Fishbeins Theory of Reasoned Action
  • A refinement of his multi-attribute model
  • Now considers conviction with which attitude held
    - more of a behavioral intention model
  • Introduces ideas of importance of opinions of
    significant others (subjective norms) and a
    consumers motivation to comply with the opinions
    of these significant others.

23
Attitude-Behavior Consistency
  • Note A positive attitude toward a product does
    not necessarily mean that the consumer will buy
  • Attitude-behavior consistency, the extent to
    which attitudes lead to purchase, is determined
    by a variety of consumer, situational, and
    measurement factors

24
Attitude-Behavior Consistency
  • Consumer Characteristics
  • Resources, experience, state vs. action
    orientation, degree of conviction with which
    attitude is held
  • Situational Characteristics
  • Intervening time, unforeseen events, social
    influences, message repetition
  • Measurement Characteristics
  • timing of measurement, reliability of measurement

25
Implications of Attitude Research for Marketing
Strategy
  • Product positioning and repositioning
  • Advertising-focus on certain attributes/benefits
  • Marketing research
  • Segmentation
  • Distribution select outlets for which consumers
    have favorable attitudes

26
Consumers can also have attitudes towards the act
of buying
27
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28
Attitude Change
29
The Marketers Challenge
  • Deep seated attitudes are internalized and
    become part of the person's value system
  • Attitudes are difficult to change because they
    are so important to the individual e.g. New Coke

30
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31
Branding America
32
  • Persuasion - the active attempt to change
    attitudes
  • Marketing messages are designed to persuade
    consumers to change brands
  • The effort to persuade will influence how to
    market/advertise
  • Who will be depicted using the product in the
    ad
  • How the message should be constructed
  • What media to use
  • Where to advertise

33
Interactive Communications
34
THE ELEMENTS OF COMMUNICATION
35
  • THE SOURCE
  • Who is delivering the message can have a big
    impact on whether it will be accepted.
  • source credibility
  • a credible source can be particularly persuasive

Expertise
Trustworthiness
Objectivity
Attractiveness
36
Source Credibility Credibility can be enhanced if
the sources qualifications are perceived as
relevant to the product being endorsed. If they
are seen as experts.
37
Celebrities as Credible Sources
  • Awareness
  • Due to their fame and high profile celebrity
    endorsers enable messages to stand out and break
    through the media clutter.
  • hold the viewer's attention
  • a consumer is more likely to keep the television
    on the channel showing a commercial with Wayne
    Gretzky than a commercial with an unknown actor.
  • provide testimony for a product or service,
  • especially effective when the product has
    contributed to their celebrity eg. consumers may
    be more likely to try a motor oil endorsed by Al
    Unser, Jr. This relationship can increase a
    consumer's belief and trust in the product and
    its benefits.
  • Instant credibility
  • when consumers see a credible celebrity endorsing
    a product, consumers think that the product must
    be at least OK

38
  • PR coverage
  • celebrities are topical and create high PR
    coverage.
  • Celebrity-company marriages are covered by most
    media
  • To create positive attitudes towards products
    and generate sales
  • EG for sports figures, people know they are not
    going to be as good as these athletes, but having
    their equipment makes them feel better.
  • Approximately 20 of all television commercials
    feature a famous person from the world of sport,
    television, movies or musical entertainment

39
Drawbacks of using Celebrities

Pepsi Shaquille O'Neal 25 million Nike
Tiger Woods 40 million Reebok Venus Williams
40 million Reebok Allen Iverson 100 million
(lifetime) Shick Andre Agassi 19
million Nike Michael Jordan 40 million
40
Drawbacks of using Celebrities
41
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42
  • Consumer cynicism
  • People know celebrities get paid a lot of money
    for endorsements and this knowledge leads them to
    cynicism about celebrity endorsements.

43
Consumer cynicism
Introducing The New Kmart!
  • The logo does signify the change that we are
    making. It's truly a new beginning for us.
  • Jeff Smith, Kmart
  • "The new logo will signify change but the reality
    is they have to do a better job inside the
    store.
  • David Littmann, Comerica economist
  • K-Mart forgot the basics, like a clean store,
    well-stocked shelves, helpful personnel and
    attention to detail. The stores are a mess.
  • The Shopper Report

44
There has to be a link between product and
celebrity
Cybill Shepherd was endorsing beef industry when
said she did not eat meat.
Sainsburys used Catherine Zeta Jones for its
recipe advertisements when she was caught
shopping in Tesco (UK grocery stores)
45
Guidelines For selecting a spokesperson
(FRED) Familiarity The target market must
recognize the celebrity, and perceive the person
as friendly, likeable, and trustworthy. The more
familiar an endorser, the more likely consumers
are to buy the endorsed product Relevance For
credibility there should be some link between the
celebrity and the product, and between the
celebrity and the audience. It is important for
audience to identify with the celebrity. E.g.
older consumers feel a tie to Arnold Palmer. If
consumers can associate with the endorser, they
will feel more comfortable accepting and buying
the product or service. Esteem Consumers must
respect celebrity for the commercial credibility.
Differentiation The public must see the
endorser as different from all the rest. Michael
Jordan is an example of a celebrity that stands
apart from the normal athlete, one of the
contributing factors to his success as an
endorser.
46
  • Source Attractiveness
  • Beautiful people are used in advertising because
  • consumer's pay more attention to ads containing
    attractive models
  • degree of attractiveness influences consumer's
    product evaluation - the more attractive the
    higher we evaluate the product.

47
Trustworthiness
48
The Message What makes a marketing message
persuasive?
  • stress a unique attribute or benefit of the
    product - USP
  • showing convenience of use
  • showing new product or improved features
  • people incidental to the message
  • indirect comparison with other products
  • demonstration of the product in use
  • demonstration of tangible results
  • no principal character - i.e. more time is
    devoted to the product

49
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50
Words or Pictures Which conveys the message best?
  • Visual
  • affects aesthetic evaluations
  • stress on creativity
  • don't convey factual information well
  • Verbal
  • Take more time for consumer to process
  • Better suited to high involvement medium - eg
    print
  • harder to remember therefore more repetition
    needed

verbal elements are more effective when
reinforced by an accompanying picture
51
Bloomingdales 1898
Throughout the 20th century pictures have
gradually replaced words. Early advertising tried
to persuade the reader with a series of facts
about the product contained in the ad.
Corn Flakes, 1933
Cosmopolitan, 1997
Puerto Rican Rum, 1974
52
  • VIVIDNESS
  • precise descriptions or vivid graphics
  • command attention
  • remembered more than vague messages
  • Companies that focused attention on the culture
    kept employee turnover to just 6.2 compared to
    20 for industry at large.
  • Vs
  • Companies that focused attention on the culture
    kept employee turnover lower than for the
    industry at large.

53
  • Repetition
  • is the mother of teachers
  • The idea behind the use of repetition in
    advertising is that we, like Pavlov's dog, will
    become conditioned to behave in a certain manner
    namely, we will respond by buying the product
  • increases familiarity and brand awareness
  • Not only are ads repeated, but repetition is
    also used within the ads or commercials
    themselves
  • too much repetition leads to habituation --
    consumer ignores stimulus because of boredom.

54
  • boredom can be eliminated by slightly varying the
    content of ads around a common theme

55
Constructing the Argument One-Versus two-sided
arguments
  • One-sided arguments
  • persuasive messages that support one side of an
    issue or one product - stress on attributes and
    benefits
  • cannot address questions
  • usually more persuasive with audiences who have
    little or no comprehension of an issue..

56
two-sided arguments
  • provide information about both positive and
    negative attributes of a product or service
  • Negative attributes trivialised or refuted
  • Help to differentiate the product
  • works well when receivers are not already loyal
    to the product
  • possess the potential for different types of
    delivery. E.g. do you deliver positive or
    negative first

57
Why would a marketer want to draw attention to
the negative aspects of their product?
  • audience may pay more attention to it.
  • By presenting the opposing side, the advertiser
    causes its audience to question the product or
    service. By questioning it, the individuals are
    made to think about the attributes. The more
    these attributes are considered...the longer the
    product or service is in the mind of the
    consumer.
  • When topics are made more interesting or
    involving messages are processed more thoroughly.
    Consumers think more highly of products, brands,
    and services which make them think. The process
    is viewed as novel and pleasant.
  • more credible than one-sided ads because they
    admit that the advertised brands have
    shortcomings.
  • researchers have found that those exposed to the
    two-sided messages were more likely to have a
    more favorable attitude after the exposure. That
    is the negative aspects of the message can yield
    a positive, desired attitude after exposure

58
  • Providing positive attributes first followed by
    negative attributes.
  • allows consumer to hear about a product or
    service in a positive light first.
  • provides a built-in counter claim, or opposing
    message. By providing only mild negative
    information to the consumer, the consumer is
    prevented from concocting potentially worse
    negative images on their own. Thus, it leads the
    consumer to perceive that the positive attributes
    presented are the stronger attributes.
  • Providing negative attributes first followed by
    positive attributes
  • Positive attributes remembered best since they
    came last.

59
  • Comparative advertisement
  • type of two-sided message
  • includes positive attributes about a product or
    service and some negative aspects of its
    competitor's product product A is better than
    product B.
  • the negative inclusions may lead a consumer to
    believe that there are more positive attributes
    to associated with the product or service when it
    admits that it has competitors.
  • often works in priced-based advertising in print
    media, where competitors' prices are compared
    side-by-side.
  • acknowledgement of the competitors may be direct
    or indirect.

60
Pitfalls of Comparative Advertising
  • Every mention of a competitor's name or product
    in an advertisement increases the probability
    that the audience will think the ad is for that
    competitor. Research commonly finds that a large
    percentage of the audience will believe that the
    competitor's product is the one being advertised.
  • audience may also doubt the credibility of the
    biased ad
  • false or misleading statements could lead to
    litigation.
  • Eg. 1992 Ad for Maytag dishwasher said that
    "Nobody, But Nobody Cleans Better than Maytag or
    Holds More Dishes!"
  • supported by results of a proprietary test .
    Whirlpool argued that its dishwasher cleaned
    better based on independent tests.

61
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62
  • EMOTIONAL APPEALS
  • emotional versus rational appeals to head or
    heart
  • depends on the product and the type of
    relationship the consumers have with it. - ads
    for cars focus on emotion
  • recall for ad contents tends to be better for
    thinking ads than for feeling ads
  • Products are sold today through the use of
    emotional appeals and identifications.

63
images and text in this ad are designed to have
the maximum emotional effect for one purpose to
persuade the reader to make an act of charity
64
Heart or Head?
65
  • Humorous Appeals
  • Culturally relative
  • effective at catching people's attention.
  • Recognition scores high for humorous ads
  • Inhibit consumer from counter arguing which
    increases the likelihood of message acceptance
  • more effective when brand is clearly identified
    creates a positive attitude
  • subtle humour usually best
  • Does not work well for products where consumers
    want the facts - e.g. food or where people have
    personal ties to the goods eg designer clothing,
    jewellery and sports cars. Ads poking fun at
    those products offend some consumers so much that
    they will not buy the product - it's like poking
    fun of the consumers
  • Humor is an effective tool for selling products
    like candy and gum, because consumers don't have
    to do much decision-making before they buy such
    items,

66
  • 1996 advertisers spent 10 billion on humorous
    ads out of the total 100 billion spent on all
    ads
  • 72 percent of the 100 Best Commercials of All
    Time use humor to reach the target audience

67
Effective humour surprises the audience, and at
the same time, speaks some sort of truth. The
goal in using humour in advertising is to make
the audience laugh, and, more importantly, have
them walk away thinking "this company understands
me"
68
Brands will be remembered more if they are
intimately entwined in the humour
69
  • Pitfalls of Humorous Appeals
  • funny material can dominate the message and thus
    the product recognition is lost
  • Reduces Comprehension
  • a punch line that doesn't pay off can backfire

70
Fear Factor
  • Highlight the risk or negative consequences of
    not using the advertised brand or of engaging in
    unsafe behaviour
  • Fear of social physical harm or social
    disapproval
  • Fear stimulates message involvement
  • common factor for public-policy issues e.g. stop
    smoking
  • Fear appeals are usually most effective when
    only a moderate amount of fear is induced
    increasing levels of fear do no result in
    increased change
  • Lead customer to believe advertised product is
    insufficient to alleviate problem
  • Pitfall - distract customer from focal product
    (ie. dwell on the fearful event rather than the
    proposed solution)

71
Which ad is more effective?
72
a solution to the problem should be presented.
otherwise consumers will tune out the ad since
they can do nothing it solve the problem
73
Message as Metaphor
  • the use of an explicit comparison -- A is B
  • Truth in advertising" laws make it highly
    desirable for advertisers to avoid making
    explicit statements that could be true or false
    therefore metaphors (and other devices) are
    typically conveyed in "non-sentences - eg Gateway
    Computer ad
  • More muscle.
  • More juice.
  • More room.
  • More RAM.
  • More gigabytes.
  • More glory.
  • More mail
  • Even more mail.

. More than one program running at a time. More
brains. More brawn. More music. More modem.
More software. More music. More tools.
74
  • Resonance
  • a literary device that employs a play on words
    (a double meaning) to communicate a product
    benefit.
  • puns are used as attention-grabbers
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