consumer behavior final
depth interviews
"1-on-1 interviews" somewhat lengthy non-structured
societal marketing concept
"enlightened marketers", calls on marketers to fulfill their target markets in ways that improve society as a whole while simultaneously meeting business objectives
usage situation/occasion
"i buy my wife flowers on valentine's day" "i try to stay at the holiday inn when im gone for a week or more for business"
brand relationship
1. Active customers- more relational, greater trust and commitment to the marketers 2. Passive customers- less relational 3. Customers seek both personal connections and functional features a. Special treatment b. Confidence benefits c. Social benefits
perceived brand loyalty
1. Behavior- frequency and consistency of buying a given brand 2. attitude - consumer's feeling of commitment to the brand 3. Frequency reward program- marketers offer rewards and benefits to those who purchase products consistently a. Switchers- seek to obtain bargains b. Consumer innovators- prime target for new products, not brand loyal
positioning process
1. Defining the market in which the product or brand competes, who the relevant buyers are, and the offering's competition. 2. Identifying the product's key attributes and researching consumers' perception regarding each of the relevant attributes. 3. Researching how consumers perceive the competing offerings on the relevant attributes. 4. Determining the target market's preferred combination of attributes. 5. Developing a distinctive, differentiating, and value-based positioning concept that communicates the applicable attributes as benefits. 6. Creating a positioning statement focused on the benefits and value that the product provides and using it to communicate with the target audiences.
the consumer research process
1. Defining the objectives of the research 2. Collecting and evaluating secondary data 3. Designing a primary research study 4. Collecting primary data 5. Analyzing the data 6. Preparing a report
criteria for effective targeting
1. Identifiable 2. Sizable 3. Stable 4. Accessible 5. Congruent with company's objectives and resources
motives
1. Losing weight to avoid health problems= negative 2. Losing weight to look better= positive 3. Rational motives- made selections based on totally objective criteria (weight, size, price, or miles per hour etc) 4. emotional motives- made selection based on personal or subjective data
dynamics of motivation
1. Needs are never fully satisfied 2. New needs emerge as old needs are satisfied 3. Success and failure influence goals a. Levels of aspiration (success of goals leads to higher goals, etc)
arousal of motives
1. Physiological arousal- bodily needs 2. Emotional arousal- 3. Cognitive arousal- thoughts lead to awareness, commercial about the meaning of home leads to calling one's parents behaviorist school- considers motivation to be a mechanical process Cognitive school- all behavior is directed at goal achievement
demographics
1. person's age, gender, ethnicity, and income a. social class- defined by income, education, occupation
microtargeting
1. personalized advertising messages a. Narrowcasting (opposite of broadcasting)
failure to achieve a goal
Frustration is the feeling that results from failure to achieve a goal, and defense mechanisms are cognitive and behavioral ways to handle frustration.
formation of new goals
Needs and goals are interdependent; neither exists without the other. However, people are often not as aware of their needs as they are of their goals. Human needs are never fully or permanently satisfied. As individuals attain their goals, they develop new ones. If they do not attain their goals, they continue to strive for old goals or they develop substitute goals.
positioning
The process by which a company creates a distinct image and identity for its products, services, or brands in consumers' minds
perceptual mapping
a diagrammatic technique used by asset marketers that attempts to visually display the perceptions of customers or potential customers. Typically the position of a company's product, product line, or brand is displayed relative to their competition
customer lifetime value
a forecasted estimate of how much a customer will spend on a particular product or service over the entire "stay" with the offering's seller
consumption rooted segmentation
a. Usage and purchase behaviors b. Attitudes and preferences regarding the product type of segmentation
VALS
a. stands for values and lifestyles i. 3 primary motivations 1. Ideals a. Thinkers- high resource, high innovation b. Believers- low resource, low innovation 2. Achievement a. Achievers- high resource, high innovation b. Strivers- low resource, low innovation 3. Self-expression a. Experiencers- high resource, high innovation b. Markers- low resource, low innovation 4. Innovators- combination of all three 5. Survivors- little/none of the above of the three motivators
consumer rooted segmentation
a.Empirical personal features b. personality , lifestyles, and sociocultural values type of segmentation
needs associated with inanimate objects
acquisition conservancy order retention construction
secondary research
already existing information that was originally gathered for research purpose other than the present research
rank order scales
asked to rank items in order of preference with some kind of criterion (exp- quality, value for money)
product concept
assumes that consumers will buy the product that offers them the highest quality, the best performance, and the most features
geodemographics
based on the premise that people who live close to one another are likely to have similar financial means
mallows hierarchy of needs
basic needs: physiological needs & safety needs psychological needs: belongingness and love needs & esteem needs self-fulfillment needs: self actualization
consumer behavior
behavior consumers display in searching from purchasing, using, evaluating, and disposing of products and services, that they expect will satisfy their needs - focuses on how indiv/fam/customers will make decisions to spend their money/resources on items what/why/when/where/how often they buy
personal consumer
buys goods/service for their own use, for use of the household, for gift. Bought for final use by individuals, referred to as end users
validity
collects appropriate data needed to answer questions
focus groups
consists of 8-10 ppl who meet w moderator to focus on a particular product
semantic differential scale
consists of a series of bipolar adjectives (good/bad) on the ends of odd numbered (usually 5 or 7) continuum, sometimes even numbered option is used to eliminate neutral answer
bases for segmentation
consumer-rooted, consumption rooted
consumer bases
demographics geodemographics personality traits psychographics lifestyle/VALS
projective techniques
disguised tests that contain stimuli, designed to make it easier for consumers to express themselves 1. Word association 2. Sentence completion 3. photo/visual storytelling 4. Role playing
motivation
driving force within individuals that impels them into action - caused by tension due to unfulfilled need
controlled experiment
ensures any difference in the outcome is due to different treatments of the variable under study
simple random sample
every member of population has a known and equal chance of being selected
quantitative research
experimentation/survey research
qualitative research
focus groups/in depth interviews/specific approaches, can use discussion guides
premier positioning
focuses on the brand's exclusivity. Positioning against the competition acknowledges competing brands.
marketing myopia
focuses on the needs of the company instead of defining the company and its products in terms of the customers' needs and wants. It results in the failure to see and adjust to the rapid changes in their markets
usage rate
heavy, medium, light users and nonusers (prospective adopters vs.persistent non adopters)
personal interview survey
high cost, slow speed, high response, difficult geo, problematic bias, difficult supervision
segmentation
identification of distinct segments within a given market or population
organizational consumer
includes profit/non-for-profit biz, govt, and institutions, all must buy products in order to run their organizations
customer satisfaction
individual consumers perception of the product in relation to his/her expectation
quota sample
interviews given # of people in each category (exp= 50 men 50 women)
umbrella positioning
is a statement or slogan that describes the universal benefit of the company's offering. At times, this statement does nor refer to specific products. For example, Campbell's slogan, "Soup is good food," promotes all soups without any reference to the Campbell's brands.
repositioning
is the process by which a company strategically changes the distinct image and identity that its product or brand occupies in consumers' minds. Companies do so when consumers get used to the original positioning and it no longer stands out in their minds. Similarly, when consumers begin to view the old positioning as dull, marketers must freshen up their brands' identities.
psychographics
lifestyles a. Activities, interests, opinions (AIOs) b. Personality traits c. Sociocultural values d. VALS- stands for values and lifestyles
types of attitude scales
likert scales, semantic differential scales, behavior intention scale, rank order scale
online interview survey
low cost, fast speed, self-selected response, excellent geo
mail survey
low cost, slow speed, low response, excellent geographic
test marketing surveys
mail, telephone, personal interview, online
production concept
maintains that consumers are mostly interested in product availability at low prices, marketing objectives are cheap, efficient production and intensive distribution
selling concept
maintains that marketers' primary focus is selling the products that they have decided to produce
marketing concept
maintains that the essence of marketing consists of satisfying consumers needs, creating value, and retaining customers
customer retention
make it in the best interest of customer to stay with a company rather than switch to another company 1. Loyal customers buy more products 2. Loyal customers are less price sensitive and pay less attention to others advertising 3. Servicing existing customers is cheaper 4. Loyal customers spread positive word of mouth and refer other customers
observational research
marketers recognize that the best way to gain an in depth understanding of a relationship bw ppl and products is by watching them in the process of buying or using product
behavior intentions scale
measures likelihood that consumers will act a certain way in the future
systematic random sample
member is selected as random and then every nth is selected
telephone survey
mod cost, immediate speed, moderate response, good geo, moderate bias, easy supervision
physiological observation
monitor respondent's pattern of information processing
likert scale
most popular, check number corresponding to their level of agreement/dis, equal number of choices on either side of neutral choice, benefit- can look at each question individually or the survey as a whole
primary research
new research especially designed and collected for purposes of a current research problem
substitute goals
not as satisfactory as primary goal, may be sufficient to dispel uncomfortable tension
product-specific goals
outcomes that consumers seek by using a given product or service
generic goals
outcomes that consumers seek in order to satisfy physiological and psychological needs
external secondary research
outside firm or company, can be free (library), public/govt data
innate (primary) needs
physiological needs such as food water air sex etc -AKA primary needs bc needed to sustain life
stratified random sample
population is divided into mutually exclusive groups (such as age groups) and then random samples are drawn from each group
cluster sample
population is divided into mutually exclusive groups (such as blocks) and then the researcher draws a sample of groups to interview
non probability sample
population understudy has been predetermined in non random fashion ex: convenience, judgement, quota
key attribute
positioning is based on a brand's superiority on relevant attributes. Un-owned positioning is when a position is not associated with a product from the category.
trio of needs
power, affiliation and achievement -power= individual's desire to control his/her environment - affiliation= desire for friendship, acceptance, belonging -achievement= personal accomplish is the goal
marketing mix
product/service price place promotion
benefit segmentation
products- 1. Functional 2. Value for money 3. Social benefit 4. Positive emotional benefits 5. Negative emotional benefits services - 1. Social benefits 2. Special treatments benefit 3. Confidence benefits
mystery shoppers
professional observers who pose as customers and interact with and provide unbiased evaluations of the company's service personnel to see opportunities for improvement w/o bias
acquired (secondary) needs
psychological needs we learn in response to our culture/environment such as self-esteem, prestige, affection, power, etc
disciplines upon which consumer behavior is built
psychology, sociology, social psychology, cultural anthropology, and economics
consumer panels
purchase data from secondary data providers who collected consumer behavior data from households, etc
qualitative vs. quantitative
qualitative= 1. purpose- designed to provide insight about new product ideas and identify strategies aimed at target markets. 2. Types of questions/methods- open-ended, not structured, etc 3. Main methods- focus groups, depth interviews 4. Sampling methods- small, nonprobability, not usually representative of entire population 5. Analysis- look for "themes" quantitative= 1. Purpose- aimed at describing target market, results used for making strategic marketing decisions 2. Types of questions/methods- close-ended, predefined response choices 3. Main methods- surveys, observation of customers, experimentation, consumer panels 4. Analysis- coded and entered into database, statistical method of analysis
customer value
ratio b/w the customer's perceived benefits and the resources used to obtain those benefits
test marketing
real-world feedback, selection of market area and then introduce product to that area to see actual response
judgement sample
researcher uses his/her judgement to select population members who are good sources for accurate info
probability sample
respondents are selected in a way that every member of the population studied as a known, non-zero chance on being selected ex: simple random sample, systematic sample, stratified sample, cluster sample
reliability
same questions produce same feelings
behavioral targeting
segmentation based on usage behavior
targeting
selecting the segments that the company views as prospective customers and pursuing them
convenience sample
selects most accessible pop members from whom to obtain info (exp- classroom of students)
compliant analysis
should encourage customers to 1. Complain about an unsatisfactory product 2. Provide suggestions for improvements by completing forms asking specific questions beyond the routine 3. Establish listening posts such as hotlines where designated employees listen to comments or ask for comments
needs reflecting ambition, power, accomplishment and prestige
superiority achievement recognition exhibition infavoidance
brand loyalty
tendency of some consumers to continue buying the same brand of goods rather than competing brand
positioning
the process by which a company creates a distinct image and identity for its products, services, and brands in consumers' minds
market segmentation
the process of dividing a market into subsets of consumers with common needs or characteristics
customer loyalty/profitability
tracks costs and revenues of individual customers and then categorizes them into tiers based on consumption behaviors that are specific to the company's offerings 1. Platinum- heavy users, not price sensitive, willing to try new offerings 2. Gold- heavy users, not as profitable bc more price sensitive, ask for discounts, likely to buy from several buyers 3. Iron- spending volume and profitability do not merit special treatment from the company 4. Lead- actually cost the company money bc they claim more attention than merited by their spending and spread negative word of mouth
usage bases
usage rate, usage situation/occasion, benefit segmentation, perceived brand loyalty, and brand relationship
internal secondary research
within company, customer lifetime value profiles