Marketing Consumer Behavior
Auto driving?
-Consumers bring their own pictures or a re shown pictures -Then, the interview is conducted using pictures as stimuli -The term "autodriving" indicates that the interview is "driven" by informants as they are seeing and hearing their behavior
What are some disadvantages of focus groups?
-Data reliability -Subjective interpretation -Cost may be an issue
Disadvantages of protective methods?
-Lack of structure -Require highly trained interviewers -Analysis of the data can be challenging and requires great skill -Risk of interpretation bias -Tend to be expensive
Advantages of a survey?
-Quick, cheap, efficient, good for describing the situation, identifying sample characteristics, measuring differences
What are some advantages of focus groups?
-See facial/body language cues -Wide ranging responses -Client participation
Advantages of projective methods?
-They elicit responses that participants would otherwise be unwilling or unable to give -Helpful when issues to be addressed are personal, sensitive, or subject to social norms -Helpful when underlying motivations, beliefs and attitudes operate at a subconscious level
Consumer behavior research methods?
1. Causal 2. Descriptive 3. Exploratoryi
Benefits of research?
1. Centers a business on its consumers 2. keeps the business focused 3. Allows to pursue the most lucrative growth opportunities 4. Keeps the business relevant future-orientated 5. Improve decision-making and reduces risk
Causal research methods?
1. Field experiment 2. Lab experiment
What are exploratory research methods? (Non-storytelling)
1. Focus groups 2. Story telling 3. Diaries 4. Photography and pictures 5. Projective methods 6. Observations and ethnography 7. Netnography
Questions that need to be answered for positive positioning?
1. How are competitive offerings positioned? 2. How should our offerings be positioned? 3. Should our offerings be repositioned?
Questions that need to be answered when developing and implementing customer orientated strategy?
1. How is the market segmented? 2. How profitable is each segment? 3. What are the characteristics of consumers I need to segment? (Age, education, lifestyle) 4. Are customers satisfied with existing offerings?
Sales of the product can be increased when the consumer
1. Larger amounts of the product 2. Uses a product more frequently 3. Uses it for a longer period of time
Who benefits from the study of consumer behavior?
1. Marketing managers 2. Ethicists and advocacy groups 3. Public policy makers and regulators 4. Academics 5. Consumers and society
Outcomes of consumer research?
1. Optimize brand strategy and positioning 2. Better identify/understand your target market 3. Elevate your message and communication 4. Innovate with impact 5. Access your category and competition
Consumer research: types of data?
1. Primary data 2. Secondary data
What are the descriptive forms of research methods?
1. Survey 2 Survey continuum questions
What affects consumer behavior?
1. The psychological core number 2. The process of making decisions 3. The consumers culture 4. consumer behavior outcomes
Why do consumer research?
1. To identify problems/issues/phenomenal of interest 2. Provide insight into optimal solution/decision making
What are the two experimental conditions?
1. Treatment condition 2. Control condition
Questions that need to be answered for making promotion and marketing communications decisions? (8)
1. What are our advertising objectives? 2. What should our advertising look like? 3. Where should advertising be placed? 4. When should we advertise? 5 Has our advertising been effective? 6. What about sales promotion objectives and tactics? 7. Have our sales promotions been effective? 8. How can sales people best serve customers?
Questions that need to be answered before to help assist developing products?
1. What ideas do consumers have for new product? 2. What attributes can be added to or changed in an existing offering? 3. How should the offering be branded? 4. What should the package and logo look like?
Questions that should be answered for making pricing decisions?
1. What price should be charged? 2. How sensitive are consumers to price and price changes? 3. When should certain price tactics be used?
Questions that should be answered before making distribution decisions?
1. When and where are target consumers likely to shop? 2. What do customers want to see in stores? 3. How should stores be designed?
Marketing implications of consumer behavior?
1.Develop and implement customer orientated strategy 2.Selecting the target Market 3. Developing Products 4. Positioning 5. Marketing Promotion & Marketing Communications Decisions
Disadvantages of a survey?
A bad survey is better than no survey at all
Reference group?
A group of people consumers compare themselves with for information regarding behavior, attitude, or values
Definition of offering?
A product, service, activity, experience, or idea offered by marketing organization to consumers
Examples of ways to acquire an offering?
Acquire an offering in a store, online, auction do they pay with cash, check, debit card, credit card, and electric system like PayPal or mobile wallet
Consumer behavior reflect: About the consumption? (Chart)
Acquisition, usage, disposition
Dependent variable?
Anything that allows a form of measurement to the independent variable example a mood questionnaire
Selecting the target market?
Consumer behavior helps marketers determine which consumer groups are appropriate targets for marketing tactics and how heavy users of a product differ from light users.
What is it called when a experiment is masked for the purpose of the study?
Cover story
The psychological cord? (Internal consumer process)
Covers motivation, ability, and opportunity; exposure, attention, perception, and comprehension; memory and knowledge; and attitudes about an offering
Positioning?
Deciding how an offering should be positioned in consumers minds
What is storytelling good for?
Eliciting experiences, beliefs, views that are difficult to articulate or uncover through direct questioning
Symbols?
External signs are consumers used to express your identity
True or false? Consumer behavior only reflects the action of a single individual?
False, consumer behavior does not necessarily reflect the action of the single individual for example it could be friends if you can entire family may plan a birthday party
True or false? Marketers must be insensitive to when consumers are likely to use a product?
False, they must be sensitive whether consumers find it effective, whether they control their consumption of it, and how they react after using it. They are interested in knowing how they spread the word about their product is it a negative or positive review about them?
True or false? Decisions about went to acquire or use an offering are not affected by knowing when others might or might not be using or buying it?
False, we might choose to go to the gym and we know that others will not be doing so
Weather disposing offering?
Find a new use for it, get rid of it temporarily, get rid of it permanently
Examples of acquiring? (Ppt)
Fine, trading, renting, bartering, gifting, finding, stealing, sharing, inheriting, producing
What is netnography good for?
Gaining deep insight into consumers' culture
What is observations and it's ethnography good for?
Gaining deep insight into consumers' lived experience associated with the behavior or phenomenon of interest
Disposition?
How consumers get rid of an offering they have previously acquired
Consumer motivation and it's effects?
I'm motivated consumer is energized, ready, and willing to engage in a go relevant activity
The consumers culture? (External process)
In large part, our consumption decisions and how we process information are affected by her culture.
Market test?
Market tests reveal whether an offering will sell in a given market •Or which marketing mix elements can increase sales
Problem recognition?
Occurs when we realize that we have an on fulfilled need. For example a need for a vacation
What are some emotions that can affect how consumers think the choices they make and how they feel after making a decision?
Positive and negative emotions as well as specific emotions like hope, fear, regret, guilt, embarrassment, and general moods
What is photography and pictures good for?
Reconstructing consumer experiences in detail and completely
Marketing?
The activity, set of institutions, and processes for creating, communicating, delivering, and exchanging offerings with value for individuals, groups, and society
Making pricing decisions?
The price of a product or service can have a critical and for consumers acquisition, usage, and disposition decisions.
Acquisition?
The process by which a consumer comes to own an offering
Usage/consumption?
The process by which a consumer uses an offering
The process of making decisions?
The processes that are part of the psychological core are intimately tied to the process of making decisions. This domain involves four stages: problem recognition, information search, decision-making, and post purchase evaluation
Making post decision evaluations?
The steps allows the consumer to judge, after the fact, whether the decision made was the correct one and whether to purchase that offering again.
When to acquire/you/dispose of an offering?
The timing of consumer behavior can depend on many factors, including our perceptions of an attitude towards time it self
Define consumer behavior?
The totality of consumers decisions with respect to the acquisition, consumption, and disposition of goods, services, time, and ideas by human decision making units (overtime)
Independent variable?
The treatment or entity that researchers vary in a research project
Culture?
The typical or expected behaviors, norms, and ideas that characterize a group of people.
Making judgments and decisions? (Information seeking & decision making)
The willingness to invest a lot of time and exert mental and emotional energy. consumers are not always aware of what they're thinking and how they're making their choices yet the experience from different emotions may influence their ultimate choice.
True false? Transitions such as graduations, birth, retirement, and death affect when we acquire, use, and dispose of offering?
True
True or false? •Ethnographic research is an in-depth qualitative research using interviews, observations, photography, videos, and other techniques?
True
True or false? Consumer behavior includes use of services, activities, experiences, and ideas such as going to the dentist, attending a concert, taking a trip, and donating
True
True or false? Emotions like love sometimes describe how we feel about certain brands or possessions?
True
True or false? Netnography data is plentiful, readily available, and immediately accessible?
True
True or false? Some consumers experience problems because they engage in more acquisition, usage, or disposition than they should?
True
True or false? Storytelling is relatively unstructured and open-ended
True
True or false? The need for variety can affect when we acquire or use, or dispose of an offering?
True
True or false? The sequence of acquisition consumption and disposition can occur overtime in a dynamic order?
True
True or false? Transitions such as graduation, birth, retirement, and death affect when we acquire use and dispose of offerings?
True
True or false? Values personality and lifestyles influence of consumers culture?
True
True or false? Weather and why we use certain products can symbolize something about who we are, what we value, and what we believe?
True
True or false? When we consume can be affected by traditions influenced by our families our culture and the area in which we live in?
True
True or false? acquisition includes other ways of obtaining goods and services such as renting, leasing, trading, and sharing?
True
True or false? consumers afternoons product to regulate their feelings?
True
True or false? house hold and social class influences the consumers culture?
True
True or false? marketers also need to identify who is likely going to be involved in acquisition, usage, and disposition decisions?
True
Two or false? Diversity influences consumers culture?
True
Two or false? It is very important for marketers to understand how consumers react to price and use this information for pricing decisions?
True
True or false? Marketers want to ensure that they're offering is used correctly?
True ex like medicine is a must
True or false? Consumer behaviors can diffuse through market? (Spread to others)
True for example one may tell a friend to go to a certain restaurant
What are diaries good for?
Understanding how consumers really use the product
Consumer behavior reflects: The totality of decisions? (Chart)
Whether, what, why, how, when, where, how much/how often/how long
Making distribution decisions?
involves how products are distributed and sold to consumers in retail stores
Field experiment?
is conducted in the real world setting (a store, a restaurant, etc.) ex. a market test
Focus groups?
•6-12 informants in a group •1 1/2 -2 hour session •1-way mirror/client may sit behind •Relaxed, "living room" environment •Qualified moderator •Video and/or audio-taped •Focus group guide •"Quick and dirty"method
Survey?
•A questionnaire that asks consumers to respond to a predetermined set of questions •Response format is standardized through scales, such as Likert scale •Quantitative data •Conducted online, in person, mail, phone
Diaries?
•A technique in which consumers are asked to keep a diary about the consumption experience •Researchers may want to know how family, friends, and close social networks affect the consumer's decisions •The diary keeping can last from several days to several weeks •Diaries can be about about purchases in different product categories •Sometimes diaries can be kept about a newly introduced product
Storytelling?
•Consumers are asked to tell stories about real/imagined experiences with the product/service/experience •Or consumers generate hypothetical stories prompted by pictures, scenarios, etc.
Lab experiment?
•Examines the causal effect of a treatment or independent variable (IV) on a dependent variable (DV), e.g., does floral scent influence mood positively?
Netnography?
•Netnography is a type of ethnographic research that studies consumers' online, in real time •Researchers collect the data from websites, online forums, blogs, or online community sites •Researchers can also collect data by directly posing questions to consumers online or posting questions
Photography and pictures?
•Pictures are used to help consumers describe their experience
Service: continuum questions?
•Questions rating the degree of a characteristic (e.g., agreement or product usage) tend to be more effective than binary "Yes/No" questions
INTERVIEWS vs Surveys? (In depth)
•Requires special skills and training •Exploratory •Uses probing questions •Uses an interview guide •45-90 minutes in average length •Uses voice recorders to record answers •Small sample size (n < 20) •Extracts detailed informant and experiential information •Requires a qualitative, thematic analysis
Observations and ethnography?
•Researchers observe consumers engaging in an activity of interest or how consumers react to brands/product •Ethnography is often used to study a particular culture/cultural group centered on a consumption phenomenon -Brand community
SURVEYS versus interviews
•Standard training in using the interview protocol •Descriptive •Uses non-probing questions •Uses a questionnaire •5-30 minutes in average length •Uses pen & paper/computer to record answers •Large sample size (n > 150) •Extracts descriptive informant background info •Requires a quantitative, statistical analysis
Cover story?
•The actual purpose of the study is masked by another believable reason
Projective methods?
•Unstructured methods •Participants are asked to interpret their own and others' behavior