Chapter 2 Flashcards

1
Q

Sensation

A

o Immediate response of our sensory receptors (eyes, ears, nose, mouth, and skin) to a basic stimuli as light, colour, and sound

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2
Q

perception

A

process by which sensation are selected, organized, and interpreted
o Study of perception focuses on what we add to or take away from raw sensations as we choose which to notice and assign meaning to them

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3
Q

What do marketers focus on more

A

perception rather then sensation

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4
Q

3 stages of perception process

A

sensory stimuli (sights sounds…)
sensory receptors (eyes nose..)

exposure -> attention->interpretation

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5
Q

sensory stimuli

A

Sights
Sound
Smell
Taste
Textured

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6
Q

explain emotions and applications of red, blue, yellow, green, orange, black, purple

A

red
- arousal and stimulated appetite
- energy seen in clearance

Blue
- relaxing
- trust and security, banking and insurance

Yellow
- optimistic and youthful
used to grab attention

Green
- wealth and serenity good for creating relaxing environments

Orange
- aggressive good for call to action

Black
- sleek good for luxury products

Purple
- soothing good for beauty or anti aging

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7
Q

What is a trade dress

A

commercial look and feel that distinguishes a product

  • ex Lindt brown and gold
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8
Q

Age and colour

A

colour look duller and prefer white and other bright tones
* Lexus: makes most of its cars in white

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9
Q

Should the same scents be used for male and females?

A

 NO
Vanillas for women and spicy for males doubled sales
 When scents were reversed sales fell below levels where scent was not used

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10
Q

Cultural scent differences

A

ex is pine where some think it smells like the outdoors and others like a cleaning product

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11
Q

Endowment effect

A

occurs when consumers ascribe more value to something simply because they own it

people who touched a product fro 30 seconds or less were more willing to pay for it

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12
Q

T or F we are in a gradual evolution toward more taste?

A

F we are in a evolution toward no taste

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13
Q

Absolute threshold and apply it

A

: refers to the minimum amount of stimulation that can be detected

decreasing the size of the product need to test to ensure the changes are not perceptible by the average consumer
o Ex: keep the price the same but make the bag of chips slightly smaller

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14
Q
  • JND (just noticeable difference)
A

: minimum change in a stimulus that can be detected
o Important as
 Reduction in product size, increase in price, or change in packaging are not of discernible to the public

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15
Q

what discount is needed for a customer to notice

A

20%

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16
Q

Subliminal perception

A

processing of information presented below the level of the consumers awareness

17
Q

does subliminal perception work?

A

no proof
ex: guy who scammed

18
Q

Attention

A

: extent to which the brain’s processing activity is devoted to a particular stimulus
- Consumers are often in state of sensory overload

19
Q

Guerrilla

A

o Using communications that are unexpected and unconventional
o Ex: In New York saw manhole covers with steam coming out trued into a

20
Q

solution to attention issues

A

Guerrilla

Perceptual selectivity
- o Pick so we are not overwhelmed using personal and stimulus factors

21
Q

Personal selection factors

A
  • attention if given based on what is going on in life

Perceptual filters
o : aspects based on individuals past experiences, values, and culture that can influence what they decide to process
o Ex: watched Office will be more likely to watch a teaser for the show

Perceptual vigilance
o :more likely to be aware of stimulus that relate to their current needs
o Both conscious and unconscious
o Notice car ads when In market for car

Perceptual defence
o : people see what they want to see and do not see what they do not want to see
o If stimulus is threatening us we may not process it
o Ex: heavy vape user may block image out of bad lungs

Adaptation
o : degree to which consumers continue to notice a stimulus over time
o Consumer can become habituated and require stronger dose
o Ex: read a billboard when first installed but passing it will become scenery

22
Q

stimulus selection factors

A

attention given due to stimulus in ad

  • need to contrast (differ from others) with

size
colour
novelty
positions

23
Q

Schema

A

organized collection of beliefs and feelings represented in a cognitive category
- Ex: when think Nike may think athletic

24
Q

Gestalt psychology

A

thought maintaining that people derive meaning from the totality of a set of stimuli rather then from any individual stimulus

Principle of closure
 Consumers tend to perceive an incomplete picture complete
 Fill in blanks based on experiences
 Ex: only hear part of a jingle
 Encourages participation increasing chance people will attend to this message

Principle of similarity
 :tells us that consumer tend to group together objects that share similar physical characteristics

Principle of figure- ground
 : one part of stimulus will dominate while other parts recede into the background

25
Q

perceptual positioning

A

combines symbolic and functional attributes

26
Q

interpretation of stimuli lead to brand positioning by

A

product attributed
- volvo and safety

Usage occasions
- OJ is not just for breakfast

Users
- J & J baby shampoo

Competitors
- 7-up is the un-cola brand

27
Q
A