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PERCEPTION

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Exposure (e.g., consumer must see your billboard) ... freeway billboard. direct mail appeal. MKTG 371 PERCEPTION Lars Perner, Instructor 12 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: PERCEPTION


1
PERCEPTION
  • Perception is subjectiveapproximation of reality
  • More information is available than can be
    processed
  • Perceptual guards

2
Alteration of Images for Optimal Perceived
Stimulus
Photoshop manipulation enhancing eyes
http//www.jasc.com/support/learn/tutorials/archiv
e/paintshoppro/eyeenhancement.asp?pg1
3
Information Processing for Consumer Decision
Making
EXPOSURE Random______________Deliberate
ATTENTION Low involvementHigh Involvement
PERCEPTION
Text, p. 278
INTERPRETATION Low involvementHigh Involvement
MEMORY Short term____________Long Term
PURCHASE /CONSUMPTION DECISIONS
4
Exposure, Attention, and Perception
  • What is necessary to reach consumers?
  • Exposure (e.g., consumer must see your billboard)
  • Attention (e.g., consumer must look at ad
    message)
  • Perception (e.g., consumer must take in message)

5
The Senses
  • Vision
  • Influence of colors
  • Priority of attention
  • Smell
  • Strong affective impact associations in memory
  • Hearing
  • Priority of attention
  • Habituation

6
More Senses
  • Touch
  • Affective impact
  • Taste
  • Acquired tastes
  • Influence of smell

7
Definition
  • Exposure the process by which the consumer
    comes in physical contact with a stimulus.

8
Sensing Change(Perceptual Thresholds)
  • Downsizing of products
  • Reducing alcohol content of beverages
  • Webers Lawlarger change is needed in a strong
    stimulus before it can be detected

9
Subliminal Perception A Diabolical Marketing
Tool?
  • Subliminal messages in ads are illegal in U.S.
  • Some research support for modest effects

10
How Do You Gain Exposure?
  • Research target group habits
  • Hidden product placements
  • Computer screen savers
  • Point-of-purchase displays

11
Selective Exposure
  • How much attention are you likely to give to the
    following advertising encounters?
  • radio ad while driving
  • ad in newspaper or magazine
  • freeway billboard
  • direct mail appeal

12
How Can We Increase Consumers Exposure?
  • Roadblocking--you can run, but you cant hide!
  • Repetition
  • Wide presence

13
Properties of Attention
  • Selective
  • Capable of being divided
  • Limited

14
Some Determinants of Attention Given to Stimuli
  • Self-relevance
  • Movement (animation)
  • Position
  • Isolation
  • Format
  • Pleasantness
  • Surprisingness
  • Contrast
  • Information quality
  • Interestingness
  • Ease of processing

3 7 9 6
81
15
Color, Movement, and Position
  • Color
  • Brighter colors are likely to get more attention
  • Preference for color
  • Movement
  • Attention to moving object is evolutionarily
    adaptive
  • Position
  • Placement relative to the viewers visual field
  • Objects closer to center are more likely to be
    seen
  • Eye level shelf space is preferred
  • Right hand ads tend to receive more attention
    than those at left
  • Gaze Motion Theory

16
Isolation and Format
  • Isolation
  • Fewer competing stimuli
  • Use of white space
  • Format
  • The way a message is organized
  • Simpler layouts tend to get more attention (less
    effort required)

17
Contrast/Expectations
  • More attention given to a stimulus which does not
    blend in to the background
  • Stimuli with unexpected content tend to receive
    more attention (prioritized as potentially
    important information)
  • Adaptation Level Theorystimuli will eventually
    be less unexpected based on prior experience

18
Interestingness and Info Quantity
  • Interestingness
  • Interest motivates allocation of attention
  • Intense competition for interest
  • Info Quantity
  • Information overload
  • Difficult to cope with excessive information
  • Better organized information is more useful

19
Self-Relevance
  • Needs, values, and goals
  • Similarity of source
  • Dramas
  • Rhetorical questions

20
Pleasantness of Stimuli
  • Attractive visuals
  • Music
  • Humor

21
Surprisingness of Stimuli
  • Novelty
  • Unexpectedness

22
Ease of Processing
  • Prominence
  • Concreteness
  • Contrast

23
Interpretation
  • Meanings assigned to stimuli
  • Often highly culturally influenced based on
    expectations
  • Cognitive interpretation and categorization
  • Categories as a way to simplify the world
  • Social/linguistic categories
  • Ad hoc categories
  • Prototypes and perfect examplars
  • Superordinate (e.g., furniture), basic (e.g.,
    chair), and subordinate (e.g., office chair).

24
Perception and Marketing Strategy
  • Retail
  • Allocation of retail shelf space
  • High volume items
  • Category allotment
  • Point-of-purchase displays
  • Brand name/logo development
  • Brand associations
  • Visual images
  • Media strategy
  • Product category vs. involvement
  • Advertisements and Package Design
  • Use of humorattention to the humor vs. the
    product

25
Advertising Evaluation
  • Exposure
  • People meters
  • Web site visits/hits
  • Click-through rates
  • Attention
  • Day after recall
  • Starch scores based on attention given to
    advertising parts
  • Noted
  • Seen-associated
  • Read most
  • Interpretation
  • Focus groups
  • Projective research
  • Memory
  • Brand awareness levels

26
Ambush Marketing
  • Attempt to associate brand with a non-owned
    entity
  • E.g.,
  • Advertising for the use of one brand of film at
    the Olympics when another brand is the official
    sponsor
  • Sponsoring a small part of the event
  • Advertising during the event
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