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Personality, Lifestyle,

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Title: Chapter 8 Author: Richard A. Wozniak Last modified by: Windows User Created Date: 2/8/2000 5:09:34 AM Document presentation format: On-screen Show (4:3) – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Personality, Lifestyle,


1
Chapter 7
Personality, Lifestyle, and Self-Concept
  • Personality, Lifestyle,
  • and Self-Concept

2
Snapshot from the Marketplace
  • Body image is an inseparable component of our
    self concept.
  • An ideal of beauty varies cross-culturally and
    over time.
  • Since we compare ourselves to idealized images
    depicted in ads, marketers use such a tactic to
    create sufficient temporary dissatisfaction to
    motivate us to act.

3
Q. 1. Define Personality.
4
What Is Personality?
  • The sum total of an individuals inner
    psychological attributes
  • Distinctive and enduring patterns of thoughts,
    emotions, and behaviors that characterize each
    individual's adaptation to the situation of his
    or her life
  • static.

5
What Is Personality?
  • Properties that characterize personality
  • Personality is unique.
  • Personality is consistentacross diverse
    circumstances.
  • Personality is not static.

6
Diversity of Personality Theories
  • Psychological literature provides a large number
    of personality theories.
  • Our focus here is on 3 theories
  • Freudian theory of personality
  • Neo-Freudian theory of personality
  • Trait theory of personality

7
Q. 2. State three theories of Personality.
8
Freudian Psychoanalytic Personality Theory
  • Strong emphasis on biological sexual motivation
  • Personality is a result of interaction conflict
    between
  • The Id pleasure principle
  • The Superego social, moral, ethical
    inhibitions
  • The Ego mediator between the ids impulses
    superegos restrictions
  • Personality develops as we progress through a
    sequence of psychosexual stages during infancy.

9
Freudian Psychoanalytic Personality Theory
(contd)
  • Anxiety plays a major role in personality
    development.
  • Freud discerned 3 types of anxiety
  • Reality anxiety fear of tangible danger
  • Neurotic anxiety fear of punishment for
    instinctual gratification
  • Moral anxiety fear of our own conscience

10
Freudian Psychoanalytic Personality Theory
(contd)
  • Defense mechanisms to overcome anxiety, examples
    include
  • Repression
  • Rationalization
  • Regression
  • Projection
  • Aggression
  • Withdrawal

11
Marketing Applications of Freudian Theory
  • Ads frequently address the id by emphasizing the
    pleasure and self-indulgent aspects of product or
    service offerings.
  • Promotions address the ego via free offers as
    well as by employing leisure, freedom, escape,
    and fantasy appeals.
  • Promotional appeals address the superego by
    emphasizing social amenities, ethics, and
    tradition.

12
Personality Videos
  • NFL Custom Shop Personality
  • Doritos Personality

13
Neo-Freudian Personality Theory
  • Social variables rather than biological instincts
    underlie personality formation
  • Four theories of Freuds disciples their
    emphases
  • Adler overcoming real perceived
    inferiorities pursuit of superiority
    perfection
  • Horney dealing with anxiety
  • Fromm escape from loneliness seeking meaningful
    relationships
  • Sullivan interpersonal relationships

14
Marketing Applications of Neo-Freudian Theory
  • Ads employing Neo-Freudian theory emphasize
    social relationships and human interaction.
  • Promotional appeals frequently depict warm
    interaction between individuals in a social or a
    family setting.
  • Appeals may also emphasize the role of products
    as enhancers of positive interpersonal
    relationships with others or protectors against
    offending others.
  • Cohens C-A-D scale a paradigm that classifies
    people based on their degree of compliance,
    aggression, and detachment

15
Trait Theory of Personality
  • Classifies people according to their dominant
    characteristics or identifiable traits
  • Theory assumptions
  • Traits are identifiable and limited in number.
  • Traits are relatively stable.
  • Traits can be measured via behavioral indicators.
  • People with similar traits behave similarly.
  • Measuring personality traits
  • Standard clinical personality tests vs.
    tailor-made modified tests

16
Trait Theory of Personality (contd)
  • Myers-Briggs Type Indicator this instrument
    measures traits by employing 4 scales
  • Extroversion/introversion
  • Sensate/Intuitive
  • Thinking/feeling
  • Judging/perceiving
  • Measurement results in 16 personality types,
    representing a persons behavioral tendencies on
    the above 4 traits.

17
Marketing Applications of Trait Theory
  • Marketers search for correlations between sets of
    specific personality traits and consumer behavior
    patterns.
  • Correlations can occur in the form of one or more
    personality traits and such specific tendencies
    as product purchase, brand choice, retail store
    selection, or media habits.

18
Psychographics
  • The objective is to assess consumers lifestyles
    so that meaningful consumer typologies can be
    identified.
  • Profiles can be obtained through AIO Inventories
    (activities, interests, and opinions surveys)

19
Marketing Applications of Psychographics
  • VALS segmentation approach defines 8 market
    segments each has a unique combination of
    psychological and demographic attributes.
  • VALS segments the market based on both consumers
    primary motivations and resources/innovation.
  • Primary motivations are ideals, achievements, and
    self-expression.
  • Resources range from minimal to abundant and
    cover individuals psychological, physical,
    demographic, and material means.

20
VALS Configuration of Consumer Categories
Self-Orientation
21
Marketing Applications of VALS
  • VALS helps marketers
  • Identify and select target markets
  • Develop effective media plans to reach specific
    target markets
  • Create ads and appeals that match the attributes
    of desirable target segments

22
Q. 3. How can the study of personality traits be
applied to Consumer Behavior Research?
23
Applications to Consumer Behavior Research
  • Need for cognition a tendency to engage in and
    enjoy thinking
  • Locus of control significant personality
    variable in psychology
  • External locus of control ascribe the
    influences on their lives to luck, fate, chance,
    other people, or strong forces they cannot
    overcome
  • Internal locus of control tend to attribute the
    influences on their lives to forces such as their
    own skills that are within their control
  • Differ in attentiveness to information present in
    the environment and seeking of additional
    relevant information

24
Q. 4. Define Self-Concept.
25
Self-Concept
  • The sum total of our beliefs and feelings about
    our self
  • An organized configuration of perceptions of the
    self, which are available to awareness

26
Q. 5. What are the interactive sources of
self-concept?
27
Interactive Sources of Selfhood
  • Significant others
  • individuals with whom we interact in various
    kinds of role relations, are crucial in the
    formation of our self.
  • Materials and objects
  • the physical environment that we rely on for
    survival and the technologies that support and
    mediate our social relations affect the
    development of our self.
  • Ideas, beliefs and values
  • ideology and religious beliefs influence the way
    we perceive and respond to our social and
    physical environment

28
Exhibit 10.1The Relational Self
29
Q. 6. Define Self-Esteem and Self-Efficacy.
30
Self-Esteem and Self-Efficacy
  • Self-Esteem the pattern of beliefs an
    individual has about self-worth
  • Ones subjective self-evaluation developed from
    personal experiences of success or failure,
    interactions with others, maturation, heredity,
    and social learning.
  • High self-esteem is related to spending low
    self-esteem is related to compulsive and
    addictive behaviors
  • Self-Efficacy -- peoples beliefs about their
    capabilities to exercise control over events that
    affect their lives
  • Self-efficacy should vary cross-culturally.

31
Q. 7. What are the various characteristics of
Self-Concept?
32
Self-Concept
  • multifaceted
  • includes a collection of images, activities,
    goals, feelings, roles, traits and values
  • Multiplicity of identity indicates that selfhood
    is a collection of diverse but related
    self-perceptions the self includes a
    multiplicity of things that people are to
    themselves and to one another


33
Self-Concept is Multi-Faceted
  • I-self
  • the active observer, the knower, or the
    information processor
  • Me-self
  • the known, observed, and constructed self-image
  • Looking-glass self
  • Image congruence hypothesis
  • self-concept is reinforced as positive responses
    from others support consumption activities
  • Extended self
  • external objects to which we are emotionally
    attached and that we consider a part of ourselves

34
Self-Concept Depends on Situations and Motives
  • Working or activated self-concept
  • aspects that are most relevant in a particular
    social setting or situation
  • People selectively retrieve different aspects of
    their self-concepts depending on goals and
    motives.
  • Sometimes consumers may contrive to use products
    to trigger aspects of the self.

35
Self-Concept is Changeable
  • Self-concept is flexible and changeable
  • Consumers self-concepts are especially dynamic
    during certain role transitions
  • Role transitions and self-esteem
  • the degree to which people have a positive
    attitude towards themselves
  • Role transitions are marked by changes in
    consumption patterns

36
Q. 8. What are the components of the dynamic
self-concept model?
37
Self Concept
  • intrapersonal inner, processes
  • including information processing and motivation
  • interpersonal processes -- including perception,
    interpersonal influence and reaction to others
    feedback

38
The Dynamic Self-ConceptIntrapersonal Processes
  • Self-narrative
  • stories that are coherent, context sensitive
    accounts of experiences that provide a sense of
    personal continuity in time and space
  • Self-relevant information
  • internalized self-schemas that represent a
    reference value or standard of comparison for new
    information
  • Self-gifts
  • frequently carry messages about identify and
    self-distinctiveness, which contributes to
    self-esteem

39
Intrapersonal Processes
  • Body image
  • Commonly defined as a mental construction,
    embedded in self-schema that can deviate
    substantially from a persons objective physical
    characteristics
  • Desired selves
  • what a person thinks he or she really can and
    would like to be

40
Interpersonal Processes
  • Self is a reference point for evaluating others,
    selecting friends and directing interactions with
    others
  • Consumption communicates socially shared meanings
    about identity
  • High self-monitors
  • concerned with being consistent with their
    conception of how people behave in a particular
    situation
  • Low self-monitors
  • concerned with being themselves in various
    situations
  • Consumers may use goods to close the gap between
    actual and possible selves

41
The Self-Concept
  • 5 original concepts of self real-self, ideal
    self, self-image, apparent-self,
    reference-group self
  • Other concepts of self
  • Extended-self
  • Possible-self

42
Self-Concept
  • Defined as an organized configuration of
    perceptions of the self, which are available to
    awareness
  • Perceptions people have about themselves
  • An active configuration that influences
    intrapersonal and interpersonal processes
  • It is not distinct from society and culture
  • Role transition is a major change in the rights,
    duties, and responsibilities expected of an
    individual by a social group

43
Self Concept and Social Roles
  • At different times, we assume diverse social
    roles such as that of spouse, parent, employer,
    or student.
  • While in a specific role, we are often concerned
    about the impression we make on others.

44
Self-Concept and Consumption
  • Consumers attempt to purchase products that match
    their personality and self concept.
  • Products we own or use serve as social symbols
    designed to communicate to others who we are.
  • Self-product congruence refers to our tendency to
    select and use products that match aspects of
    self.

45
Stability of the Self-Concept
  • Even though the self concept is relatively
    stable, it is not static.
  • New experiences can change our self concept.
  • Symbolic self-completion is our tendency to
    complement self by displaying symbols associated
    with our identity.

46
Measuring the Self-Concept
  • The Q-Sort technique involves giving respondents
    a number of cards (60-120), each containing a
    self-describing statement or situation for the
    respondent to evaluate.
  • Respondents sort these cards into a number of
    piles reflecting their assessment of how well
    each statement matches or differs from their own
    self perception.

47
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