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transcript
1© 2009 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.www.wileyeurope.com/college/evans
Consumer Behaviour, Second Edition
Martin Evans, Ahmad Jamal Gordon FoxallCardiff Business School
ISBN:978-0-470-99465-8
Chapter 3
Chapter 3
Consumer Responses to Marketing Actions: 2
Learning and Attitudes
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Chapter Objectives
• Integrate concepts from psychology within a consumer model
• Apply aspects of behavioural learning to increase marketing effectiveness
• Apply aspects of cognitive learning to increase marketing effectiveness
• Analyse and evaluate different approaches to explaining the link between attitudes and behaviour
• Explain different approaches to attitude formation and change
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Sequential Model of Response to MarketingPost-purchase
Action
Attitude
Learning
Perception
Attention
Exposure
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Learning
• One aim of marketing communications is to create awareness (teach consumers) about market offerings
• Hence, marketers can benefits from knowing about how consumers learn about things
• Learning is closely associated with perception – both are shaped by a person’s motives
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Learning and memory are interrelated yet different concepts. Learning deals with how we acquire new information whereas memory is the internal recording of information or experiences and is related to our ability to store, retain, and subsequently recall information. Forgetting is our inability to retrieve previously stored information. This could be caused by many factors including the probability that the information was never encoded into long term memory in the first place (encoding failure) or that, for some reason, we are unable to retrieve the information from long term memory (retrieval failure).
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Learning & Memory
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Classical (or Associationist) ConditioningOperant (or instrumental) conditioning
Kohler’s experiments
Vicarious Learning
Measurement of Learning
Cognitive Learning
Gestalt Psychology
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Behavioural Learning
Two Main Approaches to Learning
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Classical Conditioning
• Originally based on Russian physiologist Ivan Pavlov (1928) who conducted some experiments to observe dogs’ responses to different stimuli
• His observation: dogs salivated not only when presented food, but also when they heard the footsteps of assistants
• Presented various other stimuli at the same time as presenting food
• Dogs salivated even when no food was served
• The notion of pairing stimuli simultaneously became popular and is widely known as classical conditioning
© 2009 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.www.wileyeurope.com/college/evans
Pavlovian Classical Conditioning
Unconditioned StimulusMeat paste
Neutral StimulusBell
Unconditioned ResponseSalivation
Conditioned StimulusBell
Conditioned ResponseSalivation
AFTER REPEATED PAIRINGS
Example
Unconditioned StimulusDinner aroma
Neutral Stimulus6 O’clock news
Unconditioned ResponseSalivation
Conditioned Stimulus6 O’clock news
Conditioned ResponseSalivation
AFTER REPEATED PAIRINGS
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Classical Conditioning:
Marketing Applications
• Principles of classical conditioning are widely used
• A brand can be simultaneously and repetitively paired with, say popular music, so that each time the consumer thinks of the brand the positive feelings associated with that music are aroused
• Other examples include the use of celebrities in advertising and the aim is to transfer the endorser’s characteristics and what they stand for to the brand
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Classical Conditioning:
Marketing ApplicationsFood
Salivate
Bell
Safety
Volvo=safety
VolvoAssociation
Classical Conditioning
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Example: Marlboro
Unconditioned StimulusMarlboro
Neutral StimulusCowboy
Unconditioned ResponseSmoking
Conditioned StimulusCowboy
Conditioned ResponseSmoking
AFTER REPEATED PAIRINGS
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Classical Conditioning:
Marketing Applications
Brand associations made by a group of students:
• Volvo = safety
• Gold Gti = sporty
• BMV = quality
• Levi = trendy youth
• Wrangler = cowboys
• Benetton = colourful
Try this for yourself. Get a friend to list some well-known brands and then to ask you to spontaneously come up with what they mean to you.
© 2009 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.www.wileyeurope.com/college/evans
Creating an association between health and looks and buying a mattress from Ikea!
Classical Conditioning: Marketing Applications
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Operant Conditioning
• This approach to understanding learning is based on the work of Skinner (1938)
• Frequency of occurrence of a specific behaviour is modified by the consequences of that behaviour
• Learning can be encouraged through the use of positive and negative reinforcements
• By pairing rewards or punishments with certain behaviour, Skinner showed that these behaviours can be reinforced
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Operant Conditioning:
Marketing Applications
• Principles of operant conditioning are also widely used
• A supermarket offers a price reduction of 10% off everything bought at the time of purchase to increase the possibility that consumers will repeat behaviour (shop at store)
• Loyalty Card Benefits• A charity sends direct mail to consumers
with a free pen; the consumer keeps the pen even though they do not donate (they are positively rewarded for opening the mail); next time around they look for direct mailing from the charity still with no intention of donating, but looking for a gift
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Cognitive Learning
• The cognitive perspective on learning rejects the behavioural approach to learning and hence argues that learning involves more than stimulus-response processes
• As part of the learning process, consumers can develop mental associations which may not always be reflected in overt behavioural changes
• The focus is on what happens in the consumer’s mind (the black box) and the cognitive processes of evaluation and interpreting information
• New knowledge is learned and integrated with existing knowledge© 2009 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
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Cognitive Learning
• E.g. Gestalt Theory (not a person)
• Kohler’s experiments
• Vicarious learning
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Puzzle: Welsh
Photograph: Martin Evans
Gestalt Law of Closure
Just a little bit of extra mental processing can lead to more effective learning- because we have to engage/participate more so. It’s a example of learning by doing© 2009 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.www.wileyeurope.com/college/evans
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Reproduced by permission of Proximity London and Volkswagen Group UK Ltd
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Vicarious LearningBritney Spears is a Grammy-winning American pop singer, dancer, actress, songwriter, and endorsement model. She is also ranked as the 8th best-selling female recording artist in the United States. Despite many personal problems, she is
still very popular among teenage girls. This Hidden Fantasy ad extends her personality to the perfume
brand.
PRNewsFoto/Elizabeth Arden
• The degree of brand awareness, brand recognition and/or brand recall aroused in the respondents by the stimulus (advertising)
• The recognition method
• Aided recall method
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Measurement of Learning
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Back to the Sequential Method
Post-purchase
Action
Attitude
Learning
Perception
Attention
Exposure
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Attitudes
• A predisposition to respond in a consistent or predictable manner to the stimulus
• Attitudes can be towards:• Physical object (e.g. a brand or product)• Social object (e.g. a sales assistant) • An action (e.g. buying products that can
harm the environment)• Advertising (e.g. a particular ad)
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Structural Approaches to
Attitudes• Cognitive componentA person’s beliefs or knowledge about an issue or object
• Affective componentA person’s feelings or emotions about the issue of the object; these feelings can be ‘positive’ or ‘negative’
• Behavioural componentConsists of how the individual is likely to respond to the object based on what they know and feel about it
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We seek equilibrium in attitude formation …
• Alex wants to date Larry; Alex has positive sentiment toward Larry
• Larry wears earring; Larry has positive attitude toward earring
• Alex doesn’t like men who wear earrings; has negative
sentiment toward earrings
Attitude measurementFor the (1) direct mail (2) Telesales you receive, in general do you think it is: Interesting 1 2 3 4 5 Uninteresting
Informative 1 2 3 4 5 Uninformative
Intrusive 1 2 3 4 5 Not Intrusive
Entertaining 1 2 3 4 5 Not Entertaining
Damages theEnvironment
1 2 3 4 5 Doesn’t Damage Environment
Relevant to You 1 2 3 4 5 Not Relevant to You
1 2
Semantic Differential© 2009 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.www.wileyeurope.com/college/evans
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Strongly Agree
StronglyDisagree
I like organs sending me product or service information
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2
3
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5
I like to decide for myself where to look for product information
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2
3
4
5
The more organs know about me, the better they can meet my needs
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2
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5
I really don’t mind marketers having my personal details
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2
3
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5
Stronger laws needed to control sharing of personal information
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2
3
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Marketers have generally got my details correct
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2
3
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I like to deal with organisations over the phone
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2
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5
I like to deal with organisations through the post
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2
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5
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Attitude measurement
Likert Scales
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Attitude Change• How?
• Advertising can be an important tool for attitude formation and change
• Usage Rational and Emotional cues
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Rational Message Appeal
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Emotional Message Appeal
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Fear Appeal
A fear appeal is presented in this ad to encourage parents to talk frankly with their children about various issues including drugs, drinking, tobacco, and sex. This ad is effective because it addresses a fear that every parent has, and suggests courses of actions that parents can take to decrease that fear.
Courtesy National Youth Anti-Drug Media Campaign