9 Consumer Buying Behavior. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.9 | 2 Agenda...
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Transcript of 9 Consumer Buying Behavior. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.9 | 2 Agenda...
99Consumer Buying Behavior
Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 9 | 2
Agenda
• Level of Involvement and Consumer Problem-Solving Processes
• Consumer Buying Decision Process• Situational Influences on the Buying
Decision Process• Psychological Influences on the Buying
Decision Process• Social Influences on the Buying
Decision Process
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Introduction: Key Terms
• Buying Behavior– The decision processes and acts of people
involved in buying and using products
• Consumer Buying Behavior– Buying behavior of people
who purchase products for personal use and not for business purposes
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Level of Involvement and Consumer Problem-Solving Processes
• Level of Involvement– An individual’s intensity of interest in a
product and the importance of the product for that person• High-involvement
– Visible to others– Expensive– High importance
• Low-involvement– Less expensive– Less risky
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Level of Involvement and Consumer Problem-Solving Processes (cont’d)
• Routinized Response Behavior– The process used when buying frequently purchased,
low-cost items that require little search-and-decision effort
• Limited Problem Solving– The process that buyers use when purchasing products
occasionally or when they need information about an unfamiliar brand in a familiar product category
• Extended Problem Solving– The process employed when purchasing unfamiliar,
expensive, or infrequently bought products• Impulse Buying
– An unplanned buying behavior resulting from a powerful urge to buy something immediately
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Consumer Buying Decision Process and Possible Influences on the Process
FIGURE 9.1
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Consumer Buying Decision Process
• Problem Recognition– Occurs when a buyer becomes aware of a
difference between a desired state and an actual condition
– May occur rapidly or slowly
• Information Search– Internal search
• Buyers search their memories for information about products that might solve their problem
– External search• Buyers seek information from outside sources
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This Visine Advertisement Is Focused On Problem Recognition
Courtesy of Pfizer, Inc.
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Consumer Buying Decision Process (cont’d)
• Evaluation of Alternatives– Consideration set
• A group of brands that the buyer views as alternatives for possible purchase
– Evaluative criteria• Objective and subjective characteristics that
are important to a buyer
– Framing the alternatives• Describing the alternatives and their attributes
in a certain manner to make a particular characteristic appear more important especially to the inexperienced buyer
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Consumer Buying Decision Process (cont’d)
• Purchase– Choosing the product or brand to be
bought based on the outcome of the evaluation stage
– The choice of seller may affect the final product selection.
– Factors such as terms of sale, price, delivery, and warranties may affect the sale.
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Consumer Buying Decision Process (cont’d)
• Postpurchase Evaluation– Cognitive dissonance
• A buyer’s doubts shortly after a purchase about whether the decision was the right one
– Buyers are most likely to seek reassurance after the purchase of an expensive, high-involvement product
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What Part of the Consumer Buying Decision Process Does This Olay Ad Focus On?
© The Procter & Gamble Company. Used by permission.
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Class Exercise
In which stage of the consumer buying decision process are each of the following people?
1. A recent college graduate reads Consumer Reports to compare automobile ratings.
2. On the first day of class, a student finds out that a programmable calculator is needed for the course, but she doesn’t own one.
3. After purchasing an evening gown, a woman decides that it is not quite appropriate for her special occasion.
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Class Exercise
4. A car buyer gets a loan to purchase a new car.
5. A teenager compares numerous cell phones and narrows the choice down to two phones.
6. While on the way to work, a person’s automobile stalls and will not start again.
7. At an open-house party, a guest realizes that the host already owns the gift he plans to give.
8. A person receives a sample package of laundry detergent in the mail and uses it to wash a load of clothes.
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Situational Influences on the Buying Decision Process
• Situational Influences– Factors that can influence a buyer’s purchase
decision and may cause the buyer to shorten, lengthen, or terminate the process.
• Situational Factors– Physical surroundings– Social surroundings– Time perspective– Reason for purchase– Buyer’s momentary mood
and condition
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Psychological Influences on the Buying Decision Process
• Psychological Influences– Factors that in part determine people’s
general behavior, thus influencing their behavior as consumers
• Perception– The process of selecting,
organizing, and interpreting information inputs to produce meaning
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Psychological Influences on the Buying Decision Process (cont’d)
• Selective Exposure– The process of selecting inputs to be exposed to
our awareness while ignoring others
• Selective Distortion– An individual’s changing or twisting of information
when it is inconsistent with personal feelings or beliefs
• Selective Retention– Remembering information inputs that support
personal feelings and beliefs and forgetting inputs that do not
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Psychological Influences on the Buying Decision Process (cont’d)
• Motives– An internal energizing force that directs a
person’s behavior toward satisfying needs or achieving goals
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Psychological Influences on the Buying Decision Process (cont’d)
• Learning– Changes in an individual’s thought processes and
behavior caused by information and experience– Behaviors that produce satisfying consequences
are likely to be repeated.
• Consumers learn about products by– experiencing the products personally.– gaining additional product knowledge from seller-
provided information.– indirect information from other purchasers/users.
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Psychological Influences on the Buying Decision Process (cont’d)
• Attitudes– An individual’s enduring evaluation of,
feelings about, and behavioral tendencies toward an object or idea
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Psychological Influences on the Buying Decision Process (cont’d)
• Attitude Scale– A means of measuring consumer attitudes
by gauging the intensity of individuals’ reactions to adjectives, phrases, or sentences about an object
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Psychological Influences on the Buying Decision Process (cont’d)
• Personality and Self-Concept– Personality
• A set of internal traits and distinct behavioral tendencies that result in consistent patterns of behavior in certain situations
– Self-concept (self-image)• Perception or view of oneself
• Lifestyles– Lifestyle
• An individual’s pattern of living expressed through activities, interests, and opinions
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Social Influences on the Buying Decision Process
• Social Influences– The forces other people exert on one’s buying
behavior
• Role– Actions and activities that a person in a particular
position is supposed to perform based on expectations of the individual and surrounding persons
– Multiple role-expectation sets affect behavior.– Roles influence both general and buying
behaviors.
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Social Influences on the Buying Decision Process (cont’d)
• Family Influences– Consumer socialization
• The process through which a person acquires the knowledge and skills to function as a consumer
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Percent Who Decide or Influence Purchase Decisions
Source: Harris Interactive YouthPulse, 2003, as reported in American Demographics, December 2003/January 2004, p.16.
Age Group of Decision Makers or Influencers
Product Category of Purchase Decision
Ages 8-12 Ages 13-21
Clothing/apparel 93% 89%
Movie/Video/DVD 93% 87%
Video games/systems 87% 78%
Groceries 84% 84%
Sports equipment 71% 65%
Vacation 62% 69%
Software 57% 77%
Vehicles 22% 61%
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Social Influences on the Buying Decision Process (cont’d)
• Reference Groups– Any group that positively or negatively
affects a person’s values, attitudes, or behavior• Membership• Aspirational• Disassociative
• Opinion Leader– A knowledgeable, accessible individual
who provides information about a specific sphere of interest to followers
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How Do Reference Groups Affect Purchase Decisions?
For each of the products below, indicate whether one’s reference group would influence one’s decision to buy the product in general, the type of product within the category, and/or the brand decision. Use more than one X when appropriate.
Type of Product Product Within the Brand
Product Decision Category Decision
Soft drink
Bar soap
Telephone
Jeans
Car
Sweatshirt withcollege name
DVD player
Bathroom tissue
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Social Influences on the Buying Decision Process (cont’d)
• Social Class– An open group of individuals with similar
social rank– Individuals in the same social class
• develop and assume common behavioral patterns.
• have similar attitudes, values, language patterns, and possessions.
– Influences many major life decisions– Influences shopping patterns and
spending habits
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Social Influences on the Buying Decision Process (cont’d)
• Culture– The accumulated values, knowledge, beliefs,
customs, objects, and concepts of a society• Culture influences buying behavior.• Cultural changes affect product development,
promotion, distribution, and pricing.
• Subcultures– Groups of individuals whose characteristic values
and behavior patterns are similar and differ from those of the surrounding culture• African American • Hispanic • Asian
American
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Subcultural Differences in Movie-Going Behavior
In what ways can movie theater marketers use this information?
Source: “Now Playing,” American Demographics, September 2001, p. 14.