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1-1
1-2
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2004 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Chapter 4
Consumer Buying Behavior and Decision Making
1-3
After studying this chapter, you
should be able to:
• Discuss the importance of consumer
behavior.
• Understand consumer decision making and
some of the important influences on those
decisions.
• Distinguish between low-involvement and
high-involvement consumer behavior.
• Understand how attitudes influence
consumer purchases.
1-4
After studying this chapter, you
should be able to:
• Appreciate how the social environment affects
consumer behavior.
• Recognize many of the individual consumer
differences that influence purchase decisions
and behavior.
• Recognize the outcomes of consumers’
decisions to purchase or not to purchase and
how they affect marketing success.
1-5
The Nature of Consumer Behavior
and Decision Making
• Consumer Behavior:
– The mental and emotional processes and
physical activities people engage in when
they select, purchase, use, and dispose of
products or services to satisfy particular
needs and desires.
1-6
The Nature of Consumer
Behavior and Decision Making
• Factors important to understanding
consumer markets and consumer
behavior:
– The size of the consumer market.
– Changes in consumer shopping habits and
purchase decisions.
– Emphasis on consumer-oriented marketing.
– The design of effective marketing strategy.
1-7
Growing Consumer Markets
1. New retail line-ups
• “Price-centric”
• Lifestyle
• “Occasion-centric”
2. Outdoor living market.
3. Consumer electronics.
4. Enhanced experience
businesses.
1-8
Growing Consumer Markets
5. Anti-aging products and
services.
6. Health as a national hobby.
7. High-end sports apparel and
equipment.
8. Safe packaging, pure
contents, and “green”
concerns.
1-9
Consumer Behavior and the Design
of Marketing Strategy
Brand Equity:
The marketplace value of a brand.
Service Recovery:
Winning back consumers who defect.
1-10
Understanding E-Customers
• The 10 Most Important Website
Attributes:
1. Product representation
2. Product prices
3. Product selection
4. On time delivery
5. Ease of ordering
6. Product information
7. Level and quality of consumer support
8. Product shopping and handling
9. Posted privacy policy
10. Site navigation and appearance
1-11
Consumer Decision Making
1-12
High- and Low-Involvement Decisions
• Involvement:
– The level of
importance or
interest
generated by a
product or a
decision.
• Consumer
Information
Processing:
– The cognitive
processes by which
consumers interpret
and integrate
information from the
environment.
1-13
High-and Low-Involvement Decisions
• High-involvement Decisions:
– Characterized by high levels of importance
thorough information processing, and
substantial differences between alternatives.
• Low-involvement
Decisions:
– Occur when
relatively little
personal interest,
relevance, or
importance is
associated with a
purchase.
1-14
Types of Consumer Choices
• Six Generic Consumer Behavior
Choices:
1. Product
2. Brand
3. Shopping area
4. Store type
5. Store
6. Nonstore source (catalogs, PC, & TV
shopping)
1-15
Attitudes
• Consumer
Attitudes:
– Learned
predispositions to
respond favorably
or unfavorably to a
product or brand.
• Attitudes have
valence; they can be
positive, negative, or
neutral.
• Strong attitudes are
resistant to change.
• Attitudes can erode
over time if not
reinforce.
1-16
Attitudes – Marketing Implications
1. Attitudes are based on beliefs
consumers hold about the
attributes or features (price,
level of services, quality) of the
products they are evaluating.
2. Attitudes are primary causes of
behavior causing consumers to
buy or not buy products
1-17
Experiential Choices
• Consumers
frequently make
choices based on
their emotions and
feelings.
• Affect Referral:
– Consumers elicit from
memory their overall
evaluations of
products and choose
the alternative for
which they have the
most positive feelings.
1-18
Experiential Choices
• Impulse
Purchases:
– Choices made on
the spur of the
moment, often
without prior
problem
recognition.
• Time-inconsistent
Choices:
– Choices consumers
make which act against
their own better
judgment and engage in
behavior they would
normally reject.
1-19
Influence of the Social Environment
1-20
Cultural Influences
• Culture:
– The values, ideas,
attitudes, and
symbols that people
adopt to
communicate,
interpret, and
interact as
members of society.
• Culture is learned and
transmitted from one
generation to the next.
1-21
Cultural Influences
• Socialization:
– The process of
absorbing a culture
• Consumer
Socialization:
– When socialization is
applied to marketing
and consumer
behavior.
1-22
Values
• Values:
– Shared beliefs or cultural norms about
what is important or right.
Cultural values directly influence how
Consumers view and use individual
products, brands, and services.
1-23
Values
• The List of Values (LOV):
• Self-respect
• Warm relationships
• Self-fulfillment
• Sense of belonging
• Respect from others
• Excitement
• Security
• Sense of accomplishment
• Fun and enjoyment in life
1-24
Values
• Values and Lifestyles (VALS):
– Identifies eight market segments that
share similar end values.
1-25
Subcultures
• Ethnic Patterns:
– The norms and values of specific groups or
subcultures within a society.
1-26
Subcultures
• Demographic characteristics used to
identify subcultures:
– Nationality - Hispanics, Italians
– Race - African-American, American
Indian, Asian
– Region - New England, the South
– Age - Elderly, teenager
– Religion - Catholic, Jewish,
fundamentalist
1-27
Social Class Influences
• Social Classes:
– Relatively homogeneous divisions
within a society that contain people
with similar values, needs,
lifestyles, and behavior.
1-28
Family Influences and the Family Life Cycle
• Family influences play two
important roles in:
– The socialization of people.
– Affecting individual
purchase decisions.
1-29
• Family Life Cycle:
– The sequence of steps a family goes through:
• From young, to
• Single adults, to
• Married couples whose children have left home, to
• The retired survivor
Family Influences and the Family Life Cycle
1-30
Interpersonal Influences
• Reference Groups:
– Those others look to for help and
guidance including friends, co-
workers, and others.
1-31
Interpersonal Influence
Processes
• Three Types of Interpersonal Processes:
1. Informational influence is based on the
consumer’s desire to make informed choices
and reduce uncertainty.
2. Utilitarian influence is reflected in compliance
with the expectations, real or imagined, of others
– referred to as norms.
3. Value-expressive influence stems from a
desire to enhance self-concept through
identification with others.
1-32
Interpersonal Influence
Processes
• Normative Influence:
– A combination of Utilitarian and Value-
Expressive Influence.
1-33
Individual Differences
• Sources of Individual
Differences
Influencing Consumer
Behavior:
1. Word-of-mouth
communications
2. Personality
3. Lifestyles and
psychographics
4. Motivation
1-34
Word-of-Mouth Communications
Opinion Leaders:
Influence consumer behavior through
word-of-mouth communications.
Market Mavens:
Consumers who know about many kinds of products,
places to shop, and other facts of the market, and they
like to share this information with other consumers.
1-35
Personality
• Personality:
– Reflects a person’s
consistent response
to his or her
environment.
• Personality traits
related to consumer
behavior:
– Extroversion
– self-esteem
– dogmatism (closed-
mindedness)
– aggressiveness
1-36
Personality
• Self-Concept:
– The overall perception and feeling that one has
about herself or himself.
1-37
Lifestyles and Psychographics
• Lifestyle:
– Describes a person’s
pattern of living as
expressed in
activities, interests,
and opinions (AIO
statements).
• Psychographics:
– Divide a market into
lifestyle segments on
the basis of consumer
interests, values,
opinions, personality
characteristics,
attitudes, and
demographics.
1-38
Motivation
• Motivation:
– Refers to a state or condition within a
person that prompts goal-directed
behavior.
• Maslow’s Hierarchy:
– Self-actualization Needs - Art, books, recreation
– Esteem Needs - Clothing, home furnishings
– Love and Belonging Needs - Mementos, gifts, photos
– Safety Needs - Burglar alarms, seat belts
– Physiological Needs - Food, heat, shelter
1-39
Situational Factors
Consumers purchase goods
for use in certain situations.
Situational factors can
inhibit as well as motivate.
The anticipated use
influences choice.
1-40
Situational Factors
• Consumers buy products with
anticipated uses in mind.
1-41
Consumer Behavior Outcomes
Consumer Learning happens when changes
occur in knowledge or behavior patterns.
Marketers influence consumers by imparting knowledge
through advertising, product labels, and personal selling.
Marketers hope consumers will attend to, comprehend,
and then remember these messages
1-42
Consumer Satisfaction, Dissatisfaction,
and Complaint Behavior
• Satisfaction and
dissatisfaction
describe the positive,
neutral, or negative
feelings that may
occur after purchase.
• Consumer complaints
are overt expressions
of dissatisfaction.
• Firms adopting a customer
value perspective must
employ marketing
communications that
convey realistic
expectations.
1-43
A Model of Consumer Satisfaction
1-44
Findings of Customer
Satisfaction Research
1. Satisfaction judgements evolve and are changeable
as products are used.
2. Satisfaction judgments have a social component
determined by the satisfaction of others in the
household.
3. Emotions are important and yield insights beyond
simple comparison standards, such as expectations
and performance.
4. Product satisfaction is also related to quality of life
and life satisfaction.
1-45
Customer Complaints
Voice Responses
(seeking satisfaction directly from the seller)
Third-party Responses
(taking legal action, filing complaints
with consumer affairs agencies)
Private Responses
(bad-mouthing to friends)
1-46
Cognitive Dissonance
Cognitive Dissonance:
• A form of
postpurchase doubt
about the
appropriateness of a
decision.
• Cognitive Dissonance
occurs when:
– Decisions are major
– The purchase is important
– Perceived risk is high
– The purchase is visible
– The decision involves a
long-term commitment
1-47
Ethical and Social Issues in
Consumer Behavior
Unethical consumer behaviors include
shoplifting and abuse of return policies
Consumers are increasingly incorporating
social concerns into their buying decisions
1-48
Ethical and Social Issues
in Business Behavior
Standards of Business Behavior Evaluation
Corporate Social
Responsibility
Business Ethics

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chap004p.ppt

  • 1. 1-1
  • 2. 1-2 McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2004 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 4 Consumer Buying Behavior and Decision Making
  • 3. 1-3 After studying this chapter, you should be able to: • Discuss the importance of consumer behavior. • Understand consumer decision making and some of the important influences on those decisions. • Distinguish between low-involvement and high-involvement consumer behavior. • Understand how attitudes influence consumer purchases.
  • 4. 1-4 After studying this chapter, you should be able to: • Appreciate how the social environment affects consumer behavior. • Recognize many of the individual consumer differences that influence purchase decisions and behavior. • Recognize the outcomes of consumers’ decisions to purchase or not to purchase and how they affect marketing success.
  • 5. 1-5 The Nature of Consumer Behavior and Decision Making • Consumer Behavior: – The mental and emotional processes and physical activities people engage in when they select, purchase, use, and dispose of products or services to satisfy particular needs and desires.
  • 6. 1-6 The Nature of Consumer Behavior and Decision Making • Factors important to understanding consumer markets and consumer behavior: – The size of the consumer market. – Changes in consumer shopping habits and purchase decisions. – Emphasis on consumer-oriented marketing. – The design of effective marketing strategy.
  • 7. 1-7 Growing Consumer Markets 1. New retail line-ups • “Price-centric” • Lifestyle • “Occasion-centric” 2. Outdoor living market. 3. Consumer electronics. 4. Enhanced experience businesses.
  • 8. 1-8 Growing Consumer Markets 5. Anti-aging products and services. 6. Health as a national hobby. 7. High-end sports apparel and equipment. 8. Safe packaging, pure contents, and “green” concerns.
  • 9. 1-9 Consumer Behavior and the Design of Marketing Strategy Brand Equity: The marketplace value of a brand. Service Recovery: Winning back consumers who defect.
  • 10. 1-10 Understanding E-Customers • The 10 Most Important Website Attributes: 1. Product representation 2. Product prices 3. Product selection 4. On time delivery 5. Ease of ordering 6. Product information 7. Level and quality of consumer support 8. Product shopping and handling 9. Posted privacy policy 10. Site navigation and appearance
  • 12. 1-12 High- and Low-Involvement Decisions • Involvement: – The level of importance or interest generated by a product or a decision. • Consumer Information Processing: – The cognitive processes by which consumers interpret and integrate information from the environment.
  • 13. 1-13 High-and Low-Involvement Decisions • High-involvement Decisions: – Characterized by high levels of importance thorough information processing, and substantial differences between alternatives. • Low-involvement Decisions: – Occur when relatively little personal interest, relevance, or importance is associated with a purchase.
  • 14. 1-14 Types of Consumer Choices • Six Generic Consumer Behavior Choices: 1. Product 2. Brand 3. Shopping area 4. Store type 5. Store 6. Nonstore source (catalogs, PC, & TV shopping)
  • 15. 1-15 Attitudes • Consumer Attitudes: – Learned predispositions to respond favorably or unfavorably to a product or brand. • Attitudes have valence; they can be positive, negative, or neutral. • Strong attitudes are resistant to change. • Attitudes can erode over time if not reinforce.
  • 16. 1-16 Attitudes – Marketing Implications 1. Attitudes are based on beliefs consumers hold about the attributes or features (price, level of services, quality) of the products they are evaluating. 2. Attitudes are primary causes of behavior causing consumers to buy or not buy products
  • 17. 1-17 Experiential Choices • Consumers frequently make choices based on their emotions and feelings. • Affect Referral: – Consumers elicit from memory their overall evaluations of products and choose the alternative for which they have the most positive feelings.
  • 18. 1-18 Experiential Choices • Impulse Purchases: – Choices made on the spur of the moment, often without prior problem recognition. • Time-inconsistent Choices: – Choices consumers make which act against their own better judgment and engage in behavior they would normally reject.
  • 19. 1-19 Influence of the Social Environment
  • 20. 1-20 Cultural Influences • Culture: – The values, ideas, attitudes, and symbols that people adopt to communicate, interpret, and interact as members of society. • Culture is learned and transmitted from one generation to the next.
  • 21. 1-21 Cultural Influences • Socialization: – The process of absorbing a culture • Consumer Socialization: – When socialization is applied to marketing and consumer behavior.
  • 22. 1-22 Values • Values: – Shared beliefs or cultural norms about what is important or right. Cultural values directly influence how Consumers view and use individual products, brands, and services.
  • 23. 1-23 Values • The List of Values (LOV): • Self-respect • Warm relationships • Self-fulfillment • Sense of belonging • Respect from others • Excitement • Security • Sense of accomplishment • Fun and enjoyment in life
  • 24. 1-24 Values • Values and Lifestyles (VALS): – Identifies eight market segments that share similar end values.
  • 25. 1-25 Subcultures • Ethnic Patterns: – The norms and values of specific groups or subcultures within a society.
  • 26. 1-26 Subcultures • Demographic characteristics used to identify subcultures: – Nationality - Hispanics, Italians – Race - African-American, American Indian, Asian – Region - New England, the South – Age - Elderly, teenager – Religion - Catholic, Jewish, fundamentalist
  • 27. 1-27 Social Class Influences • Social Classes: – Relatively homogeneous divisions within a society that contain people with similar values, needs, lifestyles, and behavior.
  • 28. 1-28 Family Influences and the Family Life Cycle • Family influences play two important roles in: – The socialization of people. – Affecting individual purchase decisions.
  • 29. 1-29 • Family Life Cycle: – The sequence of steps a family goes through: • From young, to • Single adults, to • Married couples whose children have left home, to • The retired survivor Family Influences and the Family Life Cycle
  • 30. 1-30 Interpersonal Influences • Reference Groups: – Those others look to for help and guidance including friends, co- workers, and others.
  • 31. 1-31 Interpersonal Influence Processes • Three Types of Interpersonal Processes: 1. Informational influence is based on the consumer’s desire to make informed choices and reduce uncertainty. 2. Utilitarian influence is reflected in compliance with the expectations, real or imagined, of others – referred to as norms. 3. Value-expressive influence stems from a desire to enhance self-concept through identification with others.
  • 32. 1-32 Interpersonal Influence Processes • Normative Influence: – A combination of Utilitarian and Value- Expressive Influence.
  • 33. 1-33 Individual Differences • Sources of Individual Differences Influencing Consumer Behavior: 1. Word-of-mouth communications 2. Personality 3. Lifestyles and psychographics 4. Motivation
  • 34. 1-34 Word-of-Mouth Communications Opinion Leaders: Influence consumer behavior through word-of-mouth communications. Market Mavens: Consumers who know about many kinds of products, places to shop, and other facts of the market, and they like to share this information with other consumers.
  • 35. 1-35 Personality • Personality: – Reflects a person’s consistent response to his or her environment. • Personality traits related to consumer behavior: – Extroversion – self-esteem – dogmatism (closed- mindedness) – aggressiveness
  • 36. 1-36 Personality • Self-Concept: – The overall perception and feeling that one has about herself or himself.
  • 37. 1-37 Lifestyles and Psychographics • Lifestyle: – Describes a person’s pattern of living as expressed in activities, interests, and opinions (AIO statements). • Psychographics: – Divide a market into lifestyle segments on the basis of consumer interests, values, opinions, personality characteristics, attitudes, and demographics.
  • 38. 1-38 Motivation • Motivation: – Refers to a state or condition within a person that prompts goal-directed behavior. • Maslow’s Hierarchy: – Self-actualization Needs - Art, books, recreation – Esteem Needs - Clothing, home furnishings – Love and Belonging Needs - Mementos, gifts, photos – Safety Needs - Burglar alarms, seat belts – Physiological Needs - Food, heat, shelter
  • 39. 1-39 Situational Factors Consumers purchase goods for use in certain situations. Situational factors can inhibit as well as motivate. The anticipated use influences choice.
  • 40. 1-40 Situational Factors • Consumers buy products with anticipated uses in mind.
  • 41. 1-41 Consumer Behavior Outcomes Consumer Learning happens when changes occur in knowledge or behavior patterns. Marketers influence consumers by imparting knowledge through advertising, product labels, and personal selling. Marketers hope consumers will attend to, comprehend, and then remember these messages
  • 42. 1-42 Consumer Satisfaction, Dissatisfaction, and Complaint Behavior • Satisfaction and dissatisfaction describe the positive, neutral, or negative feelings that may occur after purchase. • Consumer complaints are overt expressions of dissatisfaction. • Firms adopting a customer value perspective must employ marketing communications that convey realistic expectations.
  • 43. 1-43 A Model of Consumer Satisfaction
  • 44. 1-44 Findings of Customer Satisfaction Research 1. Satisfaction judgements evolve and are changeable as products are used. 2. Satisfaction judgments have a social component determined by the satisfaction of others in the household. 3. Emotions are important and yield insights beyond simple comparison standards, such as expectations and performance. 4. Product satisfaction is also related to quality of life and life satisfaction.
  • 45. 1-45 Customer Complaints Voice Responses (seeking satisfaction directly from the seller) Third-party Responses (taking legal action, filing complaints with consumer affairs agencies) Private Responses (bad-mouthing to friends)
  • 46. 1-46 Cognitive Dissonance Cognitive Dissonance: • A form of postpurchase doubt about the appropriateness of a decision. • Cognitive Dissonance occurs when: – Decisions are major – The purchase is important – Perceived risk is high – The purchase is visible – The decision involves a long-term commitment
  • 47. 1-47 Ethical and Social Issues in Consumer Behavior Unethical consumer behaviors include shoplifting and abuse of return policies Consumers are increasingly incorporating social concerns into their buying decisions
  • 48. 1-48 Ethical and Social Issues in Business Behavior Standards of Business Behavior Evaluation Corporate Social Responsibility Business Ethics