Consumer Market Behavior Xiang OKSTATE Midterm
How to capture attention
- vividness - personal relevance - unexpectedness - scarcity - uncertainty
Why study CB?
1. Input to business/marketing strategy 2. Force that shapes society 3. Input to making responsible decisions as a consumer
Basic Consumption Process
1. Need 2. Want 3. Exchange 4. Costs and Benefits 5. Reaction 6. Value
Generally, the capacity limit for workbench memory is between _____ units of information.
5 to 9
Repositioning
A marketing strategy that involves changing the market's perception of a firm's product or brand in comparison to rival firms.
sensory memory
A type of storage that holds sensory information for a few seconds or less.
Affect
Affect refers to the feelings, emotions, and moods that consumers may experience.
Affect and Cognition
As people get older they tend to focus more on affect
self-congruency theory
Consumer behavior can be explained by congruence of a consumer's self-concept with the image of typical users of a focal product
Which two message source characteristics do consumers associate with credibility?
Expertise and trustworthiness
emotion on evaluation
Good mood often results in more favorable evaluation
Product categories with personal relevance for consumers typically have _____ product involvement.
High
instrumental learning
Learning by trial and error
self-actualization
Many middle-class Americans live a comfortable lifestyle and can devote time and effort into satisfying their need for personal fulfillment by doing things such as taking language classes, traveling, or volunteering at a local charity. Which need does this represent?
Motivation
Maslow's hierarchy of needs is a general hierarchy of motivation
retroactive interference
Occurs when later learned material interferes with the recall of information learned earlier.
Affect and memory
People are better able to recall information that has the same affective quality as their mood state.
Which theory hypothesizes that the way in which information is framed differentially affects risk assessments and any associated consumer decisions
Prospect theory
product placement
Putting products into TV shows and movies where they will be seen
lifestyles
Refers to the wats consumers live and spend their time and money
different consumer involvement
Situation involvement, enduring involvement, emotional involvement
behavioral intention model
The concept was proposed by Icek Ajzen to improve on the predictive power of the theory of reasoned action by including perceived behavioral control.
dependent variable
The measurable effect, outcome, or response in which the research is interested.
selective perception
The phenomenon that people often pay the most attention to things they already agree with and interpret them according to their own predispositions.
encoding
The process by which information is transferred from workbench memory to long-term memory for permanent storage is called _____.
Agreeableness
The tendency to get along well with other people.
Fishbein's Multi-Attribute Model
Theory of planned behavior
Market Coverage Strategies
Undifferentiated - "one size fits all" Differentiated - offers vary based upon segment Concentrated - niche focus, larger share of smaller segment
Different positioning strategies
Unique selling proposition: emphasize a single, differentiating attribute or benefit
motivations
____ are inner reasons or driving forces behind human actions as consumers are driven to address real needs.
comprehension
_____ refers to the interpretation or understanding that a consumer develops about some attended stimulus in order to assign meaning.
utilitarian motivation
a drive to acquire products that consumers can use to accomplish things
Market Orientation
a philosophy that assumes that a sale does not depend on an aggressive sales force but rather on a customer's decision to purchase a product; it is synonymous with the marketing concept
Target Market
a set of buyers sharing common needs or characteristics that the company decides to serve
brand personality
a set of human characteristics associated with a brand name
relationship marketing
a strategy that focuses on keeping and improving relationships with current customers
excitation transfer theory
a theory suggesting that arousal produced in one situation can persist and intensify emotional reactions occurring in later situations (Roller coaster)
operant conditioning
a type of learning in which behavior is strengthened if followed by a reinforcer or diminished if followed by a punisher
classical conditioning
a type of learning in which one learns to link two or more stimuli and anticipate events
classification of emotion
activated/deactivated pleasant/unpleasnt
Psychoanalytic Approach
addresses internal motivations and feelings shaped by early childhood experiences
ABC model of attitudes
affect, behavior, cognition
self-concept
all our thoughts and feelings about ourselves, in answer to the question, "Who am I?"
Learning Theories
an organized set of principles explaining how individuals acquire, retain, and recall knowledge.
instrumental conditioning
another term for operant conditioning
POP (points of parity)
associations that are not unique to a certain brand like a website that can book your air, hotel, car etc.
involuntary attention
attention that is beyond the conscious control of a consumer
stability
avoids mood swings
emotional intelligence
awareness of the emotions experienced in a given situation and the ability to control reactions to these emotions
hierarchy of effects of ABC
awareness, knowledge, liking, preference,conviction and purchase.
total value concept
business practice wherein companies operate with the understanding that products provide value in multiple ways
Zipping and Zapping
commercial avoidance, flipping through channels during commercials. -Advertising responds to this through product placement.
extended self concept
comprises all the external entities and objects that we consider, with pride, part of ourselves
Correlational causation
correlation does not equal causation
right brain
creative
emotional involvement
deep personal interest that evokes strong feelings associated with some objects or activities.
Bases of Segmentation
demographic geographic psychographic behavioral
utilitarian
derived from a product that helps the consumer with some task. Laundry soap
What is positioning?
designing organizations offerings to occupy a distinct place in the target markets mind
How to overcome forgetting
determine if a behavior is reinforced after a certain number of REPETITIONS or after a certain length of time (SCHEDULE) has passed. - slot machines
Touchpoints
direct contacts between the firm and a customer
hedonic motivation
drive to experience something emotionally gratifying
Id
energy constantly striving to satisfy basic drives
Many patients believe that when they go to the dentist that the experience will be unpleasant. These thoughts that the experience will be unpleasant influence consumers' _____ and can negatively effect their comprehension and behavior regarding this vital service.
expectation
emotional expressiveness
extent to which a consumer shows outward behavioral signs and otherwise reacts obviously to emotional experiences
message congruity
extent to which a message in internally consistent and fits surrounding information
forgetting curve
graphs retention and forgetting over time
perceptual map
how consumers position various brands relative to each other on graphs with different attributes
self-esteem
how you feel about yourself
PRIZM
identifies population characteristics by zip code
projective techniques
if you tell a person the purposed of the study they are likely to respond a certain way
primary data
information collected for the specific purpose at hand
secondary data
information that already exists somewhere, having been collected for another purpose
Message receiver characteristics affecting comprehension
intelligence involvement expectation brain dominance
sensory memory
is very perishable and lasts only a very short period of time
unintentional learning
learning that occurs when behavior is modified through a consumer-stimulus interaction without any effortful allocation of cognitive processing capacity toward that stimulus
A source's effectiveness in gaining comprehension can be impacted by what factors?
likability trustworthiness attractiveness expertise
left brain
logical
sensory marketing
marketing techniques that link distinct sensory experiences such as a unique fragrance with a product or service
proactive interference
occurs when later learned material interferes with the recall of information learned earlier.
enduring involvement
ongoing interest in some product or opportunity
Big 5
openness, conscientiousness, extraversion, agreeableness, stability
Cognitive Appraisal Theory
our emotional experience depends on our interpretation of the situation we are in
Extroversion
outgoing, assertive, active
dual coding
pairing a word with a picture makes it easier to remember
Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs
physiological safety love/belonging esteem self-actualization
intentional learning
placing new information into memory in anticipation of being tested on it later
Conscientiousness
precise, efficient, organized
The value co creation concept
realization that a consumer is necessary and must plat a part in the order to produce value
Psychographics
refers to the way consumer lifestyles are measured
Consumer Value Framework
represents consumer behavior theory illustrating factors that shape consumption-related behaviors and ultimately determine the value associated with consumption
paths
show the association between nodes in the network
POD (points of difference)
something that sets you apart from other brands like Fed-Ex over night delivery
workbench memory
storage area in the memory system where info is stored while it is being processed and encoded for later recall
situational involvement
temporary interest in some imminent purchase situation.
Positioning
the act of designing a company's offering and image to occupy a distinctive place in the minds of the target market
hedonic
the immediate gratification that comes from experiencing some activity
just noticeable difference
the minimal change in a stimulus that can just barely be detected
Weber's Law
the principle that, to be perceived as different, two stimuli must differ by a constant minimum percentage (rather than a constant amount)
emotional contagion
the process by which emotions are transferred from one person to another
Segmentation
the process of dividing a larger market into smaller pieces based on one or more meaningfully shared characteristics
subliminal perception
the processing of information by sensory systems without conscious awareness
long-term memory
the relatively permanent storage of information
Behaviorism
the science of behavior that focuses on observable behavior only
mere exposure effect
the tendency for liking to increase with the frequency of exposure
mood-congruent memory
the tendency to recall experiences that are consistent with one's current good or bad mood
spread activation
the way cognitive activation spreads from one concept to another in long-term memory.
social self-concept
the way others see us
What is attitude?
the way you view situations
four basic functions of attitude
utilitarian, knowledge, value-expressive, and ego-defensive
VALS
values, attitudes, lifestyles
independent variable
variable that is manipulated
Superego
voice of conscience that focuses on how we ought to behave
actual self-concept
who I am now
ideal self-concept
who I would like to be
associative network
A network of mental pathways linking knowledge within memory (also called Semantic Memory Network).
consumer orientation
business philosophy that focuses first on determining unmet consumer wants and needs and then designing products to satisfy those needs
Nodes
concepts/words
openness to experience
creative, curious, cultured
ego
seeks to gratify ID in realistic ways
absolute threshold
the minimum stimulation needed to detect a particular stimulus 50 percent of the time