Marketing 2
Objects of involvement
1 Product categories. 2. Brands: brand loyalty. 3.Ads: revealed by consumers' motivation to attend to and process information contained; ads must be relevant; ad might be interesting 4. Medium: sometimes a high level of involvement with the medium might reduce the involvement with the ad; television is generally low while print media is usually generates high levels of involvement. 5. Decisions & behavior: response involvement
perceptual organization
1. A factor that determines how a stimulus will be interpreted is its assumed relationship with other images, sensations or events, 2. The Gestalt concept: the whole is greater than the sum of the parts, 3. Principles of perceptual organization: figure & ground, grouping, and closure
taxonomic categories
1. A system of division where objects are classified with similar objects of the same category, 2. Principle of Graded Structure represents the concept that category members vary in how well they represent a category, 3. Prototype represents an object that is the best example of the category
factors affecting exposure
1. Ad in back cover; ads placed in articles or within TV programs that are interesting to the consumer; ads at the beginning or end of the commercial break within a program (of interest to the consumer); commercial free TV programs 2. Product distribution and shelf placement: greater the distribution greater the chances of exposure; products at the end of the aisle, from waist to eye level, and in places that have the maximum amount of store traffic increase the rates of exposure
categorization marketing implication pt 2
1. Categorization influences whether consumers consider and choose it (consideration and choice), 2. Categorization can set expectations for its performance and thereby influence our assessment (satisfaction)
goal derived categories
1. Category contains objects that serve the same goal even though they belong to different taxonomic categories, 2. Exhibits graded structure and prototypicality
selective exposure
1. Consumers actively seek and on the other hand avoid certain stimuli, 2. zipping, 3. zapping
Stress' effect on preattentive processing
1. Consumers probably have an inclination to like a particular brand/product if they have preattentively processed it than if they have not processed (or been exposed to) it at all. 2.Also affects consumer choices in case of an unfamiliar brand and a preattentive processed brand
Why do consumers differ in knowledge: Culture
1. Culture may influence associations not found in other cultures (certain spokespeople with certain products), 2. Relevant category members vary across cultures (what are breakfast foods, for example), 3. Category prototypes may vary across cultures (football in the United States, soccer elsewhere), 4. Attribute correlations may differ (size of store correlation with quality of product may be different), 5.Goal-derived categories may differ
measuring exposure
1. Determine which medium will generate maximum exposure for the given product/brand 2. Measurement is not easy, 3. Standardization required for measurement
developing/elaborating schemas marketing implications
1. Existing schemas, images, and personalities may need to be further developed, 2. Elaboration can be accomplished through new associations, multiple brand extensions, and new images
Why do consumers differ in knowledge: Expertise
1. Experts have better defined category structures, 2. Experts have more categories and more associations with concepts within a category, 3. Experts have more subordinate level categories thereby enabling finer distinctions, 4. Experts are better at understanding negative disconfirmation than non-experts
knowledge content
1. Facts about prior knowledge is linked or associated with a concept, 2.The set of associations linked to a concept is known as 'schema', 3. Associations can be described along the following dimensions: types of associations, favorability, uniqueness, & salience
habituation
1. Familiarity leads to losing attention-getting ability. 2. This is a significant problem for marketers and hence it is tackled by altering the stimulus while keeping the basic message same
personal relevance: goals
1. Goals might be specific (situational) or abstract (enduring); promotion or prevention focused goals; goals regulating how one feels and what one does, 2. While appraising an outcome, the extent to which our goals are met affects our feelings and emotions, 3. Other appraisal dimensions: normative/moral compatibility; certainty; agency
personal relevance: received risk
1. Lack of information, 2. New offering, 3. High price, 4. Technologically complex, 5. Substantial difference between brands, 6. Inexperience or little confidence in one's own evaluation, 7. Social visibility of the situation - being judged by others
marketing implication of j.n.d.
1. Marketers need to determine the relevant j.n.d. for their products: A. so that negative changes are not readily discernible to the public. B. so that product improvements are very apparent to consumer
marketing implications of ability
1. Marketers should be sure the target audience has enough prior knowledge to process marketing communications, 2. Marketers should match communications with consumers' knowledge and processing styles, 3. Marketers can provide monetary aid to facilitate first time and repeat buying
Marketing implications of consumer opportunity
1. Marketers should repeat marketing communications and make them easy to process 2. Marketers should reduce time-pressured decision-making. 3. Marketers should reduce the amount of time needed to buy or use a product 4. Marketers should provide consumers with enough information to enhance consumers' abilities to process information, make decisions, and engage in consumer behavior
Motivation Process: the process
1. Need creates tension 2. Tension creates drive to reduce/eliminate need. 3. Desired end state = consumer's goal. 4. Products/services provide desired end state and reduce tension. 5. When motivation is high, people are more likely to do things that make it more likely to achieve their goal. 6. Creates a willingness to spend time & energy to engage to certain behaviors consistent with the goal
personal relevance: characteristics of needs
1. Needs are dynamic, 2. Exist in a hierarchy, 3. Can be internally or externally aroused, 4. Can conflict (approach-avoidance; approach-approach, avoidance-avoidance)
objective of comprehension
1. Objective comprehension reflects the extent to which consumers accurately understand or have learned what is stated in a communication 2. Miscomprehension occurs when consumers inaccurately receive the meaning contained in a message. 3. MAO influences it
grouping
1. People group stimuli to form a unified impression or concept, 2. Grouping helps memory and recall
Closure
1. People have a need for closure and organize perceptions to form a complete picture, 2. Will often fill in missing pieces, 3. Incomplete messages remembered more than complete
figure and ground
1. People tend to organize perceptions into figure-and-ground relationships, 2.The ground is usually hazy, 3. Marketers usually design so the figure is the noticed stimuli
attention marketing implication
1. Personally relevant stimuli are more likely to attract attention because they have potential consequences for our lives. 2. The incorporation of more self-relevant needs, values, and goals into a stimulus (marketing communication) increases the likelihood that the stimulus will be perceived. 3. Appeals that emerge from individuals perceived as similar to one's self are more likely to be attended to. 4. Appeals that contain dramatic presentations are more likely to attract attention because they draw the consumer into the action. 4. Rhetorical questions draw consumers into advertisements although no specific answer is expected
Consumer Ability: Resources to Act (5 resources)
1. Product knowledge and experience, 2. cognitive style, 3. complexity of information, 4. Intelligence, education, and age and 5. money
easy to process stimuli marketing implication
1. Prominent stimuli, such as full-page ads and loud commercials, are easy to process because they stand out from the environment; ease of finding such stimuli increases their chance of being attended to. 2. Concrete stimuli that are more detailed and specific are easier to understand, thus they are more likely to be processed. 3. Messages that stand out from competing information draw attention to themselves, making them easier to locate and thus more likely to be processed. 4. When amount of competing information is less, messages are likely to get more attention
brand personality
1. Schemas can also include associations reflecting brand personality, 2. A set of traits people attribute to a brand as if it were a person, 3. Personality-like images represents consumers' perceptions about the brands, 4. Strong and favorable brand personality will strengthen the brand
Taxonomic categories: factors affecting prototypicality
1. Shares most associations with other members of its own category, 2. Shares fewest associations with members from different categories, 3. Frequency with which an object is encountered as a category member (sometimes the first/pioneer brand serves as a prototypical brand because it sets the standard)
images
1. Subset of associations reflecting what something stands for and how favorably it is viewed, 2. Only the most salient associations represent an image, 3. Images also exist for stores, companies, places, and countries
differential threshold
1. The ability of a sensory system to detect changes or differences between two stimuli (j.n.d.). 2. Weber's law: stronger the initial stimulus, the greater the additional intensity needed for the second stimulus to be perceived to be different
absolute threshold
1. The lowest level at which an individual can experience a sensation; minimum level of stimulus intensity needed for a stimulus to be perceived. 2. Amount of difference between something and nothing
exposure
1. The process by which a consumer comes into physical contact with a stimulus. 2. Marketing stimuli relates to information regarding offerings communicated by marketers or by non-commercial sources. 3. Exposure takes place at buying, using, or disposing stages; exposure ought to be favorable
perception
1. The process by which an individual selects, organizes, and interprets stimuli into a meaningful and coherent picture of the world. 2. How we see the world around us
categorization
1. Usage of prior knowledge to label, identify, and classify something new, 2. Subsequent to the above stage a individual knows what the object is, what it is like, and what it is similar to, 3. Categorization might not always be correct; once something has been categorized it is difficult for one to categorize it differently
pleasant stimuli marketing implication
1. Visual attractiveness increases the likelihood of a stimulus (e.g., advertisement) being noticed Familiar, pleasant, or nostalgic music can all be used to attract attention. 2. Providing a pleasurable experience through humor can draw consumers into an ad
categorization marketing implication
1. When a product is categorized as a member of a category, we infer that the product shares features typical of that category (inference), 2. Categorization influences the extent to which consumers think about it (elaboration); if we have problems categorizing something we tend to think about it more, 3. Categorization influences consumers' feelings about an object; the object might be evaluated based on our feelings towards the category (evaluation
hemispheric lateralization
1. how the two hemispheres of our brain work; in case of focal attention hemispheres are processing information; right hemisphere processes stimuli in the left visual field and vice versa 2. right hemisphere processes music and spatial information, makes inferences, draws conclusions. 3. left hemisphere processes unfamiliar words, counts, forms sentences
preattentive processing
1. when information is being processed from peripheral vision even when one is not aware of doing so 2. depends on whether the stimulus is a picture or a word, and, whether it is on the right or left of our focal attention
scripts
1.A special kind of a schema representing knowledge of a sequence of actions 2. Helps in accomplishing tasks quickly and easily 3. Absence of a script extends the time of performing a task
Personal Relevance: Inconsistency with Attitudes/Prior Knowledge
1.When inconsistency with attitudes/knowledge occurs, we try to remove or at least understand the inconsistency. 2. more motivated to process information that is moderately inconsistent. 3. Little/no motivation to process information highly inconsistent
when do we perceive stimuli
Absolute threshold, Differential threshold, Subliminal perception
why selective exposure occurs
Avoidance occurs because of lack of desire to process all information; lack of desire to be exposed to stimulus that are irrelevant; prior knowledge; parents also limit the exposure for their children
changing schemas marketing implication
Changing a schema, image, or personality may be necessary; associating offerings with new images can help alter the existing schema
levels of subjective comprehension
Consumers may make different interpretations of messages depending on the depth of elaboration they engage in when processing the message
Why do consumers differ in knowledge
Cultural System and Level of Expertise
intelligence, education, and age
Higher levels of intelligence and education enhance the consumer's ability to process information that is more complex and to make decisions
how to improve objective comprehension
Keep the message simple; repeat it within a communication and over time; present it in different forms.
personal relevance: needs
Needs can be classified in various ways: 1. Maslow's Hierarchy, and 2. Social & Non social; Functional, Hedonic, Symbolic
types of perceived risks
Performance Risk; Physical Risk; Financial Risk; Psychological Risk; Time Risk; Social Risk
attention
Process of devoting mental activity to a stimulus
subjective comprehension
Reflects the meanings consumers generate from a communication, whether or not these meanings were intended by the sender
how consumers handle risks
Seek Information; Stay Brand Loyal; Select by Brand Image; Rely on Store Image; Buy the Most Expensive Model; Seek Reassurance
subliminal perception
Stimuli that are too weak or too brief to be consciously seen or heard may be strong enough to be perceived by one or more receptors
two categories of knowledge structures
Taxonomic categories and Goal derived categories
consumer opportunity
Time, Distraction, Amount of information, Repetition of information, Control of information
True or False? There are schemas for several entities?
True
True/False: Objects can be a part of a taxonomic and goal derived category
True
creating schemas marketing implications
a) Important to help consumers better understand what a product or company is, what it can do for them, and how it is different from the competition b) May be created by brand extensions, licensing, and brand alliances
surprising stimuli marketing implication
a) Stimuli that are new are more likely to attract attention b) Using unexpectedness: in terms of placement or content c) Puzzles or other exercises that engage the consumer attract attention because they require resolution on the part of the consume
personal relevance: nonsocial
achievement is not based on other people
goals
an outcome or an end state that a person would like to achieve
limited attention
attention to multiple things take place when it is automatic, well practiced, and effortless
Motivation to process information is conceptualized in terms of consumer's ________ with the information stimuli
involvement
scripts are best at helping marketers to better understand how consumers?
buy and use an offering
divided attention
capable of dividing the attention span into units and allocating accordingly
complexity of information
cognitively complex consumers are more likely to engage in complex processing, accepting a greater amount of diverse information when making a decision
approach-avoidance
conflict occurs when a given behavior is seen as both desirable and undesirable because it satisfies some of the consumer's needs but fails to satisfy others
approach-approach
conflict occurs when the consumer faces the task of choosing among two or more equally desirable options that fulfill different needs
avoidance-avoidance
conflict occurs when the consumer faces the task of choosing between equally undesirable options
felt involvement: affective
expending emotional energy in or has heightened feeling about an issue, activity, or an offering
product knowledge and experience
experts are able to process more complex information than novices; Experts process more extensively when presented with attribute information ("what it does"), whereas novices process benefit information ("what it does for me") more extensively
personal relevance: social
externally directed and relate to other individuals
Behaviors are ____ and may take considerable _______
goal driven; effort
Marketer tries to minimize risk for the consumer by providing _______
guarantees
personal relevance: symbolic
how we perceive ourselves and how others perceive us; desire for products that help in identifying such perceptions
content
information already known
high context cultures
interpret messages differently based on the characteristics of the message sender
money
lack of money constrains consumers who might otherwise have the motivation to engage in monetary exchanges with marketers
personal relevance: functional
may be social or nonsocial; relates to searching for products solving consumption related problems
as we move from subordinate to subordinate levels?
more attributes are used to describe the objects
felt involvement: enduring
ongoing and long term; exhibited for a few offerings only
What Affects Motivation?
perceived risk; personal relevance; moderate inconsistency with prior attitudes
maslow's hierarchy of needs
physiological, safety, belongingness, ego, self-actualization
categorization
process of labeling an external stimulus based on its similarity to one's knowledge content
personal relevance: hedonic
reflects the inherent desire for sensory pleasure
needs can be used to _____ markets
segment
low context cultures (U.S.)
separate a message from the context in which it appears
cognitive style
some prefer visual information whereas others prefer verbal information
Individuals strive to reduce ______
tension
felt involvement: cognitive
thinking about & processing information related to one's goal; goal includes learning about the offering
felt involvement: situational
this is true in most cases; a kind of a temporary involvement
what is the order of driving force, unfulfilled need, tension
unfulfilled need, tension, driving force
comprehension
using knowledge content to understand what has been categorized
personal relevance
values, needs, and goals (to the extent that product characteristics are associated with values, needs, and goals, one will experience a strong involvement with the product)
structure
way information is organized or categorized