Lecture 6: Intro to Consumer Psychology Flashcards

1
Q

What is Consumer Psychology?

A
  • Consumer psychology: The study of human responses to product- and service-related information and experiences
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2
Q

What is “product- and service-related information”?

A

o “Product- and service-related information” includes a large variety of things:
♣ Marketer initiated stimuli (e.g. advertisements, package labels, point-of-purchase displays)
♣ Consumer magazines and other media
♣ Word-of-mouth communications from friends and relatives

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3
Q

What do human “responses” mean in response to product- and service-related information and experiences?

A

o “Responses” can be very broad and could be:
♣ Cognitive
♣ Emotional
♣ Behavioural

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4
Q

What are the goals of Consumer Psychology?

A
  • To learn about what makes consumers tick
    o Describe, predict, influence, and/or explain consumer responses
    ♣ E.g. Behaviours, feelings and thoughts
    o Understand what makes consumers pick certain products
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5
Q

How did the field of Consumer Psychology grow in parallel with the consumer society?

A

o Industrial Revolution (1800s) significant increase in consumption
o Scientists became more interested in understanding consumers

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6
Q

In the 1840s, Volney Palmer opened the first advertising agency (serving as a broker for ad space in newspapers) but what big event occurred during the 1850s?

A
  • 1850s: Opening of department stores
    ♣ 1852: Le Bon Marche opens in Paris
    ♣ 1858: Macy’s opens in New York
    o Fixed pricing and wide range of products available
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7
Q

What did Wilhelm Wundt do in 1879?

A
  • 1879: Wilhelm Wundt establishes the first experimental psychology lab in Leipzig
    o Idea that psychologists should focus on experience instead of just theory
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8
Q

What did William James do in 1890?

A
  • 1890: William James publishes ‘The Principles of Psychology’
    o View that our possessions can shape our identity
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9
Q

In the late 1800s, what large-scale action began occurring?

A
  • Late 1800s: Beginning of large-scale advertising
    o E.g. Patent medicines
    ♣ Drugs very unregulated – anything could be sold and claimed to cure/treat anything
    ♣ e.g. Cole, St Jacob’s oil, cocaine, heroin
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10
Q

During which historical period was there a growing interest in advertising by companies and governments?

A

1900-1930s

- Growing interest in advertising by companies and governments (propaganda)

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11
Q

What did Henry Ford do in 1913?

A
  • 1913: Henry Ford invents the assembly line
    o Manufacturing now easier, cheaper, faster
    o Greater competition between brands
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12
Q

Government propaganda campaigns began when?

A

During WWI

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13
Q

When did the first radio advertising occur in the USA?

A

1920

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14
Q

In the 1920s and 1930s, there was an increase in what?

A

Increase in household appliances and cars

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15
Q

The late 1930s saw an overall increase in what?

A

Increase in consumption

o E.g. Cotton, direct mail order catalogues

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16
Q

What did Harlow Gale do in 1900?

A
  • 1900: Harlow Gale conducts the first experiments on advertising
    o Effects of advertising on attention and memory
17
Q

What did Walter Dill Scott do in 1903?

A
  • 1903: Walter Dill Scott publishes ‘The Theory of Advertising’
    o Consumers can be quite irrational –» open to “suggestion”
    ♣ Direct and indirect suggestions
    ♣ Indirect (e.g. coupons)
18
Q

Between 1913-1916, what did Harry Hollingsworth, Daniel Starch and Henry Foster Adams do?

A
  • 1913-1916: Harry Hollingsworth, Daniel Starch, and Henry Foster Adams publish influential books on advertising
    o Harry Hollingsworth: How advertising effects purchasing behaviour
    o Daniel Starch: Links between attention and response
    o Henry Foster Adams: Advocated use of empirical method
19
Q

What did behaviourist John B. Watson do in 1920?

A
  • 1920: John B. Watson joins an advertising firm
    o Classical conditioning
    o Testimonial advertising
    o Advertisers need to appeal to people’s basic motives and instincts (eg. fears)
    ♣ Basic drives
20
Q

What did H.K. Nixon do in 1924?

A
  • 1924: H.K. Nixon publishes eye-tracking studies
    o What people get from looking at particular ads
    o Where people look when exposed to particular ads (attention)
21
Q

What did Albert Poffenberger do in 1925?

A
  • 1925: Albert Poffenberger publishes ‘Psychology in Advertising’
22
Q

What year was the ‘Journal of Marketing’ established?

A

1936

23
Q

What year did TV advertising begin in the USA?

A

1941

24
Q

In 1942, what happened to the USA’s growth in consumption?

A
  • 1942: Growth in consumption slows as WWII continues, with TV advertising having been heavily reduced
25
Q

What happened to consumption post-WWII?

A

Consumption starts to increase again

26
Q

What did governments do in the 1950s regarding consumption?

A
  • 1950s: Governments around the world actively promote consumer societies
    o To rebuild economies
27
Q

What happened in the UK in 1955?

A

1955: UK opens its first commercial TV station

28
Q

What happened to Kurt Lewin during WWII?

A
  • WWII: Kurt Lewin commissioned by the US Department of Agriculture
    o Research on housewives showed that level of involvement could increase likelihood of being persuaded to eat offal
    ♣ Offal marketed as good, nutritious
    ♣ “Variety” meat
    ♣ Those actively involved in promotion were more likely to exhibit interest in the product
29
Q

What did George Katona do between 1946-1971?

A
  • 1946-1971: George Katona pioneers use of survey research to consumer buying; develops the Index of Consumer Sentiment
    o Found if people were more confident (about the economy), were more likely to enter into credit agreements
30
Q

What did Ernest Dichter do between 1946-1972?

A
  • Ernest Dichter founds the Institute for Motivational Research
    o Introduces Freudian concepts to the US advertising industry (later made famous by Packard’s ‘The Hidden Persuaders’)
    ♣ Channel unacceptable desires into socially acceptable outlets
    o Idea that people consume things for a purpose
    ♣ Unconscious motives
    o Pioneered the focus group technique
31
Q

What happened in the 1950s and 1960s?

A
  • Seminal research on attitudes and persuasion conducted

o E.g. Janis et al. (1959)

32
Q

What important event occurred in 1960?

A
  • ‘Division of Consumer Psychology’ was formed

o Changed name to ‘The Society for Consumer Psychology’ (in 1988)

33
Q

What are Dichter’s motives for consumption?

A

o POWER: Large breakfasts, fast cars, power tools
o MASCULINITY/VIRILITY: Coffee, red meat, heavy shoes
o STATUS: Scotch, carpets (were originally expensive)
o FEMININITY: Cakes and biscuits, tea, silk
o MORAL PURITY/CLEANLINESS: Cotton fabrics, harsh household cleaning chemicals, bathing
o MAGIC/MYSTERY: Soups, paints, carbonated drinks
♣ Soups often used as remedy when ill