Consumer Behavior- Jillapalli Exam 3 Review TXST
Four types of situations
The Communications Situation The Purchase Situation The Usage Situation, and The Disposition Situation
Types of Antecedent States
1. Moods 2. Momentary Conditions
Non-Compensatory Decision Rule
-Conjunctive Rule -Disjunctive Rule -Elimination-by-Aspects Rule -Lexicographic Rule
Three types of consumer choice processes
1. Affective Choice 2. Attitude-Based Choice 3. Attribute-Based Choice
Consumer decisions require information about
1. Appropriate evaluative criteria 2. The existence of various alternatives 3. Performance of each alternative on each evaluative criterion
Components of Physical Surroundings
1. Colors 2. Aromas 3. Music 4. Crowding
The five key dimensions/characteristics of situations
1. Physical Surroundings 2. Social Surroundings 3. Temporal Perspectives 4. Task Definition 5. Antecedent States
Which type of consumer problem is one the consumer is aware of or will become aware of in the normal course of events?
Active
Which of the following is not a type of consumer choice process? A. Affective choice B. Attitude-based choice C. Surrogate choice D. Attribute-based choice E. Affective choice, Attitude-based choice, and Attribute-based choice
Affective choice, Attitude-based choice, and Attribute-based choice
Situational influence
All those factors particular to a time and place that do not follow from a knowledge of the stable attributes of the consumer and the stimulus and that have an effect on current behavior.
Evaluative Criteria
Are typically associated with desired benefits and can differ in type, number, and importance.
It is a well-known fact that grocery store managers manipulate the physical retail environment by pumping the smell of bread, cookies, and donuts from the bakery into their stores. This is known as _____________.
Atmospherics
Human Factors Research
Attempts to determine human capabilities in areas such as vision, strength, response time, flexibility, and fatigue and the effect on these capabilities of lighting, temperature, and sound. Observational techniques such as slow-motion and time-lapse photography, video recording, and event recorders are particularly useful methods. This type of research can sometimes identify functional problems that consumers are unaware of.
Driving Information to Consumers
Banner ads Permission-based e-mail Social media
Omni-Channel Retailing for the Omni-Channel Shopper
Because consumers access many channels--often simultaneously, most retailers are engaging in multi- or omni-channel marketing to reach consumers.
Consumers who exhibit a positively biased behavior toward a specific brand are exhibiting?
Brand Loyalty
The situation in which consumers receive information has an impact on their behavior and is referred to as the _____ situation.
Communications
Which decision rule establishes minimum required performance standards for each evaluative criterion and selects the first or all brands that meet or exceed these minimum standards?
Conjunctive
Temporal Perspectives
Deal with the effect of time on consumer behavior. -Limited purchase time often limits search. -Internet shopping is growing rapidly as a result of the time pressures felt by consumers.
Chaz was asked by a market researcher which criteria he uses when purchasing beer. He told the researcher that taste and price are important to him. Which method did the researcher use to obtain this information from Chaz?
Direct
Store-based Retailing
In-store shopping is perceived as neither fun nor efficient by many. Retailers are trying to enhance the experiential component through layout, music, personal shoppers, etc.
Disjunctive Rule
Establishes a minimum required performance for each important attribute (often a high level). All brands that meet or exceed the performance level for any key attribute are acceptable. If minimum performance was.
Conjunctive Rule
Establishes minimum required performance for each evaluative criterion. Selects the first (or all) brand(s) that meet or exceed these minimum standards. If minimum performance was.
Which of the following is NOT an example of information search? A. Sue asks her brother what kind of computer he has and whether he is happy with it. B. Gail returns the dress she bought because she couldn't find any shoes to match. C. Max reads some brochures he picked up at the store while looking at camcorders. D. Charlie took a test drive of the new Volkswagen Beetle. E. Jim goes to the bar and asks the bartender what kind of beer they serve.
Gail returns the dress she bought because she couldn't find any shoes to match.
Bob is searching the Internet for information on digital cameras, so he types in the words "digital camera" in Google. Which type of search is Bob conducting?
Genetic
Replenished Goods (online retailing)
High frequency purchase, moderate cost (vitamins, beauty aids), bought on a continual basis
Research Items (online retailing)
High-information, big ticket, planned purchase (electronics, travel), large price points, do not require touch
For which product is no disposition involved?
Ice Cream Cone
Nakeisha wants to purchase some new make-up, but she wants something different from what she is currently using. Since she has experience with this product, she just thinks of the other products she has tried and decides to purchase one of those. Which type of information search has Nakeisha performed?
Internal Search
Selective Problem Recognition
Involves a discrepancy only one brand can solve. Firms attempt to cause selective problem recognition to gain or maintain market share.
Generic Problem Recognition
Involves a discrepancy that a variety of brands within a product category can reduce. Increasing generic problem recognition generally results in an expansion of the total market.
Extended Decision Making
Involves extensive internal and external search followed by a complex evaluation of multiple alternatives. It is a response to the high level of purchase involvement. During post-purchase evaluation, doubts are likely and a thorough evaluation takes place.
Limited Decision Making
Involves internal and limited external search, few alternatives, simple decision rules on a few attributes, and little post-purchase evaluation. Middle ground between nominal and extended decision making. Involves recognizing a problem for which there are several possible solutions.
Attitude-Based Choice
Involves the use of general attitudes, summary impressions, intuitions, or heuristics; no attribute-by-attribute comparisons are made at the time of choice.
Driving Consumers to a Firm's Information: Website design
Is also critical. Ongoing and repeat traffic requires relevant and frequently updated content.
All other things being equal, consumers tend to prefer _____.
Larger retail outlets over smaller outlets
Convenience Items (online retailing)
Low-risk items, huge selection and discounts is important for this internet retailing, inexpensive
Costs vs. Benefits of External Search
Market Characteristics Product Characteristics Consumer Characteristics Situation Characteristics
Emotion Research
Marketers are increasingly conducting research on the role of emotions in problem recognition and resolution. Common approaches are surveys, focus group research and personal interviews that examine the emotions associate with certain problems. Critical in helping marketers anticipate consumer reaction to problems and train customer service personnel to respond appropriately.
Five primary sources of information available to consumers: 4
Marketing sources, such as sales personnel, websites, , and advertising.
Five primary sources of information available to consumers: 1
Memory of past searches, personal experiences, and low-involvement learning.
Determination of Which Evaluative Criteria Are Used: Direct
Methods include asking consumers what criteria they use in a particular purchase.
Post-purchase Dissonance
Occurs when a consumer has doubts or anxiety regarding the wisdom of a purchase made and is a function of the following: -The degree of commitment or irrevocability of the decision -The importance of the decision to the consumer -The difficulty of choosing among the alternatives -The individual's tendency to experience anxiety
Five primary sources of information available to consumers: 2
Personal sources, such as friends, family, and others.
Connie just purchased her first new car, and she's actually feeling a little bad about it. She's concerned about how much money she spent and how long she will be making car payments. She's not sure she made the right choice, either. She liked another car a little better, but ended up purchasing this one instead. Connie is experiencing _____.
Post-purchase Dissonance
________ occurs whenever the consumer sees a significant difference between his or her actual (current) state of affairs and some desired or ideal state.
Problem Recognition
Nominal Decision Making
Referred to as habitual decision making, in effect involves no decision per se. Occurs when there is very low involvement with the purchase. Does not include consideration of the "do not purchase" alternative.
Symbolic Performance
Relates to aesthetic or image-enhancement performance.
Instrumental Performance
Relates to the physical functioning of the product.
Shelly orders her disposable contact lenses online, and she is sent two boxes every six weeks. Based on Forrester Research's categories of products and services, which does this represent?
Replenishment Goods
Online Retailing
Replenishment Goods Researched Items Convenience Items
Attribute-Based Choice
Requires the knowledge of specific attributes at the time the choice is made, and it involves attribute-by-attribute comparisons across brands.
Any source of products or services for consumers is referred to as a
Retail Outlet
Internal Search
Search of long-term memory to determine if: 1. a satisfactory solution is known 2. what are types of potential solutions, and 3. ways to compare the possible solutions
Driving Consumers to a Firm's Information: Offline Media
Such as print and TV.
Determination of Which Evaluative Criteria Are Used: Indirect
Techniques assume consumers will not or cannot state their evaluative criteria. -Projective techniques: allow the respondent to indicate the criteria someone else might use. -Perceptual mapping: researcher uses judgment to determine dimensions underlying consumer evaluations of brand similarity.
Driving Consumers to a Firm's Information: Search engine optimization (SEO)
Techniques to ensure that a company's web pages are accessible to search engines and improving the chances they are found.
Sharon has to purchase a gift for her mother and only has this afternoon to do so because her birthday party is that evening. She's wondering how she will be able get to the mall in time to pick out the perfect gift. This is an illustration of which situation characteristic?
Temporal Perspective
Purchase Involvement
The level of concern for, or interest in, the purchase process triggered by the need to consider a particular purchase.
Task Definition
The reason the consumption activity is occurring. - self-use - gift giving: •social expectations •ritualized situations •to elicit return favors
Moods
Transient feeling states that are generally not tied to a specific event of object.
Consumption Guilt
When guilt feelings are aroused by the product/service use.
Five primary sources of information available to consumers: 5
Experiential sources, such as inspection or product trial.
The Smith's oldest daughter, Olivia, is a senior in high school. She has all "A's" and scored a 34 on the ACT. She is president of the debate team and the national honor society as well as a member of the cheerleading squad. Olivia wants to attend medical school, so both she and her parents are very concerned about which undergraduate school she attends. They have spent countless hours on the Internet examining universities, and they have already visited five campuses. For Olivia and her parents, which type of decision making does this represent?
Extended Decision Making
Elimination-by-Aspects Rule
First, evaluative criteria ranked in terms of importance. Second, cutoff point for each criterion is established. Finally (in order of attribute importance) brands are eliminated if they fail to meet or exceed the cutoff. If rank and cutoff were
Discovering Consumer Problems
Identifying Consumer Problems Using Online and Social Media: Monitoring and tracking is not enough. Problems need to be solved in a timely and appropriate manner
External Search
If a resolution is not reached through internal search, then the search process is focused on relevant external information. Ongoing search is done to acquire information and because the process is pleasurable.
Five primary sources of information available to consumers: 3
Independent sourcesIndependent sources, such as magazines, consumer , such as magazines, consumer groups, and government agencies.
Atmospherics (store atmosphere)
Influences consumer judgments of the quality of the store and the store's image.
Driving Consumers to a Firm's Information: Behavioral targeting
Involves tracking consumer click patterns on a website and using that information to decide on banner ad placement.
Ritual Situation
Is a socially defined occasion that triggers a set of interrelated behaviors that occur in a structured format and that have symbolic meaning.
Inactive Problem
Is one of which the consumer is not aware. Marketing strategy: Marketer must convince consumers that they have the problem AND that their brand is a superior solution.
Active Problem
Is one the consumer is aware of or will become aware of in normal course of events. Marketing strategy: Only require marketer to convince consumers that its brand is the superior solution.
Atmosphere (store atmosphere)
Is referred to as SERVICESCAPE when describing a service business such as a hospital, bank or restaurant.
Affective performance
Is the emotional response that owning or using the product or outlet provides.
Store Atmosphere (physical surroundings)
Is the sum of all the physical features of a retail environment.
Momentary Conditions
Temporary states of being (tired, ill, having extra money, being broke, etc.)
Affective Choice
Tends to be more holistic. Brand is not decomposed into distinct components for separate evaluation. The focus is on the way a product will make the user feel as it is used.
Measurement of Evaluative Criteria Involves a determination of
The Evaluative Criteria Used -Ex: Speed, Screen, Price, Camera, Battery, Style Judgments of Brand Performance on Specific Criteria The Relative Importance of Evaluative Criteria