Motivation and Affect; ADV 319

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Maslow's drawbacks

- One product = multiple needs - Cultural differences - Religions Collectivisms vs.individualism - The same product or activity can gratify different needs, and its assumptions may apply only to the western culture

Types of perceived risk

-monetary -functional -physical -social -psychological

Evolutionary Motivations

Approach pleasant situations and avoid danger and predators

Product involvement

Consumer's level of interest in a particular product; the more closely marketers can tie a brand to an individual, the higher the involvement they will create

Situation involvement

Engagement with a store, website, or a location where people consumer a product or service (test drive, apple store, luxury brand)

Emotions as information

High arousal --> more cognitive and physiological engagement --> more likely to be stored and recalled later; marketers often try to link a product or service with emotions

Cognitive dissonance

People have a need for order and consistency in their lives and that a state of dissonance (tension) exists when beliefs or behaviors conflict with one another

Involvement (product, message, situation)

Person's perceived relevance of the object based on their inherent needs, values, and interests; high involvement --> strong emotion response, process info with care (i.e., expensive product, cult products (loyalty, devotion, worship; Apple products)

Henry Murray's needs

Psychogenic Needs- basis of personality test - some basic needs - yet different priorities

Message involvement

The more efforts you spend on processing a message, the more you will remember about it; want your message to be engaging

Ikea Example

UK Ikea hosted a sleepover in Essex store in response to a Facebook fan group called "I wanna have a sleepover in Ikea"; almost 10,000 people joined the group and idea gave 100 of them the chance to actually spend a night in the warehouse; winners were given manicures and massages and bedtime story read to them by reality TV star, also a sleep expert on-hand to give people advice and potentially help them choose a new mattress

Hierarchical Needs

a framework that specifies different levels of motives that depends on the consumer's personal situations

Experiential marketing

advertising strategy that focuses on helping consumers experience a brand; creates a closer bond between the consumer and the brand by immersing them in a fun and memorable experience

Uniqueness

assert self as distinct individual identity; when products pledge to bring out our distinctive qualities

Biogenic

basis of survival (food, water, etc.)

Brand Switching

consumers switching between several brands rather than sticking with just one

Power

control one's environment; products and services that allow us to feel that we have mastery over our surroundings (muscle cars, loud boom boxes, and luxury resorts)

Social Risk

damage his or her self-esteem or confidence

Inertia

describes consumption at the low at the low end of involvement, where we make decisions out of habit because we lack the motivation to consider alternatives

Mass customization

describes the personalization of products and services for individual customers at a mass-production price

motivation (example)

devil vacuum commercial, water commercial with elephant and giraffe, say yes to happiness coca cola

Arousal

emotionally charged up and feel passionate about something. We may be angry, excited, scared, joyful or feeling the stimulation of any other emotion

Expectancy Theory

expectations or achieving desirable outcomes- positive incentives- rather than being pushed from within to motivate our behavior

Hedonic Needs

focus is on emotional or experiential need; overlaps with psychogenic needs for sensory stimulation, cognitive stimulation, and novelty needs for reinforcement and play

Utilitarian Needs

focuses on functional or practical need; emphasize the objective, tangible attributes of products

Drive theory

focuses on the biological needs that produce unpleasant states of arousal; states our motivation comes from an internal tension that pushes or drives us to relieve that tension and motivates us to return to homeostasis

Cognitive dissonance example from class

friends- Rachel telling Ross she is pregnant with his child

Maslow's needs

hierarchical and fixed; biogenic (basis of survival)

Psychogenic Needs

list of 27 needs that result in specific behaviors; includes autonomy (being independent), defendance (defending the self against criticism), play (engaging in pleasurable activities); largely at the unconscious level

Psychological Risk

lose self-respect/guilt

Physiological Needs

need for biological maintenance (food, water, etc.)

Social Needs

need for love, affection, sense of belonging

Esteem Needs

need for respect, prestige, recognition

Safety Needs

need for security, protection, stability

Self- Actualization Needs

need to grow and use abilities to the fullest

Achievement

personal accomplishment, place a premium on products that signify success (luxury brands, technology products)

Physical Risk

physically threatens the consumer

Monetary Risk

poor choice will have a monetary consequence

Customization

product involvement strategy; the more we value things when our own labor contributes to making or assembling them; creates an association, increases involvement

Functional Risk

product may not function as the consumer needs

Brand Variety Seeking

the desire to choose new alternatives over more familiar ones; influences us to switch from our favorite products to ones we like less

Motivation defined

the processes that lead people to behave as they do

Affect

the way a consumer feels about an attitude object; feelings or emotions that something evokes (joy/happiness, fear, sadness, anger, shame, disgust, empathy/sympathy)

Affiliation

to be in the company of other people; relevant to products in services for people in groups like team sports, frequenting bars, and hanging out in malls

Brand loyalty (plus switching and variety seeking)

when a consumer is highly involved with a specific product; holy grail for marketers


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