Consumer Analysis BMGT-451
Loss frame
"If you do not use energy conservation methods, you will lose $300 per year."
Gain frame
"If you use energy conservation methods, you will save $300 per year."
3 Components of Attitude
(ABC) -Affective -Behavioral -Cognitive
# of Alternatives
(Choice overload) When you have too many choices you are more likely to not make any choice at all, decision deferral
Procedural Memory
(Scripts) Knowledge about how to do things Example: How to drive, how to buy online
Evoked Set
(consideration set) Those brands or products one will evaluate for the solution of a particular consumer problem
Normative influence
(utilitarian) When an individual fulfills group expectations to gain a reward or to avoid a sanction. -Example: his friends buy premium beers although he cant taste the difference
Music
(valence, type) The speaker with the pleasant song seems to have better quality than the unpleasant song on speaker
Identification influence
(value-expressive) When an individual has internalized a group's values and norms. -Example: he has internalized the values of the church
Short-term Memory
Also known as the Working Memory. The portion of memory that is currently activated or in use. -Lasts less than 30 seconds -Limited Capacity—5 to 9 Units of Information
Operationalization
Taking a variable and turning it into a directly measurable from. We operationalize our variables. (Ex: Eating Salad vs Cake & Remembering a 2 digit # vs a 9 digit #)
Word-of-mouth
which type of communication involves individuals sharing information with other individuals in a verbal form, including face-to-face, phone, and the Internet?
Stimulus Attention Factors
• Attractiveness • Incompleteness • Contrast & Expectations • Color & Movement • Size • Novelty • Intensity (loudness, brightness, length, repetition, etc.) • Isolation • Format • Interestingness (and Content) • Information quantity • Intrusiveness • Position in visual field
Flashbulb memory
This is a very specific experience, where you feel like it was yesterday. (example: 9/11)
Authority
People are more willing to following the directions or recommendations of someone they view as an ____________ figure.
Reciprocity
People are obligated to give back to others who have given to them.
Social Proof/Principle of Consensus
People often decide what's appropriate to think, feel, or do by examining what others are thinking, feeling, or doing.
Magnetic middle
People will change their ways and go towards the middle. People who used more energy reduced it, and people who used less increased it.
Loss aversion
People's tendency to strongly prefer avoiding losses to acquiring gains.
Consistency
Activated by a commitment; a prior choice or stance on an issue.
Mood
-"Feeling State" or State of mind -Less intense or less focused than emotions, less aware of this than emotions
Properties of Attention
-Attention is selective -Attention capacity is limited -Attention can be divided (with limitation)
Benefits of using emotional content in marketing
-Enhances attention -Enhances memory (Remembered better than neutral ads) -Enhance liking (Positive emotion eliciting ads increase for the ad and the brand) --Example: PuppyMonkeyBaby]
Why is it important for marketers to understand consumer motivation?
-Environmental Concerns—informing people about the plight of the environment -Economic concerns—making products cheaper, providing monetary incentives -Status concerns—activating status motives (e.g. celebrity endorsers), no discounts -Extrinsic motivation—material reward or benefit such as tax breaks (for donating) -Signaling motivation—show others that I am a good person (by donating)
How to amplify the power of consensus
-Multiple others—a lot of the population is doing it -Similar others—smoking, peer pressure -Uncertainty
How to amplify reciprocity
-Personalized - it means more when it's personalized -Significant - worth a lot of money -Unexpected - when it's unexpected, more likely to give back
Maslow's hierarchy of Needs
-Self Actualization (Self-fulfilment, experiences) -Ego Needs (status, accomplishment, prestige) -Belongingness (Love, friendship, acceptance by others) -Safety (security, shelter, protection) -Physiological (water, sleep, food)
Associative Maps
-Triggers deeper & deeper thoughts and feelings -Asking questions about what comes to a consumer's mind when they think of a brand, and what comes to mind when they think of that attribute, etc.
Collages
-Use images to describe thoughts, feelings, and ideas visually. -Provide Interviewees with several different types of magazines or online photo archives and ask them to cut out photos that represent how they feel about the brand they considered and to briefly write why they chose the photos. After they select the pictures, ask them to tell a bit about why they selected those pictures.
Contexts when influence of reference group becomes stronger
-Visible usage -Strong individual commitment to group -Low individual purchase confidence -Unnecessary items
Consumer (dis) satisfaction
= f(expectations, perceived performance)
Framing
A cognitive bias, in which people react to a particular choice in different ways depending on how it is presented
Subjectivity of perception
A consumer's perception of a product, service, stimulus, etc. is their reality! -Example: Dictionary experiment—if a dictionary has a cover, not torn, more entries, less entries, this determines the price.
Decoy Effect
A phenomenon where people tend to have a change in preference between 2 options when presented with a 3rd option that is asymmetrically dominated. An option is asymmetrically dominated (called ______ ) when it is inferior to one option; but, in comparison to the other option, it is inferior in some respects and superior in others.
Compromise Effect
A phenomenon where the probability of choosing an item increases when that item is a middling, as opposed to extreme, alternative in a choice set.
Positive reinforcement
A pleasant or desired consequence (ex: Having a job and going to work every day to receive a paycheck.)
Moral Decoupling
A psychological separation process by which consumers selectively dissociate judgments of morality from judgments of performance (Wrong doing isn't associated with Sports player's achievements)
Subculture
A segment of a larger culture whose members share distinguishing values and patterns of behavior •Ethnicity •Religion •Subcultures of Consumption—Distinctive subgroup of society that self-selects on the basis of a shared commitment to a particular product class, brand, or consumption activity.
normative
Amie usually wears a uniform to her Catholic school, but on the first Friday of every month, students can wear other clothes as long as they bring in something for the church's food bank. Amie loves to shop and has plenty of fashionable clothes., but on these free dress days, she usually wears blue jeans, a T-shirt, and athletic shoes. Her mother asked her why she doesn't wear her nice clothes, and Amie told her that she would be made fun of at school. Which type of influence do the other students have on Amie?
Hypothesis
An expected pattern between Independent Variable and Dependent Variable
Negative reinforcement
An unpleasant consequence being taken away (Ex: It is very noisy outside so you turn on the television to mask the noise. Turning on the radio decreased the unpleasant noise.)
E
Based on the reading, which of the following statements is TRUE? a. Consumers' memories may not accurately represent their past experiences. b. When consumers are more involved in the brand or product, elaboration and retrieval are enhanced. c. It is important for marketers to understand characteristics of memory to effectively influence consumer behavior. d. A and C e. A, B, and C (Type letter for answer)
Cognitive
Beliefs about specific attributes or overall objects
Awareness Set
Brands consumers are aware of
Inept Set
Brands consumers are aware of & view negatively
Inert Set
Brands consumers are aware of and view in a neutral manner
Characteristics of reciprocity
Can trigger unfair exchanges-getting something for free and then purchasing something that is more expensive because of that free product
Joint Evaluation
Comparing two versions of the same item, creates a higher willingness to pay based on comparison of features, condition, etc.
Inactive need
Consumers are not aware of the need
Peak-end Rule
Consumers evaluate/remember the overall pleasantness of a past experience (e.g. movie, trip, eating out) based on how they were at the peak of the moment and at the end while neglecting other moments or duration.
Match-up hypothesis
Consumers have preferences for goods that match their notion or perception of the country of origin.
IKEA Effect
Consumers place a disproportionately high value on self-assembled products compared to objectively similar products which they did not assemble
Self-reference effect
Consumers process information by relating to self or personal experiences. Self-referencing increases memory for brand.
Scale labels and frequency of behavior
Consumers report that they engage in behaviors with greater frequency when provided with high-frequency response alternatives.
physical surroundings
Decor, sounds, aromas, lighting, weather, and configurations of merchandise or other materials surrounding the stimulus object are included in which situational characteristic?
Behavioral data
Directly collect consumer _____________, collected online from what consumers view or search for, etc.
Directionality problem
Directly effected. A problem with 2 variables where the cause and effect is not known.
Ethnographic research
Directly observe consumer behavior in naturally occurring settings.
No, it depends
Do marketers always want more attention?
Recognition
Do you recognize XYZ brand? Which of the following brands have you heard before?
Scarcity
Opportunities seem more valuable when they are limited
Affective
Emotions or feelings about specific attributes or overall object
Evaluate Criteria
Engage in internal search to determine features or characteristics to meet your needs
Implicit Attitude
Evaluative reactions that are automatically activated on exposure to an attitude object. Outside of a person's awareness
Explicit Attitude
Evaluative reactions that the person is aware of, can be verbally expressed
Analogical Reasoning
Existing and new information to form new associations. (ex: The kindle-- having previous computer knowledge and book knowledge, helped in learning how to use the kindle)
Promotion Focused Motives
Focus on achieving positive/desired end states ("I will work hard to win!") Stress positive benefits
Prevention Focus Motives
Focus on avoiding negative end-states ("I will work hard not to lose!") Stress avoiding losses
C (because it's highly seen by others)
For which product category would be a reference group's influence be the strongest? a. vitamins b. toilet paper c. running shoes d. insurance e. dish washer
Categorization
Grouping a product class into major subcategories, and major & minor brands within those categories
Reference Group
Groups who presumed perspectives or values are being used by an individual as the basis for one's current behavior
Autobiographical memory
How accurate are consumers' memories of their consumption experiences?
Behavioral
How one behaves with respect to specific attributes or overall objectives
Asch phenomenon
In experiments, the power of groups to influence an individual to agree with the incorrect judgement of the others is known as _________.
B
In which situation, is moral decoupling more likely to occur? a. when it's found that a successful baseball player took a steroid. b. when it's found that a successful governor took a steroid.
Physical Surroundings
Includes anything surrounding the stimulus object
External search
Independent sources, personal sources, and product experience. This is extended decision making
Factors that Influence Attention & Perception
Individual factors, situational factors, and stimulus factors
Actual self
Individual's perception of who I am now.
Ideal self
Individual's perception of who I would like to be.
Aspirational
Others/groups against whom one would like to compare oneself, and would ideally like to be. (ex: celebrity or professionals)
Dissociative
Others/groups that one would not like to be like. (ex: college students -high school students, older adults, graduate students)
Iconic Rote Learning
Just having two concepts associated without conditioning or without reasoning -Example: "Aspirin is a headache remedy"
Episodic Memory
Knowledge about oneself, one's experiences Example: Memory about graduation, wedding
Semantic Memory
Knowledge about the world, concepts -Example: Knowing Lexus is luxury car
Culture
Learned set of share knowledge, beliefs, rituals, norms, and traditions that are shared among members of an organization or society
Recall
List any brand you are familiar with in a certain product category
Internal search
Long-term memory is used. This is nominal decision making.
How to measure Implicit Attitude
Measure subtle nonverbal behavior—more eye contact, lower rate of blinking, subtle facial expression
Liking
More likely to say "yes" to what we know and like.
Weather
On a rainy day people say their life is worse than on a sunny day
Active need
One the consumer is aware of or will become aware of in the normal course of events
Voluntary
Paying attention to something
Chunking
Phone numbers 800-555-4663 → 800-555-HOME Using letters to make things easier to be remembered
Experiments
Randomly assign observational units to different conditions of the independent variable X and then measure whether the dependent variable Y differs by the conditions of X.
How to measure Explicit Attitude
Rate something on 1-10 scale 10 being the highest liking
Causation research
Relationship between 2 variables - imply causality (what causes what?)
Correlational Research
Relationship between 2 variables—does not imply causality
Negative punishment
Removal of a pleasant consequence that decreases behavior (ex: An employee is habitually late for work so begins losing the privilege of listening to music while working. The behavior will decrease because of losing a privilege.)
Involuntary
Something grabs your attention
task definition
Stacy is shopping to purchase a perfume to give to her friend for her birthday. Which situational characteristic is influencing her behavior?
Country of Origin
Stereotypes about countries in which products were made impact people's consumption choices
Blue
Stills the senses and calms the mind -Car negotiation final price should be ______ because it will calm the buyer and make them feel good about the buy
Red
Stimulates the senses and raises blood pressure -Online auction background should be ____ to increase intensity and quick actions
Emotion
Strong relatively uncontrolled feelings that affect behavior
Associative Network
System of concepts stored in memory that related to brands, manufacturers, and stores -Consumers store concepts, feelings, and events in nodes -Associative links (of varying strengths) connect the nodes -When one node is activated, this activation spreads along links to related concepts (Spreading Activation)
B
The findings of the articles "Do Default Save Lives" and "how a salad can make us fat" show that: a. Consumer preferences/behavior are not affected by contextual/situational factors. b. Consumer preferences/behavior are considerably affected by contextual/situational factors.
accessibility
The likelihood and ease with which information can be recalled from long-term memory is termed _________.
Mere Exposure Effect
The more often a person is exposed to a brand/product, the more he/she likes the brand/product. This exposure does not need to be conscious.
Long-term memory
The portion of memory that is relatively long lasting or permanent.
Classical Conditioning
The process of using an established relationship between one stimulus (music) and response (pleasant feelings) to bring the learning of the same response (pleasant feelings) to a different stimulus (the brand)
Task definition
The reason the consumption activity is occurring -People use different purchase criteria when shopping for gifts versus shopping for self-use
Consumer Knowledge
The subset of the total amount of information gathered and stored in memory that is relevant to product purchase and consumption.
Self-concept
The totality of the individual's thoughts and feelings having reference to oneself as an object
Seperate Evaluation
This doesn't give you a comparative measure
Memory for context/source
This information decays more quickly—you cant remember where you heard it.
Post-purchase dissonance
This occurs when a consumer has doubts or anxiety regarding the wisdom of a purchase made and is a function of the following: -The degree of commitment or irrevocability (finality) of the decision -The importance of the decision to the consumer -The difficulty of choosing among the alternatives -The individual's tendency to experience anxiety
Need recognition
This occurs when there is a discrepancy between a desired state and an actual state
Laddering
To undercover the core values that drive consumer behavior. Attributes → Consequences (Benefits) → Core Values
Moods
Transient feeling states that are generally not tied to a specific event or object are known as _______.
Positive punishment
Unpleasant consequence decreases behavior (ex: When a student misbehaves in class, she receives a time out.)
Operant (Instrumental) Conditioning
Use outcomes of behaviors to create positive or negative associations. (This includes positive & negative reinforcement and punishment)
Chunking
Using the toll-free number 1-800-FLOWERS to help consumers remember the phone number is an example of ___________.
Identification
Valerie and her family are members of the Baptist Church. They have accepted the Baptist Church's values as their own and behave in a manner consistent with the Church's values because their values and the Church's values are the same. Which type of influence does the Church possess with respect to Valerie and her family?
Vicarious Learning
Watching behavior or instructional information and learning that way -Example: Mimicry
schema and scripts
What are two important long-term memory structures?
Informational Influence
When an individual uses the behaviors and opinions of reference group members as useful bits of information. -Example: best skiers in the group use karhu skies
The Observer Effect
When someone acts differently when they know someone is watching them. -Example: Febreze visited consumers in their home and observed their cleaning routines.
Third variable problem
When two variables appear to be related to each other but there is another unknown variable (the third variable) that is the real source of the link between the first two variables.
D
Which of the following statements is FALSE regarding schemas? a. Schema is also known as knowledge structure. b. Concepts, events, and feelings are stored in nodes within memory. c. Associative links vary in terms of how strongly and how directly they are associated with a node. d. Once an associative link is formed, it is permanent. e. Marketers expend substantial effort to influence the schema consumers have for their brands. (Type letter for answer)
C
Which of the following statements is FALSE regarding short-term memory (STM)? a. STM is short-lived. b. STM has limited capacity. c. STM is a static structure. d. Elaborative activities occur in STM. e. STM is also called working memory. (Type letter for answer)
B
Which of the following statements is TRUE regarding the findings from Skurnik and Yoon et a. (2005)? A. The more often younger adults were told that a given claim (e.g., Aspirin destroys tooth enamel.) was false, the more likely they are to accept it as true after several days have passed. B. The more often older adults were told that a given claim (e.g., Aspirin destroys tooth enamel.) was false, the more likely they are to accept it as true after several days had passed. c. The more often older adults were told that a given claim (e.g., Aspirin destroys tooth enamel.) was false, the more likely they are to accept it as true after several minutes have passed. d. A and C e. B and C (Type letter for answer)
E
Which of the following statements is TRUE regarding the findings mentioned in the article, "How Salad Can Make Us Fat"? a. Licensing effect suggests that once consumers eat healthy foods, they are more likely to eat unhealthy foods. b. Licensing effect is stronger for those with less perceived self-control than those with greater perceived self-control. c. Those who thought that they had consumed a vitamin pill (which was actually a placebo) chose less healthy options than those who thought that they had consumed a placebo pill. d. a and b e. a and c f. a, b, and c
Celebrity Sources
Widely used in advertising, use ethnically diverse celebrities to reach US population. They enhance attention, attitude toward the brand, expertise, and aspirational aspects.
C (this will make player B seem like the middle option so that people will make the compromise of going in the middle)
You are a seller of MP3 Players A and B. MP3 Player A: Price = $400 Storage = 30GB MP3 Player B: Price = $300 Storage = 20GB You think about utilizing the compromise effect. To increase the sales of MP3 player B using compromise effect, which MP3 player should you add to a choice set? a. Price: $450, Storage: 25GB b. Price: $300, Storage: 15GB c. Price: $200, Storage: 10GB d. Price: $500, Storage: 40GB (type in letter for answer)
B (when you pay $300 and get 20GB instead of 15GB people will choose player B)
You are a seller of MP3 Players A and B. MP3 Player A: MP3 Player B: Price = $400 Price = $300 Storage = 30GB Storage = 20GB You think about utilizing the decoy effect. To increase the sales of MP3 Player B using the decoy effect, which MP3 player should you add to your choice set? a. Price: $450, Storage: 25GB b. Price: $300, Storage: 15GB c. Price: $200, Storage: 10GB d. Price: $500, Storage: 40GB (type in letter for answer)
Social environment
You consider pancakes and French toast while out to breakfast, then when someone orders pancakes you order French toast in order to have something different
Alternative evaluation
You evaluate the various dimensions, features, or benefits a consumer looks for in response to a specific problem
Licensing effect
You have the license to eat something bad after you worked out. People will self control do this more often. (can be for anything not just food and working out)
F
You read the three articles about memory. What of the following statements is FALSE regarding the findings from the three articles? a. Processing the low (vs. high) imagery ad increased false memories of product experience. b. People were more likely to remember information that could be easily retrieved from a computer than information that could not be retrieved. c. Memory for experienced familiarity declines more quickly than memory for context or source. d. A and B e. A and C f. A, B, and C (Type letter for answer)
Familiarity
You think you've heard it before
Purchase
You will _________ based on various situational factors (e.g. Good Deal, Nice Dealer, Enough Time)
Post-purchase evaluation
Your Use or Not Use of what you purchased!
Key for activating reciprocity
provide gifts (or gift concession) first
How to amplify the power of consistency
•Active commitments—"will you call us if you change your plans?" •Public commitments—more likely to follow your commitment when you make it publicly. •Effortful commitments—more committed with more effort put into something. (IKEA Effect) •Voluntary Commitment—more consistent with commitments if made voluntarily—more responsible for commitments.
Situational Perception Factors
•Background Colors, Music, Scent
How to change cognitive components
•Change beliefs—Minivan (swagger wagon) •Add beliefs—Pomegranate - retard aging •Shift importance •Change ideal
How to change affective components
•Classical Conditioning •Affect toward the ad—emotional contents •Flattery •Mere exposure effect—the more often a person is exposed to a brand/product, the more he/she likes the brand/product. This exposure does not need to be conscious. --Overall, these are most effective for hedonic products and low-involvement products
Stimulus Perception Factors
•Colors—are seen are warm or cool because of long-held associations •Phonetics •Incongruity •Closure •Figure-ground Contrast •Organization and Proximity
How to change behavioral components
•Coupon, Discount •Peer Pressure/Conformity—social proof appeal: over 1 million people visited the museum/best sellers
Situational Attention factors
•Environments -Example: Reese's Sell more during Halloween because of the orange color, IKEA—one way watch, you have to see everything!
Emotional States
•Fear •Romantic Desires •Operationalization
Focus Group Interviews
•Group Brainstorming (concept development) •Export Consensus or lack of consensus
Depth Interviews
•In Sensitive Domains (confidential, embarrassing) •Avoiding social influence
How to persuade consumers who consider a certain issue unimportant?
•Message is more persuasive when message matches with one's values and worldviews. •Endorsing a value can backfire—especially for consumers who do not endorse the value
Individual Perception Factors
•Motivation •Experience and Knowledge
Individual Attention factors
•Motivations, Goals •Capability
Why does default effect occur?
•People believe that default is a recommended action •Accepting a default is effortless. Changing the decision involves effort. •Changing from default involves trade-off. Loss looms larger than gains (i.e. loss aversion)
Binding moral foundations
•Related to maintaining social order •In-group loyalty, authority, and purity -Whether someone did something to betray his or her group -Whether someone respected the traditions of the society -Whether someone fulfill the duty of his or her roles
5 activators of liking
•Similarity—We like those individuals who are like us. Most powerful similarities: attitudes, background, experiences •Praise—People like someone who give us compliments, even if it's not genuine. •Cooperation—We like those with whom we are cooperating on a mutual goal. Cooperative environment is much more successful than merely a pleasant one. •Classical conditioning •Physical Attractiveness—like the way someone looks, liking comes into play
Individualizing moral foundations
•The rights and welfare of the individual •Care/harm, Fairness—whether or not someone was harmed, whether or not someone denied his or her right
How to be perceived as having authority
•Titles and Affiliations •Height and Clothing
How to amplify the power of scarcity
•When scarcity of items is due to a demand for them—(ex: low stock due to high demand vs. low stock due to distribution issues) •Competition aspect •Consensus effect