Consumer Behavior Test 1
Market Segments
"Heavy users": 20%, "Light users": 80%
Courses of Action
-voice -private -third-party response
The Levels of the Extended Self
1. Individual 2. Family 3. Community 4. Group
Cognitive Development
1. Limited 2. Cued 3. Strategic
Five Stages of Consumer Development
1. observing 2. making requests 3. making selections 4. making assisted purchases 5. making independent purchases
The 80/20 rule
80% of your profit is made from 20% of your customers
The process of learning values from other cultures is called ________.
Acculturation
An individual with a high need for ________ would be most likely to place a premium on products and services that signify success.
Achievement
Mary Nabholz travels the same way to work every day. She notices advertisements in store windows when the ads first go up. However, after a few days, Mary no longer pays any attention to these ads because they have become familiar. Which of the following is affecting Mary's response to the ads?
Adaptation
Motivation that is driven by raw emotions is called ________.
Affect
If a consumer were to pursue products and services that seemed to alleviate loneliness, such as playing team sports, going to a bar, and/or shopping in busy malls, the consumer would be expressing a need for ________.
Affiliation
________ refers to a person's unique psychological makeup and how it consistently influences the way a person responds to his/her environment.
Archetype
The process of curation refers to what product(s)?
Art, Travel, Food
When Coke weaves a sound into a piece of music, the advertisement is using ________.
Auto Watermarking
Which theory listed below assumes that learning take place as the result of responses to external events?
Behavioral Learning
Rules of conduct that guide actions in the marketplace are called ________.
Business Ethics
Which of the following was first demonstrated by Ivan Pavlov?
Classical Conditioning
________ is where a person derives his or her identity in large measure from a social group.
Collective self
Perceptual Map
Company's or brand's strengths and weaknesses in comparison with competitors
Classical conditioning takes place when a(n) ________ is continuously matched with a(n) ________.
Conditioned stimulus; unconditioned stimulus
A(n) ________ is a person who identifies a need or desire, makes a purchase, and then disposes of a product.
Consumer
Which term refers to sensations that subtly influence how we think about a product?
Context Effect
Bayer HealthCare Pharmaceuticals established a new campaign for Yaz birth control to ensure consumers understand that Yaz does not treat PMS, a claim which had been made in early Yaz advertisements. Bayer is using ________.
Corrective Advertisements
What form do psychographic studies take?
Data that describes a group of people in terms of their tastes, opinions, personality traits, and lifestyle habits.
Many ________ cultures stress the importance of a collective self, in which an individual's identity is derived in large measure from his or her social group.
Eastern
A transaction in which two or more organizations or people give and receive something of value is called ________.
Exchange
________ suggests that expectations of achieving desirable outcomes— positive incentives— rather than being pushed from within motivate our behavior.
Expectancy Theory
Bart was a mortuary worker who noticed that there seemed to be a social class difference in what people placed on the graves of departed family members. What Bart observed was a class difference in how people manifest the relationship between external objects and the ________ self.
Extended
If a conditioned stimulus is only occasionally matched with an unconditioned stimulus, the association between the two will become weakened. This is called ________.
Extinction
Which act makes it illegal for American executives to bribe foreigners to gain business?
Foreign Corruption Practices Act
In the motivation process, the desired end state is the consumer's ________.
Goal
As manufacturing costs decrease and the amount of products that people accumulate goes up, consumers increasingly want to buy things that will provide ________ value.
Hedonic
When a woman buys expensive jewelry, which of the following needs is most likely being expressed?
Hedonic
Social Criticisms of Marketing's Impact on Individual Consumers
High prices Deceptive practices High-pressure selling Shoddy, harmful, or unsafe products Planned obsolescence Poor service to disadvantaged consumers
Jim Smith thinks he should be more outgoing. He is looking at his ________.
Ideal self
________ is the promotional strategy that involves select consumers altering some aspects of their selves to advertise for a branded product
Identity marketing
Much learning takes effort and time, but some learning is so casual as to be unintentional. This type of learning is referred to as ________ learning.
Incidental
The VALS2™ group that has the highest degree of resources and innovation is termed the ________. This group is concerned with social issues and is open to change.
Innovators
Though the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) outlaws bribery in business practices, it is still common in ________.
Japan, Mexico, Germany
A relative permanent change of behavior is called ________.
Learning
Which of the following is NOT considered a demographic?
Lifestyle
The importance people attach to worldly possessions is called ________.
Materialism
________ refer(s) to the processes that lead people to behave as they do.
Motivation
In the Western Culture the color black is often associated with ________.
Mourning
Instrumental conditioning is also called ________.
Operant Conditioning
Which of the following is a benefit organizations receive when customers complain?
Opportunity to correct the situation
Provenance
Origin matters
The process by which people select, organize, and interpret sensations is called ________.
Perception
Match.com and eharmony.com measure identifiable personal characteristics called ________.
Personality traits
If a woman receives compliments after wearing Obsession perfume, she is more likely to keep buying the product and wearing it. What type of instrumental conditioning has occurred in the situation?
Positive Reinforcement
Which of the following time periods is encompassed in the study of consumer behavior?
Pre-purchase, Purchase, Post-Purchase
When consumers are unhappy with a product, they boycott the product and/or store and express dissatisfaction to friends. This is called ________ response.
Private
Jenny Rowlins is absolutely exhausted after her shopping trip to pick out a dress for her sorority's formal event. The stores were crowded, and none of her favorite shops carried a dress that she liked in her size. After spending hours at the mall, Jenny decided to order her dress online and just return it if it was not exactly right. This story is an example of how consumer behavior is a(n) ________.
Process
When marketer's use psychological, sociological, and anthropological factors to analyze a market, they are using ________.
Psychographics
According to Maslow's hierarchy of needs, the lowest order (e.g., most basic) of needs is ________.
Psychological
When the ego tries to balance opposing forces, it uses the ________.
Reality principle
Research has indicated that the color ________ creates feelings of arousal and stimulates appetite.
Red
________ summarizes the beliefs a person holds about his own attributes and how he/she evaluates their self on those qualities.
Self-concept
If a female consumer sees an ad about a woman who can no longer fit into her old bathing suit, the consumer might think about her own situation and make a personal pledge to lose weight before summer arrives. This would be an example of marketing communications that attempt to influence a consumer's level of ________.
Self-esteem
________ is the way we assume others expect us to act.
Self-fulfilling prophecy
Companies that think carefully about the impact of sensations on product experiences are practicing ________.
Sensory Marketing
The average adult is exposed to about 3,500 pieces of advertising information every single day, far more information than they can or are willing to process. Consumers who are exposed to more information than they can process are in a state of ________.
Sensory Overload
Interpretivist Approach
Socially constructed, multiple Understanding Time-bound context dependent multiple simultaneous shaping events interactive cooperative with researcher being part of phenomenon under study
Which term refers to the process by which the way a word sounds influences the listener's assumptions about what the word describes?
Sound Symbolism
Which of the following values is most associated with materialists?
Status
Behavioral learning theorists do not focus on internal thought processes; rather, they look to external evidence to study learning. What aspects of the environment are of most concern to behaviorists in studying learning?
Stimulus and Response
According to the sociological tradition of ________, relationships with other people play a large part in forming the self.
Symbolic Interactionism
Stimulus generalization refers to ________.
The tendency of stimuli similar to a conditioned stimulus to evoke similar, conditioned responses
Esso (now Exxon in the United States) used the work of Ernest Dichter to influence its "Put a Tiger in Your Tank" ad campaign. Which of the following conclusions formed the rationale for the famous campaign?
The tiger supplies powerful animal symbolism and it contains vaguely sexual undertones.
When consumers are unhappy with a product, they may file a complaint in the form of legal action, Better Business Bureau complaint, or publishing a negative review. This is called a ________ response.
Third-party
Consumer researchers have adapted some of Sigmund Freud's ideas. In particular, his work highlights the potential importance of ________ that influence(s) our purchases.
Unconscious Motives
"Casual Fridays" in American workplaces encourage the expression of a person's ________.
Unique Self
In its advertising, an automobile company emphasizes the fuel economy, safety rating, and resale value of its car. The company is trying to appeal to which of the following consumer needs?
Utilitarian Needs
LOHAS:
an acronym for people who live "lifestyles of health and sustainability."
Tanya would really love to have a full- length mink coat; however, animal rights (and animal rights activists) have caused her to reconsider making such a purchase. This situation illustrates a(n) ________.
approach-avoidance conflict
A triple bottom-line orientation
business strategies that strive to maximize return in three ways: • Financial • Social • Environmental
Objective of marketing:
create awareness that needs exist, not to create needs
Social Marketing
encourages positive behavior and discourages negative activities
Stages of Perception
exposure, attention, interpretation
Cognitive learning theories
focus on consumers as problem solvers who learn when they observe relationships
Behavioral learning theories
focus on stimulus-response connections
semiotics
how marketers use symbols to create meaning
According to Freud, the part of the personality that seeks immediate gratification is called the ________.
id
Personality traits
identifiable characteristics that define a person
Consumer Misbehaviors
illegal acquisition and product use Consumer theft and fraud
Factors Leading to Adaptation
intensity, duration, discrimination, exposure, relevance
Agentic roles
men are expected to be assertive and have certain skills
Five Types of Perceived Risk
monetary risk functional risk physical risk social risk psychological risk
Utilitarian needs
needs motivating consumers to go shopping to accomplish a specific task
Positivist Approach
object tangible single prediction time free, independent separation between researcher and subject
Transformative Consumer Research
promotes research projects that include the goal of helping people or bringing about social change
Self-esteem
refers to the positivity of a person's self-concept.
Hedonic needs
relating to or considered in terms of pleasant (or unpleasant) sensations, emotional response
Instrumental conditioning
the individual learns to perform behaviors that produce positive outcomes and to avoid those that yield negative outcomes (also operant)
Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR)
the process of encourage organizations to make a positive impact on stakeholders
Consumer Behavior
the processes involved when individuals or groups select, purchase, use, or dispose of products, services, ideas, or experiences to satisfy needs and desires
Gestalt
the whole is greater than the sum of its parts
Communal roles
women are taught to foster harmonious relationships