Chapter 7 Consumer Behavior
Lecture
a speech where the source speaks directly to the audience to inform and persuade them
Comparative advertising
a strategy in which a message compares two or more recognized breads and compares them on the basis of attributes
Distraction
Humorous ads inhibit the consumer from counter arguing (thinking of reasons not to agree with the message) increasing the livelihood of message acceptance
Uses and gratifications theory
argues that consumers are an active, goal directed audience that draws on mass media as a resource to satisfy needs
Social adaption perspective
assumes that a perceiver will weight information seen to be instrumental in forming an attitude more heavily
Elaboration likelihood model
assumes that once a customer receives a message, he or she begins to process it
Drama
attempt to be experiential involving the audience emotionally
Ongoing tracking studies
attitude tracking involves administration of a survey at regular intervals
Functional theory of attitudes
attitudes exist because they serve some function for the person ( they are determined by a persons motives
Ego defensive function
attitudes we from to protect ourselves either from external threats to internal feelings
Simile
compares two objects A is like B
The standard learning hierarchy
consumer approaches a product decision as a problem-solving process
Transformational advertising
consumer associates the experience of product usage with some subjective sensation
The low-involvement hierarchy
consumer does not have strong initial preference, consumer acts on limited knowledge, consumer forms an evaluation only after product trial
Havituation
consumer no loner pays attention to the stimulus because of boredom or fatigue
The experiential hierarchy
consumers act on the basis of their emotional reactions
Principle of cognitive consistency
consumers value harmony among their thoughts, feelings or behaviors to be consistent with other experience.
Hype
corporate propaganda
Two important source characteristics
credibility and attractiveness
Building credibility
credibility can be enhanced if the sources qualifications are relevant to the product.
Second order response
customer feedback in response to a remarking message that is not in the from of a transaction
Value expressive function
relate to the consumers central value
Utilitarian function
relates to the basic principles of reward and punishment
The central rout to persuasion
the processing route taken under conditions of high involvement
The peripheral rout to persuasion
the processing route taken under conditions of low involvement
Spokescharacter
the use of animated characters or fictional mascots as product representatives
Affects
the way a consumer feels about an attitude object
Buzz
word of mouth
Source attractiveness
refers to the sources perceived social value
Hierarchy of effects
a fixed sequence of steps that occur en route to an attitude
Resonance
a form of presentation that combines a play on words with a relevant picture
Attitude
a lasting, general evaluation of people (including oneself) objects advertising or issues.
Source effects
a message will have different effect if communicated by a different source
Attitude toward the advertisement
a predisposition to respond in a favorable or unfavorable manner to a particular advertising stimulus during a particular exposure occasion
Sleeper effect
a process by which difference in attitude change between positive sources and less positive sources seem to get erased over time.
First order response
a product offer that directly yields a transaction
Attitude tracking program
a program allows researcher to analyze attitude trends during an extended period of time.
Permission marketing
acknowledges that a marketer will be much more successful when he communicates with consumers who have already agreed to listen to him consumers who "opt out of listing to the message probably weren't good prospect in the first place.
Persuasion
an active attempt to change attitudes
Subjective norm
an additional component to the multiattribut attitude model that accounts for the effect of what we believe other people think we should do
Fear
an emotional response to the message
Theory of reasoned action
an updated version of the fishbein multiattrbute attitude theory that considers factors such as social pressure and the attitude toward the act of buying a product rather than simply attitudes toward the product itself.
Cognitive-affective model
argues that an affective judgment is the last step in a series of cognitive process
Social media
refers to the set of technologies that enables users to creat content and share it with a larger number of others.
Permission marketing
based on the idea that a marketer will be more successful in persuading consumers who have agreed to let him or her try
Normative belief
belief that others believe an action should or should not be taken
Negative affect
boredom increases with each exposure
Motivation to comply
degree to which consumers take into account anticipated reactions
Emotional contagion
emotions expressed by the communicator of a marketing message affect the attitude toward the product.
Fear appeals
empathize the negative consequences that can occur unless the cosumer changes a behavior or an attitude
Multiple pathway anchoring and adjustment model
empathizes multiple pathways to attitude formation, including outside-in and inside-out pathways.
Two-factor theory
explains the fine line between familiarity and boredom
Refutaional arguments
first raise a negative issue and then dismiss it can be quite effective
Attitude toward the act of buying
how someone feels about buying due to the perceived consequences of a purchase
Knowledge bais
implies a sources knowledge is not accurate
Latitudes of acceptance and rejection
in the social judgment theory of attitudes, the notion that people differ in terms of the information they will find acceptable or unacceptable.
Positive affect
increase familiarity, reduces uncertainty
Metaphore
involves placing two dissimilar objects in a close relationship such that A is B
Behavior
involves the person intentions to do something with regard to an attitude object
M-Commerce
markers promote their goods and services via wireless devices including cell phones
Contrast effect
massages falling with the latitude of rejection ten to be seen as being farther from ones position than they actually are
Framed
message in the picture is strongly related to the copy
Assimilation effect
messages that fall within the latitude of acceptance ten to be seen as more consistent with ones position than they actually are
Multiattribute models
model that assumes a consumers attitude, will depend on the beliefs he or she has about several attributes toward the object
Social judgment theory
people assimilate new information about attitudes base on what they already know or feel.
Attitudes of acceptance and rejection
people differ in the information they find acceptable or unacceptable
Self perception theory
people maintain consistency by inferring that they must maintain a positive attitude toward a product they have brought or consumed
Mere Exposure
people tend to like things that are more familiar to them even if they are not keen on them initially
Three emotional dimensions
pleasure, arousal, and intimidation
Supportive argument
presents only positive arguments
Two sided message
presents positive and negative info
Foot in the door technique
sales strategy based on the observation that consumers will comply with a request if they have first agreed to comply with a smaller request
Source credibility
sources perceived expertise, objectivity or trustworthiness
Communications model
specified the elements they need to control in order to communicate with their customers.
Attitude models
specify the different elements that might work together to influence peoples evaluation of attitude.
Theory of trying to consume
states that the criterion of behavior in the reasoned action model should be replaced with trying to reach a goal.
Independence hypothesis
takes the position that affect and cognition involve two separate, independent systems
Cognition
the beliefs a consumer has about an attitude object
Levels of commitment to an attitude
the degree of commitment is related to the level of involvement with an attitude object (compliance, identification, internalization)
Threat
the literal content of the message
Avatar
the manifestation of a Hindu deity in superhuman or animal form
Corporate paradox
the more involved a company appears to be in the dissemination of news about its products, the less credible it becomes.
Chunck
visual images allow the receiver to group information at the time of encoding
Knowledge function
we from some attitudes because we need order, structure or meaning
Theory of cognitive dissonance
when a person is confronted with inconsistencies among attitudes or behavior, he or she will take action to reduce the dissonance by changing an attitude or modifying a behavior
Reporting bias
when a source has the required knowledge but the willingness to convey it is compromised