Consumer Behaviour (Ch. 3) Flashcards

1
Q

Why do we need to study consumer behavior

A

We need to understand consumer behaviour before we can hope to influence it: People aren’t what they eat, but they eat what they are

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2
Q

What are the 5 steps in the Consumer Buying Process

A

Need recognition, information search, evaluation of alternatives, purchase decision, and post-purchase evaluation

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3
Q

Step 1: Need Recognition
Define it and name sources of it

A

individual becomes aware of a difference between their desired state and their current condition
Sources of need recognition: inventory runs out, changing reference group, family life cycle, dissatisfaction, boredom/novelty

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4
Q

How can a marketing agency encourage need recognition for consumers ?

A

educating the consumer, remind the consumer and exaggerate the problem

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5
Q

Step 2: Information Search
Internal and External Sources

A

Personal: talking to family, friends, peers
Experiential: handling/using the product
Commercial: advertising/sales people
Public: government agencies, consumer groups

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6
Q

Consideration Set

A

the products/brands that a consumer evaluates when purchasing

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7
Q

What is the most influential source for a consumer in the buying process?

A

Internal sources such as personal and experiential because that is who the consumer trusts the most

Also, consumer reviews/reports are influential, independent and informative

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8
Q

Step 3: Evaluation of Alternatives
How do consumers choose from within the consideration set?

A

Spectrum:
LEFT: Careful calculation, logical thinking, costs/benefits analysis
RIGHT: Impulse, feeling and intuition
* Choice depends on the type of purchase

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9
Q

Step 4: Purchase Decision
Purchase intention becomes purchase decision when…

A

Purchase intention becomes purchase decision when:
- It’s easy to justify and feel approval
- No unexpected events occur (price change, stockout)

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10
Q

Step 5: Post Purchase Behaviour

A

Consumer satisfaction is a function of expectations and perceived performance

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11
Q

What are the 3 factors that affect the marketing mix

A

Situational: purchase task, physical surroundings and antecedent states
Socio-Cultural: family, reference groups
Psychological: personality, lifestyle, values, motivations

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12
Q

Socio-Cultural Factor

A

Consists of a set of basic values, perceptions, wants & behaviours, learned from family and remains stable over time
Sub-culture: religion, age, geography

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13
Q

What are the different types of reference groups?

A

Associative: group you belong to (work, school, church, age, gender
Aspirational: don’t belong to but wish to (celebrities, friend groups)
Disassociative: don’t belong or wish to belong (country music, political parties)

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14
Q

What categories of products do peers groups have high and low influence on?

A

Public luxuries: high product and brand influence (golf clubs, skis)
Public necessities: high brand influence, low product influence (car, clothes)
Private luxuries: low brand influence, high product influence (pool table)
Private necessities: low brand and product influence (milk, toothpaste)

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15
Q

Psychological Influence: Motivations

A

needs that are sufficiently pressing to direct the person to seek satisfaction of the need
- Maslow’s Hierarchy is a factor

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16
Q

Attention vs. Exposure

A

Exposure: fulfilled by: ads, shelf space, buzz marketing
- Leads to familiarity
Attention: selective, people decide what to focus on

17
Q

What are some tactics marketers use to get attention of consumers?

A

novelty/surprise, sound/motion, cognition, humour, incomplete stimulus

18
Q

Perception: How do people interpret products?

A

People interpret stimuli on the fly, and are affected by context

19
Q

How can you influence people’s perceptions of products?

A

Branding: well known brands, names
Product features: product color, labelling

20
Q

Describe Influences, Beliefs & Attitude

A

Influences: deeply held beliefs, hard to change
Beliefs: descriptive thought of a product, based on experience (doesn’t involve like/dislike)
Attitude: a constant evaluation of an object, has action implications, shaped by beliefs and values

21
Q

Describe the market structure and demand of an Organizational Buyer

A
  • fewer but larger buyers
  • geographically concentrated
  • derived demand based on consumers’ purchases
  • more people are involved in buying process, making it more formalized
22
Q

Marketing Implications of Organizational Buyers

A
  • direct selling is important
  • physical distribution is important
  • ads must be technical, cost/benefit driven
  • prices are negotiable