Chapter 6
Attribute Sets
Universal, Evoked, Retrieval
Universal Sets
Includes all possible choices for a product category.
Retrieval Sets
Includes those brands or stores that the consumer can readily bring forth from memory
Performance Risk
Involves the perceived danger inherent in a poorly performing product or service
Consumer Decision Process
Need Recognition --> Information Search --> Alternative Evaluation --> Purchase --> Post Purchase
Love Needs
Needs expressed through interactions with others.
Esteem Needs
Needs that enable people to fulfill inner desires
Impulse Buying
A buying decision made by customers on the spot when they see the merchandise.
Multi-Attribute Model
A compensatory model of customer decision making based on the notion that customers see a product as a collection of attributes or characteristics. The model uses a weighted average score based on the importance of various attributes and performance on those issues.
Behavioral Component
A component of attitude that comprises the actions a person takes with regard to the issue at hand
Cognitive Component
A component of attitude that reflects what a person believes to be true.
Affective Component
A component of attitude that reflects what a person feels about the issue at hand—his or her like or dislike of something.
Lifestyle
A component of psychographics; refers to the way a person lives his or her life to achieve goals.
Motive
A need or want that is strong enough to cause the person to seek satisfaction.
Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs
A paradigm for classifying people's motives. It argues that when lower-level, more basic needs (physiological and safety) are fulfilled, people turn to satisfying their higher-level human needs (social and personal); see physiological, safety, social, and personal needs.
Attitude
A person's enduring evaluation of his or her feelings about and behavioral tendencies toward an object or idea; consists of three components: cognitive, affective, and behavioral.
Extended Problem Solving
A purchase decision process during which the consumer devotes considerable time and effort to analyzing alternatives; often occurs when the consumer perceives that the purchase decision entails a lot of risk.
Habitual Decision Making
A purchase decision process in which consumers engage with little conscious effort.
Psychological Risk
Associated with the way people will feel if the product or service does not convey the right image
Noncompensatory Decision Rule
At work when consumers choose a product or service on the basis of a subset of its characteristics, regardless of the values of its other attributes.
Compensatory Decision Rule
At work when the consumer is evaluating alternatives and trades off one characteristic against another, such that good characteristics compensate for bad ones.
Evoked Set
Comprises the alternative brands or stores that the consumer states he or she would consider when making a purchase decision.
Evaluative Criteria
Consist of a set of salient, or important, attributes about a particular product.
Involvement
Consumer's interest in a product or service. High: Greater Attention, deeper processing, develops strong attitudes and purchase intentions Low: Less attention, peripheral processing, generates weak attitudes and increased use of cues
Situational Factors
Factors affecting the consumer decision process; those that are specific to the situation that may override, or at least influence, psychological and social issues.
Limited Problem Solving
Occurs during a purchase decision that calls for, at most, a moderate amount of effort and time.
Negative Word of Mouth
Occurs when consumers spread negative information about a product, service, or store to others.
Internal Search for Information
Occurs when the buyer examines his or her own memory and knowledge about the product or service, gathered through past experiences.
External Search for Information
Occurs when the buyer seeks information outside his or her personal knowledge base to help make the buying decision.
Safety Needs
One of the needs in the PSSP hierarchy of needs; pertain to protection and physical well-being.
Reference Group
One or more persons whom an individual uses as a basis for comparison regarding beliefs, feelings, and behaviors.
Actual or Perceived Risk
Performance Risk Psychological Risk Financial Risk Social Risk Physiological Risk
Functional Needs
Pertain to the performance of a product or service.
Psychological Needs
Pertain to the personal gratification consumers associate with a product or service.
Determinant Attributes
Product or service features that are important to the buyer and on which competing brands or stores are perceived to differ.
Learning
Refers to a change in a person's thought process or behavior that arises from experience and takes place throughout the consumer decision process.
External Locus of Control
Refers to when consumers believe that fate or other external factors control all outcomes
Internal Locus of Control
Refers to when consumers believe they have some control over the outcomes of their actions, in which case they generally engage in more search activities.
Financial Risk
Risk associated with a monetary outlay; includes the initial cost of the purchase, as well as the costs of using the item or service.
Need Recognition
The beginning of the consumer decision process; occurs when consumers recognize they have an unsatisfied need and want to go from their actual, needy state to a different, desired state. (psychological or functional)
Physiological Risk
The fear of an actual harm should a product not perform properly.
Social Risk
The fears that consumers suffer when they worry others might not regard their purchases positively.
Perception
The process by which people select, organize, and interpret information to form a meaningful picture of the world.
Postpurchase Cognitive Dissonance
The psychologically uncomfortable state produced by an inconsistency between beliefs and behaviors that in turn evokes a motivation to reduce the dissonance; buyers' remorse.
Consumer Decision Rules
The set of criteria that consumers use consciously or subconsciously to quickly and efficiently select from among several alternatives.
Physiological Needs
Those relating to the basic biological necessities of life: food, drink, rest, and shelter.
Self-Actualization
When a person is completely satisfied with his or her life.