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Personality and Lifestyles Chapter 6 Personality A person s

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Title: Personality and Lifestyles Chapter 6 Personality A person s


1
Personality and Lifestyles Chapter 6
2
Personality
  • A persons unique psychological makeup
  • how it consistently influences
  • the way a person responds to his/her environment
  • Stable vs. situation-specific

3
Personality
  • Marketers lifestyles
  • Leisure activities,
  • political outlook,
  • aesthetic tastes, etc.

4
Freudian Systems
  • Personality conflict between gratification
    responsibility
  • Id pleasure principle
  • Superego our conscience
  • Ego mediates between
  • id and superego
  • Reality principle

5
Freudian Systems (Contd)
  • Marketing Implications
  • Unconscious motives underlying purchases
  • Symbolism in products
  • to compromise id superego
  • Sports car as sexual gratification for men

6
Motivational Research
  • Freudian ideas unlock
  • deeper product meanings
  • advertisement meanings
  • Consumer depth interviews

7
Motivational Research
  • Latent motives for purchases
  • Examples of Dichters motives
  • (Table 6.1)
  • Power Bowling, electric trains, power tools
  • social acceptance Ice cream, beauty products

8
Motivational Research (Contd)
  • Criticisms
  • Invalid or
  • works too well
  • Too sexually-based

9
Motivational Research (Contd)
  • Appeal
  • Less expensive
  • than large-scale surveys
  • Powerful hook
  • for promotional strategy
  • Intuitively plausible findings
  • (after the fact)
  • Enhanced validity with other techniques

10
Neo-Freudian Theories
  • Karen Horney
  • Compliant vs. detached vs. aggressive
  • Alfred Adler
  • Motivation to overcome inferiority
  • Harry Stack Sullivan
  • Personality evolves to reduce anxiety

11
Neo-Freudian Theories Jung
  • Carl Jung analytical psychology
  • Collective unconscious
  • Archetypes in advertising
  • (see Figure 6.1 old wise man, earth mother,
    etc.)
  • BrandAsset Archetypes model
  • BAV Brand Health measures

12
BrandAsset Archetypes BAV Brand Health
  • Archetypes across cultures and time
  • Archetypes telegraph instantly
  • Strong evidence of achieving business objectives
    with this model
  • Early warning signal of brand trouble

13
Trait Theory
  • Personality traits
  • identifiable characteristics
  • that define a person

14
Trait Theory
  • relevant consumer behavior Traits
  • Innovativeness
  • Materialism
  • Self-consciousness
  • Need for cognition
  • Frugality

15
Are You an Innie or an Outie?
  • Inner-directed vs. outer-directed
  • Unique sense of self vs.
  • pleasing others/fitting in
  • Power of conformity
  • Need for uniqueness

16
Are You an Innie or an Outie? (Contd)
  • Idiocentrics vs. allocentrics
  • Contentment
  • Health consciousness
  • Food preparation
  • Workaholics
  • Travel and entertainment

17
Problems with Trait Theory
  • Prediction of product choices is mixed at best
  • Scales not valid/reliable
  • Tests borrow scales used
  • for the mentally ill
  • Inappropriate testing conditions

18
Problems with Trait Theory
  • Prediction of product choices is mixed at best
  • Ad hoc (after the fact) instrument changes
  • global measures used to predict specific brand
    purchases
  • Shotgun approach
  • (no thought of scale application)
  • Remember traits are only part of the story

19
Brand Personality
  • Set of traits people attribute to a product
  • as if it were a person
  • Brand equity
  • Outsourcing production
  • to focus on brand
  • Extensive consumer research
  • goes into brand campaigns

20
Table 6.2 (Abridged)
21
Table 6.2 (Abridged)
22
Brand Personality (Contd)
  • Distinctive brand personality brand loyalty
  • Animism
  • Level 1 brand spokespersons loved ones
  • Level 2 anthropomorphized brands
  • Positioning/repositioning strategies
  • describing brands as people
  • Lust, envy, jealousy. The dangers of Volvo.

23
Lifestyles
Figure 6.2
  • Patterns of consumption
  • reflecting a persons choices of
  • how one spends time and money
  • Who we are and what we do

24
Lifestyles as Group Identities
  • expressive symbolism
  • Self-definition of group members
  • common symbol system
  • Terms
  • lifestyle, taste public, consumer group, symbolic
    community, status culture
  • a unique twist to be an individual
  • Tastes/preferences evolve over time

25
Building Blocks of Lifestyles
  • We choose products that fit a lifestyle
  • Lifestyle marketing
  • Product usage in desirable social settings
  • Consumption style
  • Patterns of behavior
  • Co-branding strategies
  • Product complementarity
  • consumption constellations
  • (e.g., yuppie)

26
Psychographics
  • Use of psychological, sociological,
    anthropological factors to determine
  • market segments
  • reasons for choosing products
  • Fine-tune offerings
  • to meet needs of different segments

27
Psychographics
  • Consumers can share
  • the same demographics
  • and still be very different!

28
Best Buy Psychographic Segments
  • Jill
  • Buzz
  • Ray
  • BB4B
  • Barry

29
Adidas Psychographic Segments
  • Gearhead
  • Core Letterman
  • Contemporary Letterman
  • Aficionado
  • Popgirl
  • Value Addict
  • A-Diva
  • Fastidious Eclectus

30
Psychographics Roots
  • Developed in 1960s 1970s
  • b/c of flawed
  • Motivational research
  • survey research
  • Demographics only tell us who buys,
  • psychographics
  • tell us why they buy

31
Psychographic Analysis
  • Lifestyle profile
  • Product-specific profile
  • General lifestyle segmentation
  • Product-specific segmentation

32
AIOs
  • Grouping consumers according to
  • Activities
  • Interests
  • Opinions
  • 80/20 Rule lifestyle segments that produce the
    bulk of customers
  • Heavy users and the benefits they derive from
    product

33
Table 6.3 (Abridged)
34
Psychographic Segmentation Uses
  • define target market
  • create new view of market
  • position product
  • communicate product attribute
  • develop overall strategy
  • market social/political issues

35
Psychographic Segmentation Typologies
  • Battery of questions
  • Cluster consumers into distinct lifestyle groups
  • Includes AIOs perceptions of
  • brands,
  • celebrities,
  • media preferences

36
VALS2TM
Figure 6.3
37
Global Psychographic Typologies
  • Global MOSAIC
  • Identifies segments
  • across 19 countries

38
Global Psychographic Typologies
  • RISC
  • Lifestyles/sociocultural change
  • in 40 countries
  • Divides population into 10 segments
  • uses 3 axes
  • Exploration/Stability
  • Social/Individual
  • Global/Local
  • 40 measured trends (e.g., spirituality)

39
10 RISC SEGMENTS
Figure 6.5
40
Geodemography
  • Consumer expenditures/socioeconomic factors
    geographic information
  • Birds of a feature flock together
  • Can be reached more economically
  • (e.g., 90277 zip code in Redondo Beach, CA)

41
PRIZM by Claritas, Inc.
  • 66 clusters of U.S. zip codes
  • E.g., Young Influential, Money Brains,
    Kids Cul-de-Sacs
  • Ranked by income, home value, occupation
  • Maximize effectiveness, cost-efficiency, and
    impact of marketing communications

42
stop
43
Discussion
  • What consumption constellation might characterize
    you and your friends today?

44
Discussion
  • Construct separate advertising executions for a
    cosmetics product targeted to the Belonger,
    Achiever, Experiencer, and Maker VALS types.
  • How would the basic appeal differ for each group?

45
Discussion
  • Extreme sports. Day trading. Blogging.
    Vegetarianism. Can you predict what will be hot
    in the near future?
  • Identify a lifestyle trend that is just surfacing
    in your universe.
  • Describe this trend in detail, and justify your
    prediction.
  • What specific styles and/or products are part of
    this trend?

46
Food Culture
  • Pattern of food/beverage consumption that
    reflects the values of a social group

47
Building Blocks of Lifestyles (Contd)
  • Interior designers
  • rely on consumption constellations when
    furnishing a room
  • Decorating style
  • integrates different products into a unified
    whole look

48
Lifestyles
Figure 6.2
  • Lifestyle marketing perspective
  • WWF Magazine,
  • 4 Wheel Off Road,
  • Readers Digest

49
Geodemography
  • Discussion Geodemographic techniques
  • assume that people
  • who live in the same neighborhood
  • have other things in common as well.
  • Why do they make this assumption, and
  • how accurate is it?
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