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Title: BUYER BEHAVIOUR AND CONSUMERISM


1
BUYER BEHAVIOUR ANDCONSUMERISM
2
CONSUMER BEHAVIOUR
  • Consumer behaviour is the study of how people
    buy, what they buy, when they buy and why they
    buy. It is a subcategory of marketing that blends
    elements from psychology, sociology,
    sociopsychology, anthropology and economics. It
    attempts to understand the buyer decision making
    process, both individually and in groups. It
    studies characteristics of individual consumers
    such as demographics, psychographics, and
    behavioural variables in an attempt to understand
    people's wants. It also tries to assess
    influences on the consumer from groups such as
    family, friends, reference groups, and society in
    general.
  • Consumer behaviour is the behaviour that
    consumers display in searching for, purchasing,
    using, evaluating and disposing of products and
    services that they expect will satisfy their
    needs. Consumer behaviour focus on how
    individuals make decisions to spend their
    available resources ( time, money, effort) on
    consumption related items.

http//www.mallofamerica.com/adults_shopping.aspx
3
CONSUMER BEHAVIOUR
  • We will have an in-depth analysis of the factors
    that influence consumer buying behaviour such as
  • A) PSYCHOLOGICAL FACTORS
  • Motivation
  • Personality
  • Perception
  • Learning
  • Attitude
  • B) SOCIO-CULTURAL FACTORS
  • Family
  • Informal sources
  • Other non commercial sources
  • Social class
  • Culture and subculture
  • Reference groups
  • C) MARKETING MIX FACTORS
  • D)ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS

4
CONSUMER MOTIVATION
  • Motivation is the driving force within
    individuals that impels them to action.
  • This driving force is produced by a state of
    tension, which exists as the result of an
    unfulfilled need.
  • Individuals strive both consciously and
    subconsciously to reduce this tension through
    behaviour that they anticipate will fulfil their
    need and thus relieve them of the stress they
    feel.
  • The specific goals they select and the patterns
    of action they undertake to achieve their goals
    are the result of individual thinking and
    learning.

5
Think of the following
  • What makes you go to a restaurant?
  • What makes you go to your GP?
  • What makes you purchase a car?
  • What makes you purchase a mobile phone?
  • What makes you purchase an umbrella?
  • What makes you go to school?
  • Why do you go to the saloon?
  • Why do you quit smoking?
  • Why do you go to the gym?
  • Why do you buy a TV set?
  • Why do you go to Church?
  • The above issues arise as a result of motivation
    which could be because of the following
  • Hunger
  • Sickness and urgent medical attention
  • The need to travel to work
  • The need to communicate
  • To protect yourself during rainfall
  • To be educated and to get a job in future.

6
  • Motivation is a state of need-induced tension
    that drives the individual to engage in
    behaviour that he or she believes will satisfy
    the need and thus reduce the tension.
  • Whether gratification is actually achieved
    depends on the course of action pursued.
  • The specific goals that consumers wish to achieve
    and the courses of action they take to attain
    these goals are selected on the basis of their
    thinking processes ( cognition) and previous
    learning.
  • Therefore, marketers must view motivation as the
    force that induces consumption and, through
    consumption experiences, the process of consumer
    learning.

7
NEEDS
  • Every individuals has needs some are innate,
    others are acquired. Innate needs are
    physiological (i.e. biogenic) they include the
    needs of food, water, air, clothing, shelter.
  • Because they are needed to sustain biological
    life, the biogenic needs are considered primary
    needs or motives.
  • Acquired needs are the needs that we learn in
    response to our culture or environment. These may
    include needs for self-esteem, prestige,
    affection, power and learning.

8
  • Because acquired needs are generally
    psychological (i.e. psychogenic), they are
    considered secondary needs or motives.
  • They result from the individuals subjective
    psychological state and from relationships with
    others. For example, all individuals need shelter
    from the elements thus, finding a place to live
    fulfils an important primary need for a newly
    transferred executive.
  • However, the kind of home she rents or buys may
    be the result of secondary needs. She may seek a
    place in which she and her husband can entertain
    large groups of people ( and fulfil social
    needs) she may want to live in an exclusive
    community to impress her friends and family ( and
    fulfil ego needs).
  • The place where an individual ultimately chooses
    to live thus may serve to fulfil both primary and
    secondary needs.

9
GOALS
  • Goals are aims that is something that somebody
    wants to achieve.
  • There are two types of goals we will examine the
    generic goals and the product specific goals.
  • Generic goals are the general classes or
    categories of goals that consumers see as a way
    to fulfill their needs. If a person tells his
    parents that he wants to get a graduate degree,
    he stated a generic goal. If he wants to get an
    M.B.A. degree in marketing from Oxford
    University, he has expressed a product-specific
    goal. Marketers are particularly concerned with
    product-specific goals, that is, the specifically
    branded products and services that consumers
    select for goal fulfillment.

10
The selection of Goals
  • For any given need, there are many different and
    appropriate goals.
  • The goals selected by individuals depend on their
    personal experiences, physical capacity,
    prevailing cultural norms and values, and the
    goals accessibility in the physical and social
    environment.
  • The goal object has to be both socially
    acceptable and physically accessible.
  • An individuals own perception of himself or
    herself also serves to influence the specific
    goals selected.

11
Interdependence of Needs and Goals
  • Needs and Goals are interdependent neither exist
    without the other. However, people are often not
    as aware of their needs as they are of their
    goals. For example, a teenager may not
    consciously be aware of his social needs but may
    join a photography club to meet new friends.
  • A local politician may not consciously be aware
    of a power need but may regularly run for public
    office.
  • A college student may not consciously recognise
    her need for achievement but may strive to attain
    a straight A grade point average.

12
  • Individuals are usually somewhat more aware of
    their physiological needs than they are of their
    psychological needs.
  • Most people know when they are hungry, thirsty,
    or cold, and they take appropriate steps to
    satisfy these needs. The same people may not
    consciously be aware of their needs for
    acceptance, self-esteem, or status. They may,
    however, subconsciously engage in behaviour that
    satisfies their psychological ( acquired ) needs.

13
POSITIVE AND NEGATIVE MOTIVATION
  • Motivation can be positive or negative in
    direction.
  • We may feel a driving force toward some object or
    condition or a driving force away from some
    object or condition. For example, a person may be
    impelled toward a restaurant to fulfil a hunger
    need, and away from motorcycle transportation to
    fulfil a safety need.
  • Some psychologists refer to positive drives as
    needs, wants, or desires and to negative drives
    as fears or aversions.

14
  • However, although positive and negative
    motivational forces seem to differ dramatically
    in terms of physical ( and sometimes emotional)
    activity, they are basically similar in that both
    serve to initiate and sustain human behaviour.
    For this reason, researchers often refer to both
    kinds of drives or motives as needs, wants, and
    drives.
  • Some theorists distinguish wants from needs by
    defining wants as product-specific needs.
  • Others differentiate between desires, on the one
    hand, and needs and wants on the other.
  • Thus, there is no uniformly accepted distinction
    among needs, wants and desires.

15
  • Needs, wants, or desires may create goals that
    can be positive or negative.
  • A positive goal is one toward which behaviour is
    directed thus, it is often referred to as an
    approach object.
  • Negative goal is one from which behaviour is
    directed away and is referred to as an avoidance
    object.
  • Because both approach and avoidance goals are the
    results of motivated behaviour, most researchers
    refer to both simply as goals.
  • Consider this example A middle-aged woman may
    have a positive goal of fitness and joints a
    health club to work out regularly.
  • Her husband may view getting fat as a negative
    goal, and so he starts exercising as well.

16
  • In the former case, the wifes actions are
    designed to achieve the positive goal of health
    and fitness in the latter case, her husbands
    actions are designed to avoid negative goal--- a
    flabby physique.
  • Sometimes people become motivationally aroused by
    a threat to or elimination of a behavioural
    freedom, such as the freedom to make a product
    choice. This motivational state is called
    psychological reactance.

17
  • A classic example occurred in 1985 when the
    Coca-Cola Company changed its traditional formula
    and introduced New Coke. Many people reacted
    negatively to the notion that their freedom to
    choose had been taken away, and they refuse to
    buy New Coke. Company management responded to
    this unexpected psychological reaction by
    reintroducing the original formula as Classic
    Coke and gradually developing additional versions
    of Coke.

18
RATIONAL VERSUS EMOTIONAL MOTIVES
  • Some consumer behaviourists distinguish between
    so-called rational motives and emotional motives.
  • They use the term rationality in the traditional
    economic sense, which assumes that consumers
    behave rationally by carefully considering all
    alternatives and choosing those that give them
    the greatest utility.
  • In a marketing context, the term rationality
    implies that consumers select goals based on
    totally objective criteria, such as size, weight,
    price, or miles per gallon. Emotional motives
    imply the selection of goals according to
    personal or subjective criteria (e.g. pride,
    fear, affection, or status).

19
  • The assumption underlying this distinction is
    that subjective or emotional criteria do not
    maximize utility or satisfaction. However, it is
    reasonable to assume that consumers always
    attempt to select alternatives that, in their
    view, serve to maximize their satisfaction.
  • Obviously, the assessment of satisfaction is a
    very personal process, based on the individuals
    own need structure, as well as on past
    behavioural and social ( or learned )
    experiences. What may appear irrational to an
    outside observer may be perfectly rational in the
    context of the consumers own psychological
    field. For example, a person who pursues
    extensive plastic facial surgery in order

20
  • to appear younger is using significant economic
    resources, such as the surgical fees, time lost
    in recovery, inconvenience, and the risk that
    something may go wrong.
  • To that person, the pursuit of the goal of
    looking younger and utilization of the resources
    involved are perfectly rational choices. However,
    to many other persons within the same culture who
    are less concerned with aging, and certainly to
    persons from other cultures that are not as
    preoccupied with personal appearance as
    Westerners are, these choices appear completely
    irrational.

21
  • Consumer researchers who subscribe to the
    positive research perspective tend to view all
    consumer behaviour as rationally motivated, and
    they try to isolate the causes of such behaviour
    so that they can predict and, thus, influence
    future behaviour.
  • Experimentalists are often interested in studying
    the hedonistic pleasures that certain consumption
    behaviours provide, such as fun, or fantasy, or
    sensuality. They study display in various unique
    circumstances.

22
THE DYNAMICS OF MOTIVATION
  • Motivation is a highly dynamic construct that is
    constantly changing in reaction to life
    experiences.
  • Needs and goals change and grow in response to an
    individuals physical conditions, environment,
    interactions with others, and experiences. As
    individuals attain their goals, they develop new
    ones. If they do not attain their goals, they
    continue to strive for old goals or they develop
    substitute goals. Some of the reasons why
    need-driven human activity never ceases include
    the following (1) Many needs are never fully
    satisfied they continually impel actions
    designed to attain or maintain satisfactions. (2)
    As needs become satisfied, new and higher-order
    needs emerge that cause tension and induce
    activity. (3) People who achieve their goals set
    new and higher goals for themselves.

23
  • THE DYNAMICS OF MOTIVATION
  • NEEDS ARE NEVER FULLY SATISFIED
  • NEW NEEDS EMERGE AS OLD NEEDS ARE SATISFIED.
  • SUCCESS AND FAILURE INFLUENCE GOALS
  • SUBSTITUE GOALS
  • FRUSTRATION failure to achieve a goal often
    results in feelings of frustration. The barrier
    that prevents attainment of a goal may be
    personal to the individual ( e.g. limited
    physical or financial resources) or an obstacle
    in the physical or social environment (e.g. a
    storm that causes the postponement of a
    long-awaited vacation). Regardless of the cause,
    individuals react differently to frustrating
    situations. Some people manage to cope by finding
    their way around the obstacle or, if that fails,
    by selecting a substitute goal. Others are less
    adaptive and may regard their inability to
    achieve a goal as a personal failure. Such people
    are likely to adopt a defence mechanism to
    protect their egos from feelings of inadequacy.

24
  • MULTIPLICITY OF NEEDS
  • Needs and goals vary among individuals.
  • AROUSAL OF MOTIVES ( What stimulates customers?)

25
  • Physiological Arousal
  • Bodily needs at any specific moment in time are
    based
  • on the individuals physiological conditions at
  • moment. A drop in blood sugar level or stomach
  • contractions will trigger awareness of a hunger
    need.
  • A decrease in body temperature will induce
    shivering,
  • which makes the individual aware of the need for
  • warmth. Most of these physiological cues are
  • involuntary however, they arouse related needs
    that
  • cause uncomfortable tensions until they are
    satisfied.
  • For example, a person who is cold may turn up the
  • heat in his bedroom and also make a mental note
    to
  • buy a warm cardigan sweater to wear around the
  • house.

26
  • Emotional Arousal
  • Sometimes daydreaming results in the arousal or
    Stimulation of latent needs.
  • People who are bored or who are frustrated in
    trying to achieve their goals often
  • engage in day dreaming (autistic thinking), in
    which they image themselves in
  • all sorts of desirable situations. These thoughts
    tend to arouse dormant needs,
  • which may produce uncomfortable tensions that
    drive them into goal oriented
  • behaviour. A young man who dreams of being a
    famous novelist may enrol in a
  • writing workshop.

27
  • Cognitive Arousal Sometimes random thoughts can
    lead to a cognitive
  • awareness of needs. An advertisement that
    provides reminders of home might
  • trigger instant yearning to speak with ones
    parents.
  • Environmental Arousal The set of needs an
    individual experiences at a
  • particular time are often activated by specific
    cues in the environment. Without these
  • cues, the needs might remain dormant. For
    example, the 6oclock news, the sight or
  • smell of bakery goods, fast food commercials on
    television, the end of the school day-
  • all of these may arouse the need for food. In
    such cases, modification of the
  • environment may be necessary to reduce the
    arousal of hunger. A most potent form of
  • situational cue is the goal object itself. A
    woman may experience an overwhelming need
  • For a new television set when she sees her
    neighbour's new high-definition home
  • theatre a man may suddenly experience a need
    for a new car when passing a dealers
  • display window. Sometimes an advertisement or
    other environmental cue produces a
  • psychological imbalance in the viewers mind. For
    example, a young college student
  • who constantly uses his cell phone may see a new,
    slick looking cell phone model with
  • more features displayed in a store window. The
    exposure may make him unhappy with
  • his old cell phone and cause him to experience
    tension that will be reduced
  • only when he buys himself the new cell phone
    model.

28
  • When people live in a complex and highly varied
    environment, they
  • experience many Opportunities for need arousal.
    Conversely, when their
  • environment is poor or deprived, fewer needs are
    activated. This explains why
  • television has had such a mixed effect on the
    lives of people in underdeveloped
  • countries. It exposes them to various lifestyles
    and expensive products that
  • they would not otherwise see, and it awakens
    wants and desires that they have
  • Little opportunity or even hope of satisfying.
    Thus while, television enriches
  • many lives, it also serves to frustrate people
    with little money or education or
  • hope, and may result in the adoption of such
    aggressive defense mechanisms
  • as robbery, boycotts, or even revolts.

29
  • There are two opposing philosophies concerned
    with the arousal of human motives. The
    behaviourist school considers motivation to be a
    mechanism process behaviour is seen as the
    response to a stimulus, and elements of conscious
    thought are ignored. An extreme example of the
    stimulus-response theory of motivation is the
    impulse buyer who reacts largely to external
    stimuli in the buying situation. According to
    this theory, the consumers cognitive control is
    limited he or she does not act but reacts to
    stimuli in the marketplace. The cognitive school
    believes that all behaviour is directed at goal
    achievement. Needs and past experiences are
    reasoned, categorized, and transformed into
    attitudes and beliefs that act as predispositions
    to behaviour. These predispositions are focused
    on helping the individual satisfy needs, and they
    determine the actions that he or she takes to
    achieve this satisfaction.

30
Model of the motivation process
Learning
Unfulfilled needs, wants and desires
Drive
Behaviour
Goal or Need fulfilment
Tension
Cognitive processes
Tension reduction
31
TYPES AND SYSTEMS OF NEEDSMurrays List of
Psychogenic Needs
  • NEEDS ASSOCIATED WITH INANIMATE OBJECTS
  • Acquisition
  • Conservancy
  • Order
  • Retention
  • Construction

32
  • NEEDS THAT REFLECT AMBITION, POWER,
  • ACCOMPLISHMENT, AND PRESTIGE.
  • Superiority
  • Achievement
  • Recognition
  • Exhibition
  • Inviolacy (inviolate attitude)unaltered not
    subject to change, damage, or destruction
  • 2. kept pure kept pure, untouched, or
    unblemished
  • Infavoidance (to avoid shame, failure,
    humiliation,
  • ridicule).
  • Defendance (defensive attitude)
  • Counteraction ( counteractive attitude)

33
  • NEEDS CONCERNED WITH HUMAN POWER
  • Dominance
  • Deference postpone to put something off until a
    later time
  • Similance ( suggestible attitude)alike sharing
    some qualities, but not exactly identical
  • Autonomy
  • Contrariance ( to act differently from
    others)somebody disposed to taking opposite
    position somebody who is prone to opposing
    policies, opinions, or accepted wisdom
  • SADOMASOCHISTIC NEEDS
  • Aggressionattack hostile action, especially a
    physical or military attack, directed against
    another person or country, often without
    provocation
  • 2. hostile attitude or behavior threatening
    behavior or actions
  • Abasement belittle somebody to make somebody
    feel belittled or degraded (literary)

34
  • NEEDS CONCERNED WITH AFFECTION BETWEEN PEOPLE
  • Affiliation To associate with a group or a
    person, to belong together as one.
  • Rejection Not accepting something.
  • Nurturance (to nourish, aid, or protect the
    helpless)
  • Succorance (to seek aid, protection, or
    sympathy)help for somebody or something help or
    relief for somebody or something
  • 2. somebody or something giving help somebody
    or something that provides help or relief
  • Play.

35
  • NEEDS CONCERNED WITH SOCIAL INTERCOUSE (THE NEEDS
    TO ASK AND TELL)
  • Cognizance ( inquiring attitude)knowledge
    knowledge or awareness of something (formal)
  • 2. somebodys scope of knowledge the extent or
    range of what somebody can know and understand
    (formal)
  • Exposition ( expositive attitude) Exhibition,
    display or show.

36
HIERARCHY OF NEEDS
  • Dr. Abraham Maslow, a clinical psychologist,
    formulated a widely accepted theory of human
    motivation based on the notion of a universal
    hierarchy of human needs. Maslows theory
    identifies five basic needs of human needs, which
    ranked in order of importance from lower-level
    (biogenic) needs to higher level ( psychogenic)
    needs.
  • The theory postulates that individuals seek to
    satisfy lower-level needs before higher-level
    needs emerge.
  • The lowest level of chronically need that an
    individual experiences serves to motivate his or
    her behaviour.
  • When the need is fairly well satisfied, a new (
    and higher) need emerges that the individual is
    motivated to fulfill. When this need is
    satisfied, a new ( and still higher) need
    emerges, and so on. Of course, if a lower-level
    need experiences some renewed deprivation (e.g.
    thirst), it may temporarily become dominant
    again.

37
ABRAHAM MASLOWS HIERARCHY OF NEEDS
Self-Actualization (Self-fulfilment)
Ego needs (prestige, status, self-esteem)
Social Needs ( Affection, friendship, belonging
Safety and Security Needs ( Protection, order,
stability)
Physiological Needs (Food, water, air, shelter)
38
  • PHYSIOLOGICAL NEEDS Basic human needs like food,
    water, clothing, shelter, etc.
  • SAFETY AND SECURITY NEEDS This has to do with
    protection, order and stability.
  • SOCIAL NEEDS people seek warm and satisfying
    human relationships with other people and are
    motivated by love for their families. Because of
    the importance of social motives in our society,
    advertisers of many product categories emphasize
    this appeal in their advertisements.
  • EGO NEEDS
  • These are egoistic needs Of the individuals
  • which Can take an inward or Outward
  • orientation.
  • Examples self-Acceptance, Self-esteem,
  • Success, independence, and Personal
  • satisfaction with a Job well done.
  • SELF-ACTUALISATION
  • This need refers to an individuals Desire to
    fulfill
  • his Or her potential.


39
  • SEGMENTATION AND PROMOTIONAL APPLICATIONS
  • POSITIONING APPLICATIONS
  • A TRIO OF NEEDS Power, Affiliation, Achievement.

40
THE MEASUREMENT OF MOTIVES
  • How are motives identified? How do researchers
    know which motives are responsible for certain
    kinds of behaviour? These are difficult questions
    to answer because motives are hypothetical
    constructs- that is, they cannot be seen or
    touched, handled, smelled, or otherwise tangibly
    observed. For this reason, no single measurement
    method can be considered a reliable index.
    Instead, researchers usually rely on a
    combination of various qualitative research
    techniques to try to establish the presence
    and/or the strength of various motives.
  • Some psychologists are concerned that many
    measurement techniques do not meet the crucial
    test criteria of validity and reliability. (
    Remember, validity ensures that the test measures
    what it purports to measure reliability refers
    to the consistency with which the test measures
    what it does measure.)
  • Constructing a scale that measures a specific
    need, while meeting both criteria, can be
    complex. For example, a recent research project
    employed six different studies to develop and
    validate a seemingly simply five-item scale to
    measure status consumption (defined as the
    tendency to purchase goods and services for the
    prestige that owing them bestows.)

41
  • Respondents are asked to indicate their level of
    agreement or disagreement ( a Likert scale) on
    the following five items
  • I would buy a product just because it has status.
  • I am interested in new products with status
  • I would pay more for a product if it had status
  • The status of the product is irrelevant to me
  • A product is more valuable to me if it has some
    snob appeal.

42
MOTIVATIONAL RESEARCH
  • The term motivational research, which should
    logically include all types of research into
    human motives, has become a term of art used to
    refer to qualitative research designed to uncover
    the consumers subconscious or hidden
    motivations. Based on the premise that consumers
    are not always aware of the reasons for their
    actions, motivational research attempts to
    discover underlying feelings, attitudes, and
    emotions concerning product, service, or brand
    use.

43
The development of Motivational Research
44
EVALUATION OF MOTIVATIONAL RESEARCH
45
Defense Mechanisms
  • People who cannot cope with frustration often
    mentally redefine their frustrating situations in
    order to protect their self-images and defend
    their self-esteem. For example, a young woman may
    yearn for European vacation she cannot afford.
    The coping individual may select a less expensive
    vacation trip to Disneyland or to a national
    park. The person who cannot cope may react with
    anger toward her boss for not paying her enough
    money to afford the vacation she prefers, or she
    may persuade herself that Europe is unseasonably
    warm this year.

46
  • These last two possibilities are examples,
    respectively, of aggression and rationalization,
    defense mechanisms that people sometimes adopt to
    protect their egos from feelings of failure when
    they do not attain their goals. Other defense
    mechanisms include regression, withdrawal,
    projection, autism, identification, and
    repressions. Marketers often consider this fact
    in their selection of advertising appeals and
    construct advertisements that portray a person
    resolving a particular frustration through the
    use of the advertised product.

47
DEFENSE MECHANISAMS
DEFENSE MECHANISM DESCRIPTION AND ILLUSTRATIONS
Aggression In response to frustration, individuals may resort to aggressive behaviour in attempting to protect their self-esteem. The tennis pro who slams his tennis racket to the ground when disappointed with his game or the baseball player who physically intimidates an empire for his call are examples of such conduct. So are consumer boycotts of companies or stores.
Rationalisation People sometimes resolve frustration by inventing plausible reasons for being unable to attain their goals ( e.g. not having enough time to practice) or deciding that the goal is not really worth pursuing.
Regression An individual may react to a frustrating situation with childish or immature behaviour. A shopper attending a bargain sale, for example, may fight over merchandise and even rip a garment that another shopper will not relinquish rather than allow the other person to have it.
Withdrawal Frustration may be resolved by simply withdrawing from the situation.
48
Defense Mechanism
Descriptions and illustrations
  • Projection An individual may redefine a
    frustrating situation by projecting blame for his
    or her own failures and inabilities on other
    objects or persons. Thus, the golfer who misses a
    stroke may blame his golf clubs or his caddy.
  • Autism Autistic thinking is thinking dominated by
    needs and emotions, with little effort made to
    reality. Such daydreaming, or fantasizing,
    enables the individual to attain imaginary
    gratification of unfulfilled needs.
  • Identification People resolve feelings of
    frustration by subconsciously identifying with
    other persons or situations that they consider
    relevant.
  • Repression Another way that individuals avoid
    the tension arising from frustration is by
    repressing the unsatisfied need. Thus,
    individuals may force the need out of their
    conscious awareness. Sometimes repressed needs
    manifest themselves indirectly. The manifestation
    of repressed needs in a socially acceptable form
    is called sublimation, another type of defense
    mechanism.

49
EVALUATION OF MOTIVATIONAL RESEARCH
50
  • PERSONALITY AND
  • CONSUMER
  • BEHAVIOUR

51
WHAT IS PERSONALITY
  • Personality can be defined as those inner
    psychological characteristics that both determine
    and reflect how a person responds to his or her
    environment
  • Personality is about somebodys set of
    characteristics the totality of somebodys
    attitudes, interests, behavioral patterns,
    emotional responses, social roles, and other
    individual traits that endure over long periods
    of time
  • Personality can also refer to the characteristics
    making somebody appealing the distinctive or
    very noticeable characteristics that make
    somebody socially appealing a partner with real
    personality

52
THE NATURE OF PERSONALITY
  • Personality reflects individual differences
  • Personality is consistent and endurance
  • Personality can change.

53
PERSONALITY
  • Consumers are different in terms of age,
  • gender, marital status, income, occupation, race,
  • status, etc. These differences, gives rise to
  • differences in personality.
  • Some can afford to buy very expensive cars,
  • rent expensive hotels because of their
  • personality. The can afford these products
  • because of their position, power, money, status
  • and occupation.

54
THEORIES OF PERSONALITY
  • FREUDIAN THEORY
  • NEO-FREUDIAN PERSONALITY THEORY
  • TRAIT THEORY

55
FREUDIAN THEORY
  • Sigmund Freuds psychoanalytic theory of
    personality is a cornerstone of modern
    psychology.
  • This theory was built on the premise that
    unconscious needs or drives, especially sexual
    and other biological drives, are at the heart of
    human motivation and personality.
  • He said that personality is primarily instinctual
    and sexual in nature.
  • He came out with three aspects He said the human
    personality consists to there interacting
    systems
  • Id physiological needs e.g. food, water, shelter
    etc
  • Superego Individuals internal expression of
    societys
  • moral and ethical codes of conduct. The
    superegos role is to see that individuals
    satisfies needs in a socially acceptable fashion.
  • Ego Freud emphased that an individuals
    personality is formed as he or she passes through
    a number of distinct stages of infant and
    childhood development. These are the oral, anal,
    phallic, latent, and genital stages.
  • According to Freudian theory, an adults
    personality is determined by how well he or she
    deals with the crisis that are experienced while
    passing through each of these stages.

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NON-FREUDIAN PERSONALITY THEORY
  • They believe social relationship is vital to the
    development of personality

57
PERSONALITY AND UNDERSTANDING CONSUMER DIVERSITY
58
CONSUMER INNOVATIONS AND RELATED PERSONALITY
TRAITS
  • CONSUMER INNOVATIVENESS
  • DOGMATISM
  • SOCIAL CHARACTER
  • NEED FOR UNIQUENESS
  • OPTIMUM STIMULATION LEVEL
  • SENSATION SEEKING
  • VARIETY-NOVELTY SEEKING

59
COGNITIVE PERSONALITY FACTORS
  • NEED RECOGNITION
  • VISUALIZERS VERSUS VERBALISERS

60
FROM CONSUMER MATERIALISM TO COMPULSIVE
CONSUMPTION
  • CONSUMER MATERIALISM
  • FIXATED CONSUMPTION BEHAVIOUR
  • COMPULSIVE CONSUMPTION BEHAVIOUR

61
CONSUMER ETHNOCENTRISM RESPONSES TO FOREIGN-MADE
PRODUCTS
  • Brand Personality

62
  • BRAND PERSONIFICATION
  • PRODUCT PERSONALITY AND GEOGRAPHY
  • PERSONALITY AND COLOUR
  • Self and Self-image.

63
  • ONE OR MULTIPLE SELVES
  • THE MAKEUP OF TH ESELF-IMAGE
  • THE EXTENDED SELF
  • ALTERING THE SELF
  • Virtual Personality or Self.

64
CONSUMER PERCEPTION
  • Perception is defined as the process by which an
    individual selects, organizes, and interprets
    stimuli into a meaningful and coherent picture of
    the world.
  • It can be described as how we see the world
    around us.

65
SENSATION
  • Sensation is the immediate and direct response of
    the sensory organs to stimuli. A stimuli is any
    unit of input to any of the senses. Examples of
    stimuli (i.e. sensory input) include products,
    packages, brand names, advertisements, and
    commercials.
  • Sensory receptors are the human organs ( the
    eyes, ears, nose, mouth and skin) that receive
    sensory inputs. These sensory functions are to
    see, hear, smell, taste and feel.
  • All of these functions are called into play,
    either singly or in combination, in the
    evaluation and use of most consumer products.
  • Human sensitivity refers to the experience of
    sensation. Sensitivity to stimuli varies with the
    quality of an individuals sensory receptors
    (e.g. eyesight or hearing) and the amount (or
    intensity) of the stimuli to which he or she is
    exposed. For example, a blind person may have a
    more highly developed sense of hearing than the
    average sighted person and may be able to hear
    sounds that the average person cannot.
  • Sensation itself depends on energy change within
    the environment where the perception occurs (
    i.e. on differentiation of input).

66
  • A perfectly bland or unchanging environment,
    regardless of the strength of the sensory input,
    provides little or no sensation at all.
  • Thus a person who lives on a busy street in
    midtown Manhattan would probably receive little
    or no sensation from the inputs of such noisy
    stimuli as horns honking, tires screeching, and
    fire engines clanging, because such sounds are so
    commonplace in New York City.

67
THE ABSOLUTE THRESHOLD
  • The lowest level at which an individual can
    experience a sensation is called the absolute
    threshold.
  • The point at which a person can detect a
    difference between something and nothing is
    that persons absolute threshold for that
    stimulus.
  • To illustrate, the distance at which a driver can
    note a specific billboard on a highway is that
    individuals absolute threshold.
  • Sensory adaptation is a problem that concerns
    many national advertisers which is why they try
    to change their advertising campaigns regularly.
    They are concerned that consumers will get so
    used to their current print ads and TV
    commercials that they will no longer see them
    that is, the ads will no longer provide
    sufficient sensory input to be noted.

68
THE DIFFERENTIAL THRESHOLD
  • The minimal difference that can be detected
    between two similar stimuli is called the
    differential threshold, or the just noticeable
    difference ( the j.n.d.).

69
MARKETING APPLICATIONS OF THE Just Noticeable
Difference (J.N.D.)
70
SUBLIMAL PERCEPTION
  • Evaluating the effectiveness of Subliminal
    Persuasion

71
DYNAMICS OF PERCEPTION
72
PERCEPTUAL SELECTION
  • Nature of the Stimulus
  • Expectations
  • Motives
  • Selective Perception Selective exposure,
    Selective attention, Perceptual defense,
    Perceptual Blocking.

73
PERCEPTUAL ORGANISATION
  • Figure and Ground
  • Grouping
  • Closure

74
PERCEPTUAL INTERPRETATION
  • Perceptual distortion
  • Physical appearances
  • Stereotypes
  • First impressions
  • Jumping to conclusions
  • Halo Effect

75
Consumer Imagery
76
PRODUCT POSITIONING
  • Umbrella positioning
  • Positioning against the competition
  • Positioning based on a specific benefit
  • Finding an Unowned position
  • Filling several positions

77
PRODUCT REPOSTIONING
  • Perceptual mapping

78
POSITIONING OF SERVICES
79
PERCEIVED PRICE
  • Reference prices
  • Tensile and Objective price claims.

80
PERCEIVED QUALITY
  • Perceived quality of product
  • Perceived quality of services

81
PRICE/QUALITY RELATIONSHIPS
82
RETAIL STORE IMAGE
83
MANUFACTURERS IMAGE
84
PERCEIVED RISK
  • Perception of risk varies
  • How consumers handle risk Consumers seek
    information, Consumers are brand loyal, Consumers
    select by brand image, Consumers rely on store
    image, Consumers buy the most expensive model,
    Consumers seek reassurance.

85
CONSUMER LEARNING
86
THE ELEMENTS OF CONSUMER LEARNING
  • Consumer Learning is the process by which
    individuals acquire the purchase and consumption
    knowledge and experience that they apply to
    future related behaviour.
  • Consumer learning is a process which means it
    continually evolves and changes as a result of
    newly acquired knowledge. ( which may be gained
    from reading, discussions, observation and from
    thinking) or from actual experience.
  • Both newly acquired knowledge and personal
    experience serve as feedback to the individual
    and provide the basis for future behaviour in
    similar situations.

87
MOTIVATION
  • The concept of motivation is important in
    learning.
  • Motivation is based on needs and goals.
  • Motivation acts as a spur to learning. For
    example men and women who want to become good
    tennis players are motivated to learn all they
    can about tennis and to practice whenever they
    can.
  • They may seek information concerning the prices,
    quality, and characteristics of tennis racquets
    if they learn that a good racquet is
    instrumental to playing a good game. Conversely,
    individuals who are not interested in tennis are
    likely to ignore all information related to the
    game. The degree of relevance, or involvement,
    determines the consumers level of motivation to
    search for knowledge or information about a
    product or service.
  • Uncovering consumer motives is one of the prime
    tasks of marketers, who then try to teach
    motivated consumer segments why and how their
    products will fulfill the consumers needs.

88
CUES
  • If motives are to stimulate learning, cues are
    the stimuli that give direction to those motives.
  • An advertisement for a tennis camp may serve as a
    cue for tennis buffs, who may suddenly
    recognise that attending tennis camp is a
    concentrated way to improve their game while
    taking a vacation.
  • The ad is the cu, or stimulus, that suggests a
    specific way to satisfy a salient motive. In the
    market place, price, styling, packaging,
    advertisement, and store displays all serve as
    cues to help consumers fulfill their needs in
    product-specific ways.
  • Cues serve to direct consumer drives when they
    are consistent with consumer expectations.
  • Marketers must be careful to provide cues that do
    not upset those expectations. For example,
    consumers expect designer clothes to be expensive
    and to be sold in upscale retail stores. Thus a
    high-fashion designer should sell his or her
    clothes only through exclusive stores and
    advertise only in upscale fashion magazines.
  • Each aspect of the marketing mix must reinforce
    the others if cues are to serve as the stimuli
    that guide consumer actions in the direction
    desired by the marketer.

89
RESPONSE
  • How individuals react to drive or cue- how they
    behave-constitutes their response.
  • Learning can occur even when responses are not
    overt.
  • The automobile manufacturer that provides
    consistent cues to a consumer may not always
    succeed in stimulating a purchase.

90
REINFORCEMENT
  • It increases a likelihood that a specific
    response will occur in the future as the result
    of particular cues or stimuli.

91
Behavioural Learning Theories
  • CLASSICAL CONDITIONING
  • Conditioned learning
  • Unconditioned stimulus
  • Conditioned stimuli
  • Cognitive Associative Learning
  • Strategic Application of Classical conditioning

92
INSTRUMENTAL CONDITIONING
  • Reinforcement of behaviour
  • Strategic Applications of Instrumental
    Conditioning

93
MODELLING OR OBSERVATIONAL LEARNING
94
COGNITIVE LEARNING THEORY
  • INFORMATION PROCESSING
  • Structure of memory
  • Sensory store
  • Short-term store
  • Long-term store
  • Rehearsal and Encoding
  • Information overload
  • Retention
  • Retrieval

95
Models of cognitive learning
96
INVOLVEMENT THEORY
  • Involvement theory and media strategy
  • Involvement theory and Consumer Relevance
  • Central and Peripheral Routes to Persuasion
  • Measures of involvement
  • Marketing Applications of involvement

97
MEASURES OF CONSUMER LEARNING
  • Cognitive Responses to Advertising
  • Attitudinal and Behavioural measures of Brand
    loyalty
  • Brand Equity

98
CONSUMER ATTITUTUDE FORMATION AND CHANGE
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