Test 2 Consumer Behavior
store image
a stores personality
allegory
a story told about an abstract trait or concept that has been personified as a person, animal, or vegtable
nudge
a subtle change in a person's environment that results in a change in behavior
new task
a task that requires a great degree of effort and information search
default bias
a tendency in decision making that makes it more likely for people to comply with a requirement than to make the effort not to comply
Anthromorphism
Giving human traits to non-human things
reader-response theory
Role of the reader interpreting a story rather than just relying upon the authors version.
low-involvement hierarchy
assumes consumers initially doesn't have a strong preference for one brand over another (think, do, feel)
multiattribute attitude models
assumes that consumers' attitude toward an attitude object depends on the belief they have about several of its attributes
A(n) ________ is a lasting, general evaluation of people (including oneself), objects, advertisements, or issues.
attitude
Internalization
attitudes are difficult to change because they are so important to us
ego-defensive function
attitudes we form to protect ourselves from external threats or internal feelings
quality management (TQM)
complex set of management and engineering procedures that aims to reduce errors and increase quality
Researchers agree that there are various levels of commitment to an attitude. The lowest form of involvement is ________.
compliance
atmospherics
conscious designing of space and its dimensions to evoke certain effects in buyers
balance theory
considers how people perceive relations among different attitude objects, and how they alter their attitudes so that these remain consistent
foot-in-the-door technique
consumers are more likely to comply to a big request if they agree to a smaller one first
time poverty
consumers feel they are more pressed for time then ever before
recommerce
consumers want to squeeze more value out of their possessions by selling or trading them
diclaimers
content at the end of a commercial that supplies additional info the advertiser is required to give
The source of a message has an impact on whether the message will be accepted or not. Two particularly important source characteristics are ________.
credibility and attractiveness
value-expressive function
relate to the consumer's self-concept or central values
utilitarian function
relates to rewards and punishments
sharing economy or collaborative consumption
renting instead of buying. WEbsite that allows other to use your old stuff
lifestyle segmentation typologies
research projects that cluster a large group of consumers into a set of distinct lifestyle groups
retail theming
strategy where stores create imaginative environments that transport shoppers to fantasy worlds or provide other kinds of stimulation
consumer satisfaction/dissatisfaction (CS/D)
the overall attitude a person has about a product after it has been purchased
buying center
the part of an organization charged with making purchasing decisions
organizational buyers
the people who purchase products and services for use in business
open rates
the percentage of people who open an email message from a marketer
M-commerce
the practice of promoting and selling goods and services via wireless devid=ces including cell phones, PDAs, and iPods
core values
the primary or dominant values that are accepted throughout the organization
Search Engine Optimization (SEO)
the procedures companies use to design the content of Web sites and posts to maximize the likelihood that their content will show up when someone searches for a relevant term
Information search
the process by which we survey the environment for appropriate data to make a reasonable decision
normative influence
the process in which a reference group helps to set and enforce fundamental standards of conduct
enculturation
the process of learning the belief and behaviors endorsed by one's culture
acculturation
the process of learning the value system and behaviors of another culture
product placement
the process of obtaining exposure for a product by arranging for it to be inserted into a movie, tv show, or some other medium
accommodative purchase decision
the process of using bargaining, coercion, compromise, and the wielding of power to achieve agreement among group members who have different preferences or priorities
identity negotiation
the process that occurs when both participants in an encounter reach an agreement about the role of each person (buyer vs seller)
sleeper effect
the process whereby differences in attitudes change between positive and negative sources seem to diminish over time
kin-network system
the rituals intended to maintain ties among family members, both immediate and extended
situational self-image
the role a person plays at any one time
social media
the set of technologies that allow users to create content and share it with a large group of other people
showrooming
the shopping practice of coming into retail store showrooms to check out merchandise and prices but instead buying from an online-only cheaper stores
behavioral economics
the study of the behavioral determinants of economic decisions
counterarguing
the tendency for consumers to think of reasons why they should not believe a message
martyrdom effect
the tendency for people to donate more to a cause if they also have to sacrifice something or experience discomfort
loss aversion
the tendency for people to hate losing things more than they like getting things
mere exposure phenomenon
the tendency to like persons or things if we see them more often
transmedia storystelling
the use of a mix if social media platforms to create a plot that involves consumers who try to solve puzzles or mysteries in a narrative
spokescharachters
the use of animated characters or fictional mascots as a product representatives
psychographics
the use of psychological, sociological, and anthropological factors to construct market segments
framing
the way an issue is posed; can affect decisions and judgements
juggling lifestyle
working mothers' attempts to compromise between conflicting cultural ideals of motherhood and professionalism
long tail
no longer need to rely on big hits to find profits
dyadic encounters
two person groups
two-factor theory
2 seperate psychological processes are operating when a person is repeatedly exposed to an ad: repetition increased familiarity and thus reduced uncertainty about the product, but over time boredom inc. with each exposure, and at some point the amount of boredom incurred begins to exceed the amount of uncertainty reduced, resulting in wear-out
theory of reasoned action
A theory suggesting that the decision to engage in a particular behavior is the result of a rational process in which behavioral options are considered, consequences or outcomes of each are evaluated, and a decision is reached to act or not to act. That decision is then reflected in behavioral intentions, which strongly influence overt behavior.
fear appeals
Attempting to change people's behaviors by use of a message that induces fear.
activity stores
Letting consumers participate in the production of the products or services they buy there
value system
The relative importance or ranking of universal values
guerilla marketing
Unconventional marketing campaigns that place unusual messages in places where consumers don't expect to encounter advertising
source credibility
a communication source's perceived expertise, objectivity, or trustworthiness
bounded rationality
a concept that states bc we rarely have the resources to weigh every possible factor into a decision, we settle for a solution that is just good enough
more
a custom with a strong moral overtone
satisficing solution
a decision strategy that aims to yield an adequate solution rather than the best solution in order to reduce the costs of the decision-making process
prospect theory
a descriptive model of how people make choices
communications model
a framework specifying that a number of elements are necessary for communication to be achieved including a source, message, medium, receivers, and feedback
buyclass theory of purchasing
a framework that characterizes organizational buying decisions in terms of how much cognitive effort is involved in making a decision
attitide
a lasting general evaluation of people (including oneself), objects, advertisements, or issues
resonance
a literary device, frequently used in advertising, that uses a play on words (a double meaning) to communicate a product benefit
humor appeals
a marketing message that relies upon humor to sell a product
synoptic ideal
a model of spousal decision-making in which the husband and wife take a common view and act as joint decision-makers, assigning each other well-defined roles and making mutually beneficial decisions to maximize the couple's joint utility
dadvertising
a new trend that depicts fathers as wise and benevolent in advertising
custom
a norm that controls basic behaviors, such as division of labor in a household
lifestyle
a pattern of consumption that reflects a person's choices of how to spend his or her time and money
brand loyalty
a pattern of repeat product purchases, that involves a conscious decision to continue buying the same brand
high involvement theory
a person approaches a product decision as a problem-solving process (think, feel, do)
psychological time
a person's subjective evaluation of the passage of time, which may not correspond closely to the actual time elapsed
personality
a persons unique psychological makeup. Consistent patters of response to his/her environment
source derogation
a possible downside to comparative advertising because the consumer may doubt the credibility of a biased presentation
home shopping party
a selling format where a company representative makes a sales presentation to a group of people who gather at the home of a friend or acquaintance
knowledge structure
a set of beliefs and the way we organize these beliefs in our minds
belief system
a set of principles or tenets which together form the basis of a religion, philosophy, or moral code.
Plinking
act of embedding a product or service link in a video
instrumental values
actions we need to take to achieve the terminal values
AIOs
activities, interests, opinions
celebrity endorsements
advertisements that use an expert or celebrity as a spokesperson to endorse the use of a product or service
independence hypothesis
affect and cognition are seperate systems so its not necessary to have a cognition elicit an emotional response
ABC model of attitudes
affect, behavior, cognition
evoked set
alternatives a consumer knows about
consideration set
alternatives that are considered acceptable for further consideration in decision making
persuation
an active attempt to change attitudes
subjective norm
an additional component to the multiattribute attitude model that accounts for the effects of what we believe other people thinks we should do
attitude accessibility perspective
an attitude will guide the evaluation of the object but only if a persons memory activates it when she encounters the object
social shopping
an emerging form of e-commerce that allows an online shopper to simulate the experience of shopping in a brick-and-mortar store
cognitive-affective model
an emotional reaction is the last step in a series of cognitive processes that follow sensory recognition of a stimulus and retrieval of info from memory that helps categorize it.
timestyle
an individual's priorities regarding how he or she spends time as influenced by personal and cultural factors
attitude object
anything toward which one has an attitude
Habitual Bucket of Consumer Decision Making
behavioral, unconscious, automatic
salient beliefs
beliefs about the object a person considers during evaluation
motivational research
borrowed Freudian ideas to understand the deeper meanings of products and advertisements
category exemplars
brands that are particularly relevant examples of a broader classification
modified rebuy
buyer wants to modify product specifications, prices, terms, or suppliers
underground economy
buying and selling of goods and services that is concealed from the government to avoid taxes or regulations or because the goods and services are illegal
refutational arguments
calling attention to a products negative attributes as a persuasive strategy where a negative issue is raised and then dismissed; this approach can increase source credibility
point-of-purchase (POP) stimuli
can be an elaborate product display or demonstration, a coupon-dispensing machine, or an employee who gives out free samples
linkbaiting
careful crafting of a title that markets the content
M-commerce most likely takes place through ________.
cell phones
habitual decision making
choices made with little or no conscious effort
product disposal
choices people make regarding how to get rid of items once they no longer are of value to them
market beliefs
common assumptions about relationships between product quality and other factors such as price
co-branding strategies
companies team up to promote 2 or more products
impoulse buying
experiencing a sudden urge you can't resist
mental budgets
deciding beforehand an amount they plan to spenf, but then have an additional amount of slack they are willing to spend.
compensatory rule
decision rule that allows consumers to select products that may perform poorly on one criterion by compensating for the poor performance by good performance on another
consumption constellation
define, communicate, and perform social roles
Cognitive Bucket of Consumer Decision Making
deliberate, rational, sequential
frugality
denying short term purchasing desires
terminal values
desired end states that apply to many cultures
Id/libido
desiring immediate gratification
implementation intentions
dictates how much weight we give to different kinds of info, a timeline to carry out a decision, or how we deal with disruptive influences that mess up our plans
business to business e-commerce
e-commerce in markets where businesses buy from and sell to other businesses
reality engineering
elements of popular culture are appropriated by marketers and become integrated into marketing strategies
Affective
emotional, instantaneous
brand storytelling
emphasizes the importance of giving a product a rich background to involve customers in its history or experience
elimination-by-aspect
evaluating brands on the most important attribute
hierarchy of effects
explains the impact of the three components
hybrid products
feature characteristics from two distinct domains
determinant attributes
features we actually use to differentiate among our choices
native advertising
focusing on digital messages designed to blend into the editorial content of the publications in which they appear
attitude toward the act of buying (Aact)
focusing on the percieved consequence of purchasing
knowledge function
forming attitudes because we need order, structure, or meaning
expectancy disconfirmed model
forming beliefs about product performance based on our prior experience with the product or communications about the product that imply a certain level of quality.
shopping orientation
general attitudes about shopping
prediction market
groups of people with knowledge about an industry are, collectively, better predictors of the future than are any of them as individuals
mental budget
helps us estimate what we will consume over time so that we can regulate what we do in the present
affect
how a consumer feels about an attitude object
phablets
hybrid of a phone and a tablet
personality traits
identifiable characteristics that define a person
noncompensatory rule
if the option doesn't suit us on one dimension, we just reject it out of hand and move on to something else rather than think about how it might meet our needs in other ways
sunk-cost fallacy
if we pay more for something we shouldnt waste it
straight rebuy
in the buyclass framework, the type of buying decision that is virtually automatic and requires little deliberation
consumption situation
includes a buyer, a seller, and a product or service- but also many other factors, such as the reason we want to make a purchase and how the physical environment makes us feel
underdog brand biography
includes details about a brand's humble origins and how it defied the odds to succeed
inertia
involving little effort to throw a familiar package into the cart
The ________ function of attitudes applies when a person is in an ambiguous situation and needs order, structure, or meaning.
knowledge
simple additive rule
leads to the option that has the largest number of positive attributes
According to the two-factor theory, the net effect of being exposed repeatedly to the same message is a combination of ________.
learning and tedium
the ________ hierarchy of effects assumes the consumer does not initially have a strong preference for one brand over another. Instead, a consumer acts on the basis of limited knowledge and then forms an evaluation only after the product has been purchased or used.
low-involvement
consumer hyperchoice
making repeated choices that may drain psychological energy while decreasing our abilities to make smart choices
sex appeals
marketing communications for products that feature heavy doses of erotic suggestions that range from subtle hints to blatant displays of skin
Fishbein Model
measures salient beliefs, object-attribute linkages, and evaluation
comparative advertising
message compares two+ recognizable brands on specific attributes
convention
norm that regulates how we conduct our everyday lives
feature creep
occurs when developers add extra features that were not part of the initial requirements
lateral cycling
one consumer exchanges something he or she owns for something the other person owns
automatic decision
one family member chooses a product
doppelganger brand image
one that looks like the original but is in fact a critique of it
advergaming
online games merged with interactive ads that let companies target specific types of consumers
Big 5 Personality Traits
oppenness to experience, conscientiousness, extroversion, agreeableness, neuroticism
co-consumers
other patrons in a consumer setting
Covariation
our associations among events that may or may not actually influence one another
purchase momentum
our initial impulse purchases actually increase the likelihood that we will buy even more
executive control center
part of the brain that we use for important decision making, including moral judgements, can be worn down or distracted even by simple tasks like memorizing numbers
P2P Commerce
peer to peer. the notion of doing business with other consumers rather than with companies
social judgement theory
people assimilate new info about attitude objects in light of what they already know or feel
rational persepective
people calmly and carefully integrate as much info as possible with what they already know about a product, painstakingly weigh the pluses and minuses of each alternate, arriving at a satisfactory decision
means-end chain model
people link specific product attributes to terminal values
swishing
people organize parties to exchange clothing or other personal possessions with others
lifestyle marketing perspective
people sort themselves into groups on the basis of the things they like to do, how they like to spend their leisure time, and how they choose to spend their disposable income
latitudes of acceptance and rejection
people will consider and evaluate ideas falling within the latitude favorably, but they are more likely to reject out of hand those that fall outside of this zone
________ acknowledges that marketers will be more successful when they communicate with consumers who have already agreed to listen to them.
permission marketing
permission marketing
popular strategy based on the idea that a marketer will be more successful in persuading consumers who have agreed to let them try.
mental accounting
principle that states that decisions are influenced by the way a problem is posed
object-attribute linkages
probability that a particular object has an important attribute
feedback loop
provide people with information about their actions in real time, and then give them a chance to change those actions so that you push them to improve
syncretic decisions
purchase decision that is made jointly by both spouses
lexicographic rule
select the brand that is the best on the most important attribute
brand personality
set of traits people attribute to a product as if it were a person
Morning Morality Effect
shows that people are more likely to cheat, lie, or even commit fraud in the afternoon than in the morning
collective decision making
situations in which more than one person chooses the products or services that multiple consumers use
focus groups
small set of consumers tries out a new product while being observed by company personnel
value
some condition is preferable to its opposite
superego
someones conscience
cognitive element
something a person believes about himself, a behavior he performs, or an observation about his surroundings
intelligent agents
sophisticated software programs that use collaborative filtering technologies to learn from past user behavior in order to recommend new purchases
________ is the first element in the traditional communications model.
source
business to business marketers
specialists in meeting the needs of organizations such as corporations, government agencies, hospitals, and retailers
self-regulation
specify in advance how we want to respond to certain stimulus
ego
stuck in the middle of temptation and virtue
compliance
superficial attitude, likely to change when no one is monitoring us or when another option comes along
product complementarity
symbolic meanings of different products relate to one another
Behavior
the action he or she takes towards the object or in some cases at least his or her intentions to take action about it.
Elaboration Likelihood Model (ELM)
the approach that one of two routes to persuasion (central versus peripheral) will be followed, depending on the personal relevance of a message; the route taken determines the relative importance of the message contents versus other characteristics, such as source attractiveness
weighted additive rule
the consumer takes into account the relative importance of positively rated attributes, essentially multiplying brand ratings by importance weights
conjunctive rule
the decision maker establishes cut-offs for each attribute and chooses a brand if it meets all the cutoffs, but rejects a brand that fails to meet any one cut-off
family identity
the definition of a household by family members that it presents to members and to those outside the family unit
attitude models
the different elements that might work together to influence people's evaluations of attitude objects
source attractiveness
the dimensions of a communicator that increase her persuasiveness; these include expertise and attractiveness
evaluative criteria
the dimensions we use to judge the merits of competing options
reporting bias
the effectiveness of a source decreases bc he/she has the required knowledge but we question her willingness to convey it accurately
knowledge bias
the effectiveness of a source decreases because we question his/her knowledge about the topic
maximizing solution
the extensive cognitive decision strategies we use when we want to identify the best possible choice
postpurchase evaluation
the final stage of consumer decision making when we experience the product or service we selected and decide whether it meets our expectations
crowdsourcing
the growing practice of soliciting ideas for new products and even advertising campaigns from a user community
family financial officer
the individual in the family who is in charge of making financial decisions
queuing theory
the mathematical study of waiting lines
heuristics
the mental rules of thumb that lead to a speedy decision
gemba
the one true source of information
counteractive construal
when you exaggerate the negative aspect of behaviors that will interfere with the ultimate goal
functional theory of attitudes
theory that says attitudes exist because they serve some function for the person
multiple pathway anchoring and adjustment (MPAA) model
those models that assume a consumer's attitude (evaluation) of an attitude object depends on the beliefs he or she has about several or many attributes of the object; the use of a multi attribute model implies that an attitude toward a product or brand can be predicted by identifying these specific beliefs and combining them to derive a measure if the consumer's overall attitude.
The Berry and Dale advertising agency has proposed a new campaign for Bayer aspirin to overcome the public's tendency to "tune out" Bayer commercials. The proposed technique involves creating ten different 15-second spots that all demonstrate reasons for using Bayer aspirin. Which theory of message communication is the agency trying to use for in its proposal for Bayer aspirin?
two-factor theory
laddering
uncovers consumers' associations between specific attributes and these general consequences
wisdom of crowds
under the right circumstances, groups are smarter than the smartest people in them, meaning that large numbers of consumers can predict successful products
unplanned buying
unfamiliar with a stores layout or under time pressure . Recognizing a new need while in the store
archetypes
universally recognized ideas and behavior patterns
shared endorsements
users who follow or rate a product/service may find that their endorsements show up on the advertiser's page
Neuromarketing
uses fMRI to track blood flow as we preform mental tasks to take an up-close look at how our brains respond to marketing messages and product design features.
experiential hierarchy of effects
we act on the basis of our emotional reactions (feel, do, think)
constructive processing
we evaluate the effort we'll need to make a particular choice and then tailor the amount of cognitive "effort" we expend to get the job done
self-perception theory
we observe our own behavior to determine what our attitudes are, much as we assume that we know what another person's attitude is when we watch what he does
principle of cognitive consistency
we value harmony within our thoughts, feelings, and behaviors, and a need to maintain uniformity among these elements motivates us
cybermediary
website that helps to filter and organize online market information so that customers can identify and evaluate alternatives more efficiently
cognition
what he/she believes to be true about the attitude object
halo effect
when people react to other, similar stimuli in much the same way they respond to the original stimulus
paradox of low involvement
when we don't care as much about a product, the way it's presented increases in importance
problem recognition
when we experience a significant difference between our current state of affairs and some state we desire
identification
when we form an attitude to conform to another persons/groups expectations