Chapter 5 Flashcards
(26 cards)
consumer buying behavior
the buying behavior of final consumers - individuals and households that buy goods and services for personal consumption
consumer market
all the individuals and households who buy or acquire goods and services for personal consumption
Two parts of a consumer’s black box
- the buyers characteristics
- buyers decision process
culture
the set of basic values, perceptions, wants, and behaviors learned by a member of soceity from family and other important institutions
-spot cultural shifts (ex: shift to be more envirnmentally or health conscious)
subculture
a group of people with shared value systems based on common life experiences and situations
-nationalities, racial groups, geographic regions
Four important subculture groups
- Hispanic – fastest growing, tend to buy more branded higher quality products, family oriented, brand loyal
- African-American - more price conscious, brands are important, most fashion conscious ethnic group
- Asian-American - most affluent, second-fastest growing, most tech-savvy, most brand concious of all ethnic groups
- Mature- not “stuck in their ways”
social class
relatively permanent and ordered divsions in a society whose members share similar values, interests, and behaviors
- combination of income, occupation, education, wealth etc.
- people can change social classes
group
two or more people who interact to accomplish individual or mutual goals
reference groups
direct or indirect points of comparision in forming a person’s attitudes or behavior
-aspirational group is a group to which an individual wishes they belong (ex: NBA)
opinion leaders
person within a reference group who, because of skills, knowledge, personality or other characteristics, exerts social influence on others
-influentials or leading adopters
buzz marketing
use buzz marketing by enlisting or creating opinion leaders to serve as brand ambassadors who spread the word about their products
other social factors that influence buying behavior
- family members
- role and status
personal factors that influence buyer’s decisions
- age and life-cycle stage
- occupation
- economic situation
- lifestyle (activities, interests, opinions) - AIO dimensions
- personality
- brand personality – human traits that apply to brands (ex: sincerity, excitement, competance, sophistication, ruggeddness)
psychological factors that influence a buyer’s decisions
- motive (drive)
- perception
- learning
- belief
- attitude
perception
- the process by which people select, organize, adn iterpret information to form a meaningful picture of the world
1. selective attention = the tendency for people to screen out most of the information to which they are exposed
2. selective distortion = describes the tendency of people to interpret information in a way that will support what they already believe
3. selective retention = consumers are likely to remember good points made about a brand they favor and forget good points made about competing brands
learning
changes in individuals behavior arising from experience
belief
a descriptive thought that a person holds about something
attitude
a persons consistently favorable or unfavorable evaluations, feelings and tendencies toward an object or ideas
complex buying behavior
high consumer involvement in a purchase and significant ercieved differences among brands
ex: computers
dissonance reducing buying behavior
high involvement but few percieved differences among brands
ex: carpeting
*post-purchase dissonance = after-sale discomfort when they notice certain disadvantages of the purchased carpet brand or hear favorable things about a brand not purchased
habitual buying behavior
low consumer involvement and few significantly percieved brand differences
ex: salt
- brand familiarity rather than brand conviction – they have no strong feelings, they select a brand bc its familiar
- tv is effective for ads
variety seeking buying behavior
low consumer involvement but significant percieved brand differences
ex: buying cookies
- switching occurs for the sake of variety rather than dissatisfaction
buyer decision process
- need recognition
- information search
- evaluation of alternatives
- purchase decision (affected by attitudes of others and unexpected situational factors)
- postpurchase behavior (satisfied or not?)
**in routine purchases, consumers skip steps
cognitive dissonance
buyer discomfort cause by post purchase conflict