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Customer Analysis

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Mature, satisfied, comfortable. Favor durability, functionality, value. Achievers. ... access to other members of the buying center (e.g., secretaries, receptionists) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Customer Analysis


1
Customer Analysis
2
7 Os of Consumer Behavior
  • Occupants. Who constitutes the market?
  • Objects. What does the market buy?
  • Objectives. Why does the market buy?
  • Organizations. Who participates in the buying?
  • Operations. How does the market buy?
  • Occasions. When does the market buy?
  • Outlets. Where does the market buy?

3
Quickly identify the 7 Os of Consumer Behavior
For
  • Baby diapers
  • Friday nights entertainment
  • Pizza
  • Resort hotels
  • Intercity transportation (mainland)
  • Dishwashing equipment

4
Model of Buyer Behavior
Buyers Charact-eristics
Buyers Decision Process
Buyers Decisions
Marketing Stimuli
Other Stimuli
Product Price Place Promo- tion
Econ Tech Political Cultural Compet- ition
Cultural Social Personal Psycho- logical
Problem Search Evaluate Decision Post- purchase
Product choice Brand choice Dealer
choice Purchase timing Purchase amount
5
ConsumerBuying Decision Process
Problem Recognition
Information Search
Evaluation of Alternatives
Purchase
Post-Purchase
6
Successive Sets Involved in Consumer Decision
Making
Total Set
Awareness Set (Evoked Set)
Consideration Set
Choice Set
Decision
7
Four Types of Buying Behavior
Complex Buying Behavior
Variety- Seeking Behavior
High Involvement
Low Involvement
Dissonance- Reducing Buying Behavior
Habitual Buying Behavior
8
Postpurchase Evaluation
  • Customer Satisfaction.
  • Based on perception of quality and
    customers expectations.
  • Cognitive Dissonance.
  • Buyers remorse, followed by justification.

9
Possible influences on the decision process
  • Psychological
  • Perception
  • Motives
  • Learning
  • Attitudes
  • Personality
  • Social
  • Roles/ family
  • Reference groups/
  • opinion leaders
  • Social class
  • Culture,subculture
  • Personal
  • Demographic
  • Lifestyle
  • Situational

Consumer buying decision process
Problem recognition
Information search
Evaluation of alternatives
Purchase
Postpurchase evaluation
10
Demographic
  • Age
  • Gender
  • Race
  • Income
  • Education
  • Religion
  • Ethnicity
  • Size

11
Lifestyle
12
Situational Factors
  • Time pressures
  • Product scarcity
  • Weather
  • Use occasion
  • Buying purpose (self, gift for others, etc.)

13
Perception
  • The process of selecting, organizing, and
    interpreting information inputs to produce
    meaning.
  • Selective Exposure. Individuals select some
    pieces of information and ignore others.

14
Selective Perception
  • Selective Distortion. Changing or twisting
    currently received information.
  • Selective Retention. When people remember
    information inputs that support their feelings
    and beliefs, forget inputs that do not.

15
Motives
  • Something that moves a buyer to action to satisfy
    a need or achieve a goal.
  • At any one time we may be motivated by more than
    one motive, but some are stronger than others.

16
Maslows Hierarchy of Needs
17
Information
Learning
Experience
18
Attitude
  • A lasting, general evaluation of something
    (people, objects, or issues).
  • Three components of an attitude, or the ABCs of
    Attitude
  • Affect (Feelings)
  • Behavior
  • Cognition (Thoughts)

19
Personality
  • A persons distinguishing psychological
    characteristics that lead to relatively
    consistent and enduring responses to his or her
    environment.
  • Self-confidence Sociability
  • Dominance Defensiveness
  • Autonomy Adaptability
  • Deference

20
Self-Concept
  • Actual Self-Concept. How she views herself
  • Ideal Self-Concept. How she would like to view
    herself.
  • Others-self-concept (looking glass self). How
    she thinks others see her.

21
Family Decision-Making Processes
  • Autonomic. Decision made by either/or
  • Husband-dominant
  • Wife-dominant
  • Children-dominant
  • Syncratic. Decision made jointly.

22
  • Lawn mower
  • Car
  • House
  • Furniture
  • Family vacation
  • Breakfast cereal
  • Life insurance
  • Movie
  • Soft drinks
  • Drapes
  • Home computer
  • Autonomic
  • Husband-dominant
  • Wife-dominant
  • Children-dominant
  • Syncratic

23
The Family Life Cycle
  • 1. Bachelor Stage.
  • 2. Newly married. Young. No children.
  • 3. Full Nest I. Youngest child under six.
  • 4. Full Nest II. Youngest child over six.
  • 5. Full Nest III. Older married couples with
    dependent children.

24
The Family Life Cycle
  • 6. Empty Nest I. Older married couples, no
    children living with them. Head of household in
    labor force.
  • 7. Empty Nest II. Older married. No children
    living at home. Head of house retired.
  • 8. Solitary survivor, in labor force.
  • 9. Solitary survivor, retired.

25
Reference Groups
  • All the groups that have a direct (face-to-face)
    or indirect influence on a persons attitudes or
    behavior.

26
Reference Groups
  • Membership Reference Group
  • Aspirational Reference Group
  • Disassociative Reference Group
  • Opinion Leader. Viewed by others in group as
    well-informed. Provides information.

27
Social Classes
  • Relatively homogeneous and enduring divisions in
    a society, which are hierarchically ordered and
    whose members share similar values, interests,
    and behavior.

28
The American Class Structure
UPPER AMERICANS Upper-Upper (0.3) The
Old Rich Lower-Upper (1.2) The Nouveau
Riche Upper-Middle (12.5) Professionals,
managers
MIDDLE AMERICANS Middle-Class
(32) White-collar workers Working Class
(38) Blue-collar workers
LOWER AMERICANS Lower Class (9) Working,
but poor Lowest Class (7) Welfare,
unemployed.
29
Social Class Criteria
  • Occupation
  • Education
  • Income
  • Wealth
  • Possessions
  • Neighborhood

30
VALS 2 Frame- work
High Resources
Actualizers
Fulfilleds
Experiencers
Achievers
Strivers
Makers
Believers
Low Resources
Strugglers
Principle Oriented
Action Oriented
Status Oriented
31
VALS 2 Groups -High Resources
  • Actualizers. Successful, sophisticated, active,
    take-charge. Cultivated tastes for relatively
    upscale, niche-oriented products.
  • Fulfilleds. Mature, satisfied, comfortable.
    Favor durability, functionality, value.
  • Achievers. Successful, career-oriented.
    Established, prestige products that demonstrate
    success to peers.
  • Experiencers. Young, vital, enthusiastic,
    impulsive, rebellious. Clothes, fast food,
    music.

32
VALS 2 Groups- Low Resources
  • Believers. Conservative, conventional,
    tradition. Familiar products, established
    brands.
  • Strivers. Uncertain, insecure, approval-seeking,
    resource constrained. Stylish products that
    emulate those with greater wealth.
  • Makers. Practical, self-sufficient, traditional,
    family-oriented. Practical, functional products.
    Tools, utility vehicles, fishing, hunting, etc.
  • Strugglers. Elderly, resigned, passive,
    concerned. Cautious, brand loyal.

33
Business and Organizational Buying Behavior
34
Business Buyers vs. Consumers
  • Fewer buyers
  • Larger buyers
  • Close supplier-customer relationships
  • Geographically concentrated buyers
  • Derived demand. Demand derived from ultimate
    purchasers.
  • Inelastic demand.
  • Professional purchasing.
  • Several buying influencers. Buying center.

35
Primary Concerns of Organizational Buyers
  • Quality. Meets specifications
  • Service.
  • Price (Cost).
  • In short, the bottom line.
  • Reverse marketing. Developing close
    relationships so that buyer controls the supplier.

36
Major Influences on Industrial Buying
Behavior
  • Environ-
  • mental
  • Demand
  • Economic
  • outlook
  • Interest rate
  • Techno-
  • logical
  • change
  • Political
  • Regulations
  • Competition
  • Social
  • Response
  • Organi-
  • zational
  • Objectives
  • Policies
  • Procedures
  • Resources
  • Systems
  • Inter-
  • personal
  • Interests
  • Authority
  • Status
  • Empathy
  • Persuas-
  • iveness
  • Indivi-
  • dual
  • Age
  • Income
  • Education
  • Position
  • Risk

Business Buyer
37
Organizational Factors
Purchasing- Department Upgrading
Cross- Functional Roles
Centralized Purchasing
Decentralized Purchasing of Small Ticket Items
Internet Purchasing
Long-Term Contracts
Purchasing- Performance Evaluation Pro. Buyers
Lean Production
38
The Buying Center
  • The group of people within an organization who
    are involved in making organizational purchase
    decisions.
  • Includes users, influencers, buyers, deciders,
    gatekeepers, initiators, approvers.

39
Participants in the Business Buying Process
Users
Initiators
Influencers
Gatekeepers
Buyers
Deciders
Approvers
40
  • Users. People who actually use the product.
    Often initiate the buying process.
  • Influencers. Technical personnel, such as
    engineers or consultants.
  • Buyers. Their job is to buy. Select suppliers,
    negotiate terms. Purchasing agents.
  • Deciders. People who decide on product
    requirements or on suppliers.
  • Gatekeepers. Control the flow of information and
    access to other members of the buying center
    (e.g., secretaries, receptionists)

41
  • Initiators. Those who request that something be
    purchased. They may be users or others in the
    organization.
  • Approvers. People who authorize the proposed
    actions of deciders or buyers.
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