Chapter 5 Marketing: Understanding Consumer and Business Buyer Behavior
2. Information Search
Consumers can obtain information from any of several sources, which include personal sources, commercial sources, public sources, and experimental sources.
Cultural Factors
Cultural factors expert a broad and deep influence on consumer behavior. Marketers need to understand the role played by the buyer's culture, subculture, and social class.
Cultural
Culture Subculture Social Class
Early Mainstream Adopters
Deliberate - Although they are rarely leaders they adopt new ideas before the average person
Age and Lifestyle
People change the goods and services they buy over their lifetimes.
Family
The family is the most important consumer buying organization in society, and it has been researched extensively.
Group
Two or more people who interact to accomplish individual or mutual goals.
Innovators
Venturesome - they try new ideas at some risk.
Divisibility
The degree to which the innovation may be tried on a limited basis
Communicability
The degree to which the results of using the innovation can be observed or described to others
New Task
A business buying situation in which the buyer purchases a product or service for the first time
Straight Rebuy
A business buying situation in which the buyer routinely reorders something without any modificaitons
Modified Rebuy
A business buying situation in which the buyer wants to modify product specifications, prices, terms, or suppliers
Personal Factors
A buyer's decision also are influenced by personal characteristics such as the buyer's occupation, age and life-cycle stage, economic situation, lifestyle, and personality and self-concept.
Social Factors
A consumer's behavior also is influenced by social factors, such as the consumer's small groups, social networks, family, and social roles.
Belief
A descriptive thought that a person holds about something.
New Product
A good, service, or idea that is perceived by some potential customers as new.
Subculture
A group of people with shared value systems based on common life experiences
Motive (drive)
A need that is sufficiently pressing to direct the person to seek satisfaction
Selective Retention
Consumers are more likely to remember good points made about a brand they favor and forget good points made about a brand they favor and forget good points made about competing brands
Opinion Leader ( Influentials or Leading Adopters)
A person within a reference group who, because of special skills, knowledge, personality, or other characteristics, exerts social influence on others.
Psychological Factors
A person's buying choices are further influenced by four major psychological factors: motivation, perception, learning, and beliefs and attitudes
Economic Situation
A person's economic situation will affect his or her store and product choices. Marketers watch trends in spending, personal income, savings, and interest rates.
Lifestyle
A person's pattern of living as expressed in his or her activities, interests, and opinions.
Attitude
A person's relatively consistently favorable or unfavorable evaluations, feelings, and tendencies toward an object or idea.
Roles and Status
A role consists of the activities people are expected to perform according to the people around them.
Drive
A strong internal stimulus that calls for action. A drive becomes a motive when it is directed toward a particular stimulus object.
Occupation
Affects the goods and services bought. Blue-collar workers tend to buy more rugged work clothes, whereas executives buy more business suits. Marketers try to identify the occupational groups that have an above average interest in their products and services.
Personal
Age and Lifecycle stage Economic situation Lifestyle Personality and self-concept
Consumer Market
All the individuals and households that buy or acquire goods and services for personal consumption
Buying Center
All the individuals and units that play a role in the purchase decision making process
Evaluation of Alternatives
Alternative evaluation is how consumers process information to choose among alternative brands.
Stages in Adoption Process
Awareness: The consumer becomes aware of the new product but lacks information about it. Interest: The consumer seeks information about the new product. Evaluation: The consumer considers whether trying the new product makes sense. Trial: The consumer tries the new product on a small scale to improve his or her estimate of its value. Adoption: The consumer decides to make full and regular use of the new product.
Derived Demand
Business demand that ultimately comes from the dead for consumer goods
Cognitive Dissonance
Buyer discomfort caused by post purchase conflict
Systems Selling
Buying a complete solution to a problem from a single seller, thus avoiding all the separate decisions involved in a complex buying situation
Buyer
Buying decisions are affected by an incredibly complex combination of external and internal influences
Learning
Changes in an individual's behavior arising from experience
Personality and Self-Concept
Each person's distinct personality influences his or her buying behavior.l
Social
Groups and social networks Family Roles and Status
Membership Groups
Groups that have a direct influence and to which a person belongs
Early Adopters
Guided by respect - They are opinion leaders in their communities and adopt new ideas early but carefully.
General Need Description
Having recognized a need, that describes the characteristics and quantity of the needed item.
Total Market Strategy
Integrating ethnic themes and cross-cultural prospectives within a brand's mainstream marketing, appealing to consumer similarities across subcultural segments rather than differences.
Buzz Marketing
Involves enlisting or even creating opinion leaders to serve as "brand ambassadors" who spread the word about a company's products.
Order-Routine Specification
It includes the final order with the chosen supplier or suppliers and lists items such as technical specifications quantity needed, expected delivery time, return policies, and warranties.
Performance Review
May lead to the buyer to continue, modify, or drop the arrangement
Psychological
Motivation Perception Learning Beliefs and Attitudes
Aspirational Group
One to which the individual wishes to belong, (ex. a young basketball player hopes to someday emulate basketball star Lebron James and play in the NBA).
Online Social Networks
Online communities - blogs, social networking Web sites, and other online communities - where people socialize or exchange information and opinions
African Americans
Population is growing in affluence and sophistication. The nations more than 42 million black consumers wield almost $1.2 trillion in annual buying power.
Social Class
Relatively permanent and ordered divisions in a society whose members share similar values, interests, and behaviors. Social class is not determined by a single factor, such as income, but is measured as a combination of occupation, income, education, wealth, and other variables. Marketers are interested in social class because people within a given social class tend to exhibit similar buying behavior.
Hispanics
Represent, large, fast growing market. The nations more than 55 million Hispanic consumers have a total annual buying power of $1.7 trillion.
Reference groups
Serve as direct (face to face interactions) or indirect points of comparison or reference is forming a person's attitudes or behavior. Marketers try to identify reference groups of their target markets. They expose a person to new behaviors and lifestyles, and influence the person's attitudes and self concept, and create pressures to conform that may affect the person's product and brand choices.
5 Brand Personality Traits
Sincerity Excitement Competence Sophistication Ruggedness
Late Mainstream Adopters
Skeptical - They adopt an innovation only after a majority of people have tried it
Supplier Development
Systematic development of networks of supplier-partners to ensure a dependable supply of products and materials for use in making products or reselling them to others.
The Buyer Decision Process
The actual purchase decision is part of a much larger buying process - from recognizing a need through how you feel after making the purchase. Marketers want to be involved throughout the entire process
Proposal Solicitation
The buyer invites qualified suppliers to submit proposals
1. Need Recognition
The buyer recognizes a problem or need. Can be triggered by internal stimuli when one of the person's normal needs.
Consumer Buyer Behavior
The buying behavior of final consumers-individuals and households that buy goods and services for personal consumption.
Business Buyer Behavior
The buying behavior of organizations that buy goods and services for use in the production of other products and services that are sold, rented or supplied to others
Supplier Selection
The buying center often will draw up a list of the desired supplier attributes and their relative importance
Product Specification
The buying organization next develops the items's technical product specification
Relative Advantage
The degree to which the innovation appears superior to existing products.
Compatibility
The degree to which the innovation fits the values and experiences of potential consumers
Complexity
The degree to which the innovation is difficult to understand or use
Purchase Decision
The first factor is Attitudes of Others: If someone important to you thinks that you should buy the lowest priced product, the chances of you buying the expensive product are reduced. The second factor is Situational Factors: The consumer may form a purchase intention based on factors such as expected income, expected price and expected product benefits.
Self Concept (Self Image)
The idea is that people's possessions contribute to and reflect their identities - that is, "we are what we consume"
Word of Mouth Influence
The impact of the personal words and recommendations of trusted friends, family, associates, and other consumers on buying behavior.
Adoption Process
The mental process through which an individual passes from first hearing about an innovation to final adoption.
Asian Americans
The most affluent U.S. demographic segment. A relatively well-educated segment, they now number more than 18 million with annual buying power expected at $1 trillion by 2017.
Business Buying Process
The process by which business buyers determine which products and services their organizations need to purchase and then find, evaluate, and choose among alternative suppliers and brands.
Perception
The process by which people select, organize, and interpret information to form a meaningful picture of the world
Culture
The set of basic values, perceptions, wants, and behaviors learned by a member of society from family and other important institutions.
Brand Personality
The specific mix of human traits that may be attributed to a particular brand.
Selective Attention
The tendency for people to screen out most of the information to which they are exposed - means that marketers must work especially hard to attract the consumer's attention
Selective Distortion
The tendency of people to interpret information in a way that will support what they already believe
Personality
The unique psychological characteristics that distinguish a person or group. Usually described in terms of traits such as self confidence, dominance, sociability, autonomy, defensiveness, adaptability, and aggressiveness.
Supplier Search
To find the best the best vendors
Lagging Adopters
Traditional bound - They are suspicious of changes and adopt the innovation only when it has become something of a tradition itself
Vendor Managed Inventory
in which they turn over ordering and inventory responsibilities to their suppliers