Marketing Exam 3

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Blind Test

The consumer is not aware of the product's brand name

Nonsatisfaction

The consumer is not likely to feel disappointment or engage in complaint behavior

Many marketing efforts attempt to influence what?

The consumer's desired state

Switching Costs

The cost of finding, evaluating and adopting another solution

Affective Performance

The emotional response that owning or using the product or outlet provides

Two Stage Decision Process

The first stage is making the buyer's approved vendor list. A second stage is other decision rules/purchase decisions

Reference Group Infastructure

The flow of purchase influence within an industry

Metagoal

The general nature of the outcome being sought

Pragmatic Implications

The implied meanings (that are neither directly stated nor logically implied) that consumers derive when interpreting language in a "practical" way

Decision Making Units (DMUs)

The individuals (representing functional areas and management) within an organization who participate in making a given purchase decision

Purchase Involvement

The level of concern, or interest in, the purchase process triggered by the need to consider a particular purchase

What does retail attraction model show?

The level of store attraction

Organizational Culture

The lifestyle in that organization and how they make decisions and how they approach problems involving risk, innovation, and change

What does Limited Decision Making cover?

The middle ground between nominal decision making and extended decision making

Instrumental Performance

The physical function of the product

Problem Recognition

The result of discrepancy between a desired state and an actual state that is sufficient to arouse and activate the decision process

Desired State

The way an individual WANTS to feel or be at the present time

Actual State

The way an individual perceives his or her feelings and situations to be at the present time

Awareness Set

Those brands consumers are aware of

Inert Set

Those brands consumers are aware of and view in a neutral manner

Inept Set

Those brands consumers are aware of and view negatively

Evoked Set (Consideration Set)

Those brands or products one will evaluate for the solution of a particular consumer problem

Ongoing Search

To acquire information for possible later use and because the process itself is pleasurable

Selective Problem Recognition

Discrepancy that only one brand can solve

List the marketing strategies based on information searched patterns

-Maintenance Strategy -Disrupt Strategy -Capture Strategy -Intercept Strategy -Preference Strategy -Acceptance Strategy

List examples of what could classify a firm (firmographics)

-Size -Activities and objectives -Location -Industry -Industry Category -Organization Composition -Macrosegmentation

An important step in developing a marketing strategy for a particular segment is to specify the objectives being pursued. Several distinct possibilities exist:

1) Attract new users to the product category 2)Capture competitor's current customers 3) Engage current customers to use more 4) Encourage current customers to become repeat purchasers 5) Encourage current customers to become committed customers

Firms need to satisfy customer expectations by:

1) Creating reasonable thorough promotional efforts 2) Maintaining consistent quality so the reasonable expectations are fulfilled

What are the five key elements of relationship marketing?

1) Developing a core service or product around which to build a customer relationship 2) Customizing the relationship to the individual customer 3) Augmenting the core service or product with extra benefits 4) Pricing in a manner that encourages loyalty 5) Marketing to employees so they they will perform well for customers

What are five factors that determine whether a relationship will be transactional or relational?

1) Industry Structure 2) Decision Making Culture 3) Decision Making Structure 4) Risk Tolerance 5) Nature of the Purchase

Healthy business relationships depend on a number of value dimensions. What are they?

1) Legitimacy and Compatibility 2) Social Relations 3) Economic and Shared Values 4) Learning Bonds

The following represent the five primary sources of information available to consumers:

1) Memory of past searches, personal experiences, and low involvement learning 2) Personal sources such as family, friends, and others 3) Independent sources such as magazines, consumer groups, and government agencies 4)Marketing sources such as sales personnel, websites, and advertising 5) Experiential sources such as inspection and product trial

List the three purchasing situations

1) Straight Rebuy 2) Modified Rebuy 3) New Task

A consumer decision requires information on the following:

1) The appropriate evaluation criteria for the solution of the problem 2) The existence of various alternative solutions 3) The performance level or characteristics of each alternative solution on each evaluative criterion

The probability and magnitude of such dissonance (see post purchase dissonance) are a function of:

1) The degree of commitment or irrevocability of the decision 2) The importance of the decision to the consumer 3) The difficulty of choosing among the alternatives 4) The individual's tendency to experience anxiety

The level of one's desire to resolve a particular problem depends on two factors:

1) The magnitude of the discrepancy between the desired and actual state 2) The relative importance of the problem

A firm will attempt to influence generic problem recognition when the problem is latent or of low importance and one of the following exists:

1)It is early in the product life cycle 2)The firm has a high percentage of the market 3)External search after problem recognition is apt to be limited 4)It is an industry-wide cooperative effort

List the five steps of the organizational decision process.

1)Problem Recognition 2) Information Search 3) Evaluation and Selection 4) Purchase and Decision Implementation 5) Usage and Postpurchase Evaluation

Requires consumers to rank the criteria by importance and establish cutoffs to narrow down to 1

Elimination by aspect decision rule

Disjunctive Decision Rule

Establishes a minimum level of performance for each important attribute

Although consumers have a general sense of how important various criteria are, this can be influenced by numerous factors:

1)Usage situation 2) Competitive context 3) Advertising Effects

Brand Loyalty

A biased behavioral response expressed overtime by a decision making unit with respect to one or more alternative brands

Post Purchase Dissonance

A common consumer reaction after making a difficult, relatively permanent decision

Innovativeness

A consumer using a product in a new way

Bounded Rationality

A limited capacity for processing information

External Reference Price

A price provided by the manufacturer or retailer in addition to the actual current price of the product

Instrumental Motives

Activate behaviors designed to achieve a second goal

John Deere wants to understand how people maintain their lawns. What should they be studying?

Activity and Product analysis

Corrective Advertising

Advertising run by a firm to cause consumers to unlearn inaccurate information they acquired as a result of the firm's earlier advertising

Symbolic Performance

Aesthetic or image-enhancement performance

Evaluation of products based on how they make the users feel

Affective Choice

Relationship Marketing

An attempt to develop an ongoing, expanding exchange relationship with firm's customers

Surrogate Indicator

An attribute used to stand for or indicate another attribute

Rational Choice Theory implicitly or explicitly assumes a number of things about a consumer choice that are often not true. What are those three assumptions?

Assumption 1: Consumers seek one optimal solution to a problem and choose on that basis Assumption 2: Consumers have the skill and motivation to find the optimal solution Assumption 3: The optimal solution does not change as a function of situational factors such as time pressure, task definition, or competitive context

Children's Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA)

Authorizes the FTC to develop specific rule to implement the provisions of the act

Involves tracking consumer click patterns on websites and using that information to display ads

Behavioral Targeting

What does CARU stand for?

Children's Advertising Review Unit

A term used to refer to turnover in a firm's customer base is?

Churn

Repeat Purchasers

Continue to buy the same brand though they do not have an emotional attachment to it

What is evaluation criteria typically associated with?

Desired Benefits

Generic Problem Recognition

Discrepancy that a variety of brands within a product category can reduce

Conjunctive 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

True or False: Purchase involvement is the same as product involvement

False. Purchase involvement is NOT product involvement

Committed Customer

Has an emotional attachment to a brand or firm

Attempts to increase capabilities in areas such as vision, response time, temperature and sound

Human Factors Research

External Search

If a solution is not reached through internal search, then the search process is focused on external information relevant to solving the problem

A consumer issue that they are not aware of

Inactive Problem

This is composed of those brands consumers are aware of and view negatively

Inept Set

Lead Users

Innovative organizations that derive a great deal of their success from leading change

What are two dimensions to performance?

Instrumental and Symbolic

Firmographics

Involve both organizational characteristics and characteristics of the composition of the organization

Relational Exchanges

Involve multiple events, occur over an extended period of time, involves significant investment by the buyer and seller, and involve high levels of loyalty

Transactional Exchanges

Involve single transactions, are short lived, involve few investments by the buyer and seller in the relationship and involve low loyalty

Extended Decision Making

Involves an extensive internal and external information search followed by a complex evaluation of multiple alternatives and significant post purchase evaluation

Limited Decision Making

Involves internal and limited external search, few alternatives, simple decision rules on few attributes, and little post purchase evaluation

Nominal Decision Making (Habitual Decision Making)

Involves no decision per se. They occur where there is low involvement with the purchase

Search Engine Optimization (SEO)

Involves techniques designed to ensure that a company's web pages are accessible to search engines and focused in ways to help improve the chances they are found

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 the choice

Behavioral Targeting

Involves tracking consumer click patterns on a website and using that information to decide on a banner and placement

This involves internal limited search, few alternatives and decision rules on a few attributes

Limited Decision Making

Net Promoter Score

Measures the percentage of a firm's customer base left after subtracting out the firm's detractors

How likely is it that you would recommend us to a friend is used to calculate this_____

NPS

Consumption Guilt

Negative emotions or guilt feelings are aroused by the use of a product or service

This approach tends to occur when the buying decision is important and the choice is complex

New Task Buying

Product Nonuse

Occurs when a consumer actively acquires a product that is not used or used sparingly relative to potential use

Corporate Culture

Often used to refer to the organizational culture of the business firm

Internal Search

Once a problem is recognized, relevant information from long term memory is used to determine such things as (1) whether a satisfactory solution is known (2) what the characteristics of potential solutions are and (3) what appropriate ways exist to compare solutions

Inactive Problem

One of which the consumer is not aware of

Active Problem

One the consumer is aware of or will become aware of in the normal course of events

Macrosegmentation

Organizations with distinguishing firmographics can be grouped into marketing segments through this process

When was COPPA founded

Passed by congress in 1998

James decided to buy cereal when he saw some in the store and remembered he was out at home. This is an example of:

Reminder Purchase

Lexicographic Decision Rule

Requires the consumer to rank the criteria in order of importance

Elimination By Aspect Decision Rule

Requires the consumer to rank the evaluation criteria in terms of their importance and to establish a cutoff point for each criterion

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

Local Mobile Search

Searches for information from a mobile device pertaining to the current (or future planned) geographic location of a consumer

Memory, personal, independent, marketing experiential- what are these referred to as?

Sources of information

An attribute such as country of origin or price is used to indicate quality. What is this an example of?

Surrogate Indicator

Sensory Discrimination

The ability of an individual to distinguish between similar stimuli

Children's Advertising Review Unit (CARU)

The advertising industry's self-regulatory group dedicated to monitoring advertising to kids

Compensatory Decision Rule

The brand that rates highest on the sum of the consumer's judgements of the relevant evaluative criteria will be chosen

This process requires companies to make an approved vendor list and selects vendors based on some evaluative criteria

Two-stage decision process

Consummatory Motives

Underlie behaviors that are intrinsically rewarding to the individual involved

Evaluation Criteria

Various dimensions, features, or benefits a consumer looks for in response to a specific problem


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