Consumer behavior chapter 16 "Alternative evaluation and selection"
What are the 3 assumptions that marketers make regarding the rational choice theory?
1. Consumers seek one optimal solution to a problem and choose on that basis 2. Consumers have the skill and motivation to find the optimal solution. 3. The optimal solution does not change as a function of situational factors such as time pressure, task definition, or competitive context.
Evaluation criteria can differ in what 3 ways?
1. type 2. number 3. importance
although consumers often have a general sense of how important various criteria are, this can be influenced by a number of factors. These include the following:
1. usage situation 2. Competitive context 3. Advertising effects
Before a marketing manager or a public policy decision maker can develop a sound strategy to affect consumer decisions, he or she must determine...
1. which evaluative criteria are used by the consumer 2. How the consumer perceives the various alternatives on each criterion. 3. The relative importance of each criterion
surrogate indicator
An attribute, such as price, used to estimate the level of a different attribute, such as quality
Attitude-Based Choice
Involves the use of general attitudes, summary impressions, intuitions, or heuristics; no attribute-by-attribute comparisons are made at the time of choice.
attribute-based choice
Requires the knowledge of specific attributes at the time the choice is made, and it involves attribute-by-attribute comparisons across brands.
Perceptual mapping
a means of displaying or graphing, in two or more dimensions, the location of products, brands, or groups of products in customers' minds
Instrumental motives
activate behaviors designed to achieve a second goal
projective techniques
allow the respondent to indicate the criteria "someone else" might use
Direct methods include...
asking consumers what criteria they use in a particular purchase or in a focus group.
Evaluation criteria are typically associated with _____ _____
desired benefits
Disjunctive decision rule
establishes a minimum level of performance for each important attribute
conjunctive decision rule
establishes minimum required performance standards for each evaluative criterion and selects the first or all brands that meet or exceed these minimum standards
Attribute-based choices rely heavily on a comparison of brands on one or more attributes. These attributes are called ___________ criteria because they are the dimensions on which the brands are evaluated.
evaluative
Affective choice
process in which consumers make a choice based on how they think the product will make them feel. It is more holistic in nature.
Lexicographic decision rule
requires the consumer to rank the criteria in order of importance
Elimination-by-aspects decision rule
requires the consumer to rank the evaluative criteria in terms of their importance and to establish a cutoff point for each criterion
Secondary discrimination
the ability of an individual to distinguish between similar stimuli
Compensatory decision rule
the brand that rates highest on the sum of the consumer's judgments of the relevant evaluative criteria will be chosen
Blind test
the consumer is not aware of the product's brand name
Evaluative criteria
the various dimensions, features, or benefits a consumer looks for in response to a specific problem
Consummatory motives
underlie behaviors that are intrinsically rewarding to the individual involved