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9TH EDITION

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9th edition manning and reece chapter 7 understanding buyer behavior part iv – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: 9TH EDITION


1
9TH EDITION
Selling Today
Manning and Reece
CHAPTER 7
UNDERSTANDING BUYER BEHAVIOR
PART IV
2
LEARNING OBJECTIVES-1
  • Discuss the meaning of a customer strategy
  • Understand complex nature of consumer and
    business buyer behavior
  • Discuss social and psychological influences
    shaping buying decisions
  • Discuss power of perception in shaping buyer
    behavior

3
LEARNING OBJECTIVES-2
  • Distinguish between emotional and rational
    buying motives
  • Distinguish between patronage and product
    buying motives
  • Explain two commonly accepted theories about
    how people arrive at buying decision
  • Describe three ways to discover customer buying
    motives

4
CUSTOMER STRATEGYDEFINED
  • A customer strategy is a carefully conceived
    plan that results in maximum customer
    responsiveness. One major dimension of this
    strategy is to achieve a better understanding of
    the customers buying needs and motives.

5
STRATEGIC/CONSULTATIVESELLING MODEL
6
CONSUMER vs. BUSINESS BUYERS
  • Consumer buyer behavior Individuals and
    households who buy for personal consumption
  • Business buyer behavior Organizations that buy
    goods and services used in production of other
    products and services that are sold, rented, or
    supplied to others

7
BUYER BEHAVIOR COMPLEXITY
  • ADOPT ONE-TO-ONE MARKETING STRATEGY
  • CULTIVATE LONG-TERM RELATIONSHIP WITH EACH
    CUSTOMER
  • WORKS FOR BOTH RETAIL AND BUSINESS-TO-BUSINESS

8
CUSTOMER STRATEGY MODEL
9
CURRENT TRENDS
  • Consumers moving upscale to premium, luxury
    goods
  • Customer respect central to success in every
    market
  • Customers from diverse racial, ethnic, and
    cultural backgrounds

10
BASIC NEEDSMASLOW
  • Physiological food, shelter
  • Security free from danger
  • Social identification with social groups,
    friendship
  • Esteem desire to feel worthy in eyes of others
  • Self-Actualization need for mastery,
    self-fulfillment

11
GROUP INFLUENCES
  • Role expectations associated with position
  • Reference Groups categories of people you see
    self belonging to
  • Social Class group with similar jobs,values,
    interests, lifestyles
  • Culture influences of group with common
    language, environment, also sub-cultures

12
GROUP INFLUENCES
13
DAIMLER/CHRYSLER
14
APPLICATION OVER-GENERALIZING
  • Remember, prospects act as individuals, not
    stereotypes
  • Facts are negotiable.
    Perception is rock-solid.
  • Some predict the demise of demographics in
    marketing How would this impact customer
    analysis?

15
USING JUST DEMOGRAPHICS
  • 21-34-year-old female
  • 40,000 income
  • college educated
  • owns home
  • Could yield

16
SELECTIVE PROCESSES-OVERVIEW
EXPOSURE
ATTENTION
PERCEPTION
RETENTION
BEHAVIOR
17
PERCEPTION CUSTOMER NEED FORMATION
  • Selective AttentionWe tend to screen out
    certain messages information overload
  • Buyers conditioned by socio- cultural background
    and need to use various selective processes
  • Salespersons should encourage client to
    discuss perceptions of products

18
BUYING MOTIVES
  • A buying motive is an aroused need, drive, or
    desire that stimulates behavior to satisfy the
    aroused need
  • Its helpful to discover the dominant buying
    motive or DBM
  • Four basic motive typesemotional, rational,
    patronage, and product

19
EMOTIONAL AND RATIONAL
  • EMOTIONAL
  • --Acts due to passion or sentiment
  • -- Emotional appeals common
  • --Discovery of emotions involved helps determine
    why customer buys
  • RATIONAL
  • --Acts on reason or judgment
  • --Relatively free of emotion
  • --Discovery of important product, service,
    delivery details critical

20
PATRONAGE AND PRODUCT MOTIVES
  • PATRONAGE
  • --Buy from particular firm
  • -- Past experience positive
  • --Relevant elements superior service
    competent sales staff product selection
  • PRODUCT
  • --Buyer believes one is product superior to
    others
  • --Preferences for specific brands
    quality price
    design/engineering

21
BUYER RESOLUTION THEORY
  • Sometimes called the 5-Ws
  • Why should I buy? (need)
  • What should I buy? (product)
  • Where should I buy? (source)
  • What is a fair price? (price)
  • When should I buy? (time)

22
NEED-SATISFACTION THEORY
  • Beliefs about salespersons role
  • Foundation of consultative selling
  • Effective two-way communication
  • Systematic inquiry with prospect
  • Two-way advocacy position
  • Provides best solution
  • Aims to develop long-term customer relationship

23
THEORIES COMPARED-NEEDS WINS
  • Needs approach based on systematic analysis of
    buyer situation
  • Needs approach works well in all selling
    situations
  • Customers experience less stress with needs
    approach

24
BUSINESS-TO-BUSINESS
  • Differs from consumer level
  • Often a group or committee decision
  • Buyer often does
  • Purchase requisition or request
  • Systematic information search
  • Evaluates alternatives
  • Issues purchase order
  • Performs post-buy evaluation

25
BUSINESS BUYING DECISION STEPS
26
DISCOVERING CUSTOMERS BUYING MOTIVES
ASK QUESTIONS
BE A GOOD LISTENER
BE A GOOD OBSERVER
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