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Consumer Decision Making I

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Consumer Decision Making I. MKT 750 Dr. West. Agenda. Finish topic of cultural influence Present model of consumer decision making Laddering Technique and HVMs Factors impacting involvement in decision making Need recognition & search Discuss shopping diary. Means-End Chain Analysis:. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Consumer Decision Making I MKT 750 Dr. West
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Page 1: Consumer Decision Making I

Consumer Decision Making I

MKT 750Dr. West

Page 2: Consumer Decision Making I

AgendaFinish topic of cultural influencePresent model of consumer decision making

Laddering Technique and HVMs Factors impacting involvement in decision making Need recognition & search

Discuss shopping diary

Page 3: Consumer Decision Making I

Means-End Chain Analysis:

Consumer behavior can be understood as:

Purposeful We strive to achieve short-term, and long-term goals

Revealing Our behavior reflects our values Trade-offs

Page 4: Consumer Decision Making I

Laddering Technique

Values

Attributes

Consequences

Page 5: Consumer Decision Making I

Hierarchical Value Map Values

Consequences

Attributes

Page 6: Consumer Decision Making I

Consumer Decision Making

Consumers make a wide variety of choices that range from life-altering (the decision to go to grad school, getting married) to mundane (filling your car with gasoline).

Page 7: Consumer Decision Making I

From Inertia to Passion

Nature of Processing

Midrange Problem Solving

Habitual Problem Solving

Extended Problem Solving

PassionInertia

Limited Problem Solving

Simple Elaboration

Page 8: Consumer Decision Making I

Nature of the Decision:

First time vs Repeat purchasePurchase for Self versus AnotherFunctional products (e.g. washing machine)

Hedonic products (e.g. perfume, clothing)

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9

Routine Decision Making

Consumers are “cognitive misers” Heuristics are used as shortcuts to decision making What might some of these be?

Purchase decision based on: Habit, Promotion, Impulse

Page 10: Consumer Decision Making I

10

The Rational Decision Process: Preferences & Beliefs

Need Recognition

Search Evaluation

Purchase Decision

Post-Purchase Feelings

Page 11: Consumer Decision Making I

Need RecognitionIdeal State

Ideal State Ideal State

Actual State Actual State

Actual StateNo Problem Opportunity Need

Recognition Recognition

Page 12: Consumer Decision Making I

How are Needs Activated?Changed circumstances

Graduation, new job, marriage, first baby …Product acquisition

DVD player, XboxProduct consumption

Toothpaste, milk, gasoline…Product innovation

SoftwareMarketing influence

Page 13: Consumer Decision Making I

Sources of Problem Recognition

Need Recognition Stock out – “Got Milk” campaign

Page 14: Consumer Decision Making I

The Role of Self Concept

Alter the buyer’s perception of “ideal self”

IdealSelf

ActualSelf

ExtendedSelf

Products that enhance “self-concept” reduce the dissonance between the ideal and actual self.

Page 15: Consumer Decision Making I

How Companies Can Activate Need Recognition

Instill fear Gets attention Memorable Need to provide

a solution

Page 16: Consumer Decision Making I

Information Search

Internal searchPersonal knowledge and experience stored in memory

External search Personal sources (wom, friends, etc) Independent sources (media, experts, etc) Marketing sources (advertising, salespeople, packaging, etc) Experiential sources (trial)

Page 17: Consumer Decision Making I

Information Search

Types of Information Search Information -- observable prior to purchase Experience Information -- can be obtained from direct experience with the product or service Credence Information – product claims that are not readily observed even post purchase

Page 18: Consumer Decision Making I

Information Search Limited!

Surveys indicate that 50% of consumers shop at a single store for a durable good, only 30% look at more than one brand of appliance

What does this not take into account? Internal search Ongoing search Incidental learning

Page 19: Consumer Decision Making I

Consideration Set

Consumers only consider a small number of alternatives

Typically 3 – 4 brands; size may vary by product category Highlights why top-of-mind awareness is crucial

Page 20: Consumer Decision Making I

What determines search? Cost

Effort, time, delay, immediacy of need, money The internet can lower search costs

What are the effects? Benefits

Savings, performance, satisfaction, avoidance of regret, ease of justification

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What determines search?Consumer knowledge (Bettman & Park 1980)

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AssignmentFinish reading Chapters 3, 4 & 6Write-up Shopping Insights DiaryExam questions need to be submitted by Friday evening.


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