MKT 310 Unit 3
Marketers understand that individuals make statements about their social class through product purchases. Research on the study of the impact of fakes finds a major headache for many manufacturers, especially in Asia. Officials in China estimate that ________ percent of the products made there are counterfeit.
15-20
The ________ richest people in the world are worth $1.9 trillion. This is about the same amount shared by the 3.5 billion people who are in the bottom half of the world's income bracket.
80
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? A. The tiger supplies powerful animal symbolism and it contains vaguely sexual undertones. B. The playful nature of the tiger is appealing to female consumers. C. Orange and black are two of the most powerful colors in the color spectrum. D. The size of the tiger enhances a male's ego.
A
Which is an example of anthropomorphism? A. A car owner thinks that his car is cool and fun. He sometimes talks to it as a friend. B. An underwear maker releases a controversial print ad that many believe is too explicit. C. A salesperson classifies her customers by personality type. D. A marketer launches a new product designed for middle-aged men with high incomes. E. A researcher speaks one on one with a subject for two hours about why he buys the brand of sneakers he wears.
A
This occurs when consumers disguise their luxury items in the belief that truly high status people do not need to display expensive logos, whereas those who do betray lower status.
Abranding
This is the person who actually purchases a product.
Buyer
Taco Bell's very successful decision to offer tacos produced with Dorito brand shells is an example of which strategy described in this chapter?
Co-branding
This rule for decisionmaking allows a product to make up for its shortcoming on one dimension by excelling on another.
Compensatory rule
This rule entails processing by brand. The decisionmaker establishes cutoffs for each attribute, chooses a brand if it meets all the cutoffs, and rejects a brand if it fails ANY of the cutoffs.
Conjunctive rule
This term was coined by Veblen and refers to people's desires to provide prominent visible evidence of their ability to afford luxury goods.
Conspicuous consumption
Consumer's beliefs about what the future holds
Consumer confidence
This refers to the fact that we are more likely to comply with a requirement than to make the effort to not comply
Default bias
Lee-Ann Wang is young and enjoys risky activities such as skydiving, bungee jumping, and snowboarding. To which of the following VALS2TM groups would Lee-Ann most likely belong?
Experiencers
This occurs when a consumer stops using a brand because they don't want to be mislabeled as a lesser status person who buys fake brands.
Flight
This is the person who conducts the information search and controls the flow of information available to the group; in an organization, they identify possible vendors and products for the rest of the group to consider
Gatekeeper
This type of DM describes the choices we make with little or no conscious effort.
Habitual
Mental rules of thumb
Heuristics
Based on motivational research, which of the following consumption motives most likely explains a person's motivation to purchase gourmet foods, foreign cars, cigarette holders, or perfume?
Individuality
This person tries to sway the outcome of a decision.
Influencer
This is the person who brings up an idea or identifies a need for something.
Initiator
The VALS2TM 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
A consumer's ________ refers to the various ways the consumer decides to invest time and money and how these consumption choices reflect his values and tastes.
Lifestyle
Loss aversion refers to the fact that people hate ________ more than they like ______.
Losing things, getting things
This group of consumers tends to purchase luxury items to demonstrate to others that they have "made it" (expensive homes, cars, etc)
Luxury is a reward
This group purchases expensive items that are very high quality and will last a long time; their purchasing of these goods is highly thought out and not impulsive.
Luxury is functional
Which phrase is used by marketers to describe consumers who use their money to buy things that will last and have enduring value?
Luxury is functional
Devon has a more emotional approach to luxury spending and is more likely to make impulse purchases. Based on Devon's attitude towards luxury, SRI Consulting Business Intelligence would place her in which consumer group?
Luxury is indulgence
This group of consumers is the smallest of luxury buyers and more likely to be younger; they want luxury goods so they can be lavish and self-indulgent. It's more impulsive and an emotional approach is used.
Luxury is indulgence
Jessie uses her luxury goods to say, "I've made it." She likes to demonstrate her success to others and purchases conspicuous luxury items, such as high-end automobiles and homes in exclusive communities. Market researchers would describe Jessie as which type of consumer?
Luxury is reward
In the lexicographic rule, what do consumers do if there are two or more brands that are equally good on the most important attribute?
Move on to the next most important criteria and pick the one that performs best in that criteria.
This occurs when an organization wants to make a purchase and needs to conduct extensive problem solving.
New task
This set of rules operate by eliminating any options that do not suit us on one dimension.
Noncompensatory
When we make habitual or emotional decisions, we typically use a __________ rule.
Noncompensatory
Consumers who have recently achieved their wealth and don't have the benefit of extensive training to know how to spend it
Noveau riche
What is one example that Ariely gave regarding default bias?
Opt in vs. opt out of organ donation
Deliberately avoiding status symbols by mocking status.
Parody display
Some individuals who have a desire to make a statement about their social class, or the class to which they hope to belong, seek status by deliberately avoiding fashionable products. Market researchers would use the term ______ to describe the actions of these status seekers.
Parody display
This occurs when consumers go out of their way to emphasize their long relationship with a brand but express concern that its image will be tarnished
Reclamation
________ is the coping strategy used by consumers who go out of their way to emphasize their long relationship with the brand and express concern that its image will be tarnished.
Reclamation
The laundry detergent Cheer was once advertised as "all-tempa-Cheer," with the promise that it was effective regardless of water temperature. Today, its ads promote it for its color-safe properties. Which strategy was involved in developing the brand's new personality?
Repositioning
How does the lexicographic rule work?
Select the brand that is the best on the most important attribute
The passage of individuals from one social class to another
Social mobility
A habitual decision; an automatic choice such as when an inventory level reaches a preestablished reorder point.
Straight rebuy.
Young teenage girls are very heavy users of makeup (especially eye shadow). Though the size of this market is smaller than the larger adult market, marketers have learned that the consumption pattern is very heavy and these young women experiment with many varieties of products. This market most closely resembles which of the following principles?
The 80/20 principle
Bounded rationality refers to...
The satisficing approach to decisionmaking
(T/F) Brands have personalities.
True
(T/F) It is possible to use psychographics to identify distinct segments even for mundane products such as soap
True
(T/F) People tend to hate losing things more than they like getting things.
True
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
This is the person who actually consumes the product or service.
User
This type of DM involves assigning a relative importance to each attribute and weighting each one, then finding the sum.
Weighted additive rule
Shirley buys a genuine mink fur and then sees a woman walking on Worth Avenue with a faux fur. Shirley decides to disguise her genuine fur because she believes that truly high-status people do not need to display expensive logos, whereas those who do demonstrate that they belong to a lower status. Marketers would describe this coping strategy as ________.
abranding
Old money families tend to live largely on inherited funds and following the Great Depression of the 1930s, they ______________.
became more discreet about exhibiting their wealth
Our confidence in our future, as well as in the overall economy, determines how freely we spend our money and the types of products we buy. The field of ________ studies how consumers decide what to do with their money.
behavioral economics
This field focuses on the effects of psychological and social factors on the economic decisions we make (many of which are irrational)
behavioral economics
According to the VAL system, consumers that have strong principles and favor brands are considered ________.
believers
_________ is repeat purchasing behavior due to a conscious decision to continue buying that brand
brand loyalty
The Pillsbury Doughboy and the Jolly Green Giant are examples of ________.
brand personalities
When a person flaunts his status by deliberately using up valuable resources, marketers call this ________.
conspicuous consumption
Prioritizing consumption activities that use up as many resources as possible in nonconstructive pursuits
conspicuous waste
________ is the state of mind consumers have about their own personal situation. This state of mind as well as their feelings about their overall economic prospects help to determine whether they will purchase goods and services, take on debt, or save their money.
consumer confidence
The famous psychologist Sigmund Freud proposed that much of one's adult personality stems from a fundamental conflict between a person's ________________ and the necessity to function as a responsible member of society.
desire to gratify his or her physical needs
We need both social class and income data to predict purchase of...
expensive, symbolic products
When consumers ________, they reduce the amount they save, they take on more debt, and they splurge on discretionary items.
feel optimistic about the future
If a person who bought the real thing sees imitations of their prized handbags or watches parading in public, they can respond in a number of ways. One approach is to discontinue using the brand because they don't want to be mislabeled as a lesser-status person who purchases counterfeit brands. Which term do researchers use for this consumer reaction?
flight
With the elimination-by-aspects rule, the buyer evaluates brands on the most important attribute by...
imposing specific cutoffs on the most important attribute
___________ is a better predictor of major expenditures that do not have status or symbolic aspects (like major appliances)
income
This occurs when consumers purchase familiar brands over and over because it's simply less effort to do so
inertia
What are two (very separate) explanations for a buyer who purchases the same brand again and again?
inertia or brand loyalty
If a consumer simply selects the brand that is the best on the most important attribute, they are using the...
lexicographic rule
People with incomes high enough to purchase luxury items, at least on a small scale
mass class
This situation involves limited DM; it occurs when an organization wants to repurchase a product or service but also make minor changes
modified rebuy
Bill Gates and Mark Zuckerberg are individuals who recently achieved their wealth and who don't have the benefit of years of training to learn how to spend it. Market researchers would use the term ________ to describe these consumers.
noveau riche
A deliberate change by an organization that intends to modify behavior
nudge
Many social scientists consider ___________ the best indicator of social class
occupation
Our tendency to define people to a great extent by what they do for a living is called...
occupational prestige
In the last few years, the label ________ entered our nation's vocabulary, beginning with the Occupy Wall Street movement where we saw protesters camping out in cities across the United States.
one percenter
A person's unique psychological makeup and how it consistently influences the way a person responds to his or her environment.
personality
The concept of ________ refers to a person's unique psychological makeup and how it consistently influences the way a person responds to his or her environment.
personality
Marketing strategies based on personality differences have met with mixed success, partly because of the way researchers have measured and applied these differences in ________ to consumption contexts.
personality traits
Citigroup strategists coined the term ________ to describe an economy that's driven by a fairly small number of rich people.
plutonomy
Cues in the environment that make us more likely to react in a certain way even though we're unaware of the influences
priming
When the ego tries to balance opposing forces, it uses the ________.
reality principle
A range of factors influence the overall ________ including individual consumers' pessimism or optimism about their personal circumstances, such as a sudden increase in personal wealth as the result of an inheritance and global events such as the Great Recession.
savings rate
___________ is a better predictor of purchases that have symbolic aspects but low to moderate prices, such as cosmetics or liquor.
social class
Many of the noveau rich suffer from..
status anxiety
The nouveau riche group of consumers monitor the cultural environment to ensure that they do the "right" thing, wear the "right" clothes, get seen at the "right" places, use the "right" caterer, and so on. They suffer from ________.
status anxiety
Market researchers use the term _____ to describe products that are purchased not for the enjoyment of the item itself, but rather to let others know that the purchaser/owner can afford it.
status symbols
An advertisement emphasizes that if a consumer uses a certain deodorant, he or she will not offend other people and will not cause problems in the workplace because of "bad body odor." What part of the Freudian system is this ad appealing to?
superego
The ________ is the counterweight to the id. This system is essentially the person's conscience. It internalizes society's rules (especially as parents teach them to us) and tries to prevent the id from seeking selfish gratification.
superego
Jim sees himself as being confident, powerful, and heroic. According to the BrandAsset Archetypes model developed by ad agency Young & Rubicam, Jim would be classified as a ________.
warrior
According to this chapter, marketers segment consumers based on contemporary psychographic research, which includes categories of variables such as ______________.
activities, interests, and opinions