Hearts, Minds, Will, Body, World, Tribe A Framework for Considering Consumer Behaviour
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Transcript of Hearts, Minds, Will, Body, World, Tribe A Framework for Considering Consumer Behaviour
Hearts, Minds, Will, Body, World, TribeA Framework for Considering Consumer Behaviour
Huw HepworthAccount DirectorPainted Dog Research
Background To The FrameworkWhat’s being added to an already big pile of existing models?
A Simple Question…
Political
Economic
Social
Technology
Strengths Weaknesses
Opportunities Threats?
PEST SWOT
Input Information Processing
Decision Process
Other Variables
The Traditional Consumer Behaviour Model
• Marketer dominated
• OtherStimuli
External Search
Exposure
Attention
Comprehension
Acceptance
Retention
Need Recognition
Search
Alternatives Evaluation
Purchase
Post-Purchase Evaluation
Environmental Influences
Individual Influences
Engel-Kollat-Blackwell, 1973, Abridged
A Very Short History of Consumer Behaviour Frameworks
1940s
Homo Economicus
1950s / 60s
Freud Comes To Advertising
A Very Short History of Consumer Behaviour Frameworks
1970s / 80s / 90s
Complex Interactions
2000s +
Neuroscience, Behavioural Economics,
Big Data
Cognitive Affective Conative Physical Environmental Cultural
The PEACCC (or CACPEC) Framework
The Components & Their InteractionsA synthesis of internal and external consumer behaviour aspects
Cognitive
Knowledge & facts Not rational!Perceived
control
Affective
Emotions and feelings
‘Unconscious’ control
Lots of emotions /
models
Conative
Drive / willpowerConation often missed in
examination between cognitive and affective
Physical
Can’t separate the body from the mind
Physical state (e.g. hunger, pain, fatigue)
Environmental
World around us Powerful stimuli
Cultural
Shared behaviour, beliefs – what other people do
Social behaviours – that which doesn’t fit in,
stands out
Physical
EnvironmentalCultural
Conative
Physical
EnvironmentalCultural
Conative
But that’s not all…
Decision-making requires mental load
Lots of things take away from mental
load
Not having enough mental load available means shortcuts are made
Cognitive Affective Conative Physical Environmental Cultural
The PEACCC (or CACPEC) Framework
Component InteractionsEverything influences everything else
Lots of interactions
Complex direct and indirect influences
Just going to look at a sample…
Physical
Conative
Internal processes have physiological
impacts
Internal To The Interactive
Physical state (e.g. hunger, fatigue) effects
mental components
Environmental
Cultural
Interactive To The External
Physical
Physical state influences how environment / culture
impacts on decision
External conditions / cultural norms dictate physiological
expectations / reactions
Conative
Internal To The External
Environmental
Cultural
Internal processes influences how external
info is assessed
Situational factors and expected ‘normal’
knowledge / feelings
Using the PEACCC FrameworkSome examples
Cognitive Affective Conative Physical Environmental Cultural
The PEACCC (or CACPEC) Framework
A Useable Framework
Intent that this framework is simple to use, but allows
complex approaches
Can be used to help set-up a project, for analysis or for presentation of findings
Example: Setting Up A Project
Cognitive:What does the target audience
know?
Affective:What does the target audience
feel?
Conative:How difficult is
it to make / stick to a decision?
Physical:What physical effort / state is required (or
do we want)?
Environmental:What are the
situational aspects to consider?
Cultural:What do other
people / society think
about the decision?
Example: Classifying Market Research Techniques
Cognitive:Behavioural economics
Neuro measurement
Affective:Projective techniques
Biometrics / neuro measurement
Conative:Data mining / ‘big
data’Behavioural economics
Choice modelling
Physical:Biometric / neuro
measurementObservational
Usability testing
Environmental:Literature reviewEnvironmental
analysisSemiotics
Cultural:Literature review
EthnographySemiotics
Traditional qualitative / quantitative techniques
Example: Choosing a Chocolate Bar
Cognitive:Know they
don’t need the empty
calories
Affective:Will provide a
short-term positive boost
Conative:Willpower required to resist the purchase
Physical:Tired / hungry status, current
chocolate habit
Environmental:Layout of
store, location of chocolate
bar brands on shelf
Cultural:Role of
chocolate, role of brand
Example: Choosing a Mortgage
Cognitive:Facts around mortgages,
interest rates, etc.
Affective:Anxiety about
a wrong choice, love of
the house
Conative:Complex decision –
ideally requires high mental load
Physical:Stressed,
tired – mental load depleted
Environmental:Economic
situation, bank branch
condition, etc.
Cultural:Distrust of banks vs.
importance of owning a
home
Example: Giving Up Smoking
Cognitive:Know that
smoking has health
impacts
Affective:Concern
about health impacts,
social ostracism
Conative:Requires a lot of willpower to
quit
Physical:Habitual
behaviour with
physiological reactions
Environmental:Financial
costs, where cigarettes are
purchased from
Cultural:Peer group
view of smoking, poor
view of tobacco co.’s
Next Steps / LimitationsImpact of time
‘Conscious / active’ versus ‘unconscious / passive’ component interactions
Relative influence within specific decisions
Feel free to use PEACCC!
Offered for wider use Feedback appreciated if you use it
Images
Taken from Microsoft Office Imagery (http://office.microsoft.com/en-au/images/)
Except for Action Comics #176 – reproduced without permission
All rights for that image remain with DC Comics / Warner Brothers
Page 1 of 1
HEART, MIND, WILL, BODY, ENVIRONMENT,
TRIBE: A FRAMEWORK FOR CONSIDERING
CONSUMER BEHAVIOUR
Huw Hepworth – Account Director, Painted Dog Research
About the Author:
Huw Hepworth is an Account Director at Painted Dog Research and has worked on a
wide range of local, national and international projects during his 8 years in market
research. He has worked on research projects across a wide range of industry
sectors, including fashion, property, financial services, government, FMCGs and
retailing / shopping and for clients in all life stages, from start-ups to blue chips. In
2006, he was awarded the Mike Larbalestier Scholarship for WA by the AMSRS and
in 2009 he was awarded the George Camakaris Best Paper by a Young Researcher
at the AMSRS National Conference.
Painted Dog Research
Suite 1, Level 2
658 Newcastle Street
Leederville WA 6007
t/f 08 9227 6464
m 0488 343 497
www.painteddog.com.au
Page 1 of 21
HEART, MIND, WILL, BODY, WORLD, TRIBE: A FRAMEWORK FOR
CONSIDERING CONSUMER BEHAVIOUR
Background to the Development of This Paper
There is no shortage to the number of models available to organisations looking to understand how
their customers think and act. Since the start of formal study into consumer behaviour in the 1940s
based on the theoretical “economically rational man”, through the 1950s and 1960s consideration of
psychoanalysis and cultural meaning, across the 1970s and 1980s and their increased focus on
consumer decision making, and into the 1990s and the formation of a collective consumer culture, a
great deal of investigation has occurred into this area (see Zaichkowsky, 1991; Ryynänen, 2010;
Belch & Belch, 1985 for a broader consideration of the history of consumer behaviour research).
With the start of a new century has come an even more certified push to understand consumer
motivations, especially the aspects hidden to even the consumer themselves. Neuroscience has
started looking straight into the brain of consumers to understand which regions fire at key times
and what that means; behavioural economics has helped bring to light the decision-making short
cuts used by consumers every day; the rise and reach of “Big Data” (Poynter, 2012) means that
organisations are increasingly able to predict consumer needs before the consumer is aware of
them, such as identifying pregnant woman purely on the products they buy (Duhigg, 2012a).
Over time new techniques and technologies have been engaged to grapple with understanding how
various populations go about buying / using products and services. A vast array of new insights has
been generated, but it always seems that the consumer has more secrets still left to be uncovered.
Indeed, there is a wealth of existing information about consumer behaviour and new discoveries are
still being made. But how do we fit them together in a way that is simple to understand and also
usable?
The aim of this paper is to propose a framework for considering and arranging the complicated web
of aspects around consumer behaviour. This proposed framework has been developed to be as
straightforward to use as the Strengths Weaknesses Opportunities Threats (SWOT) or Political
Economic Social Technological (PEST) models often used to assist in organisational decision
making, while being backed up as robust and reliable by existing research.
The framework has been developed by synthesising a range of different sources of information –
using sources outlined in this paper – and will be usable across a wide range of applications, from
the consideration of individuals, assisting in the assessment of qualitative findings and to provide a
backbone for planning quantitative tools.
The Cognitive Affective Conative Physical Environmental Cultural (PEACCC)
Framework
Let’s start with a view of the framework in its entirety before breaking it down and showing the
importance of each individual component and how they fit together.
The full framework is shown in Figure 1.
Page 2 of 21
Figure 1: The PEACCC Framework
In short, the framework proposes that consumer behaviour is driven by the sometimes
complementary, sometimes conflicting forces that occur within (i.e. cognition, affection, conation), to
(i.e. physical) and around (i.e. environmental, cultural) the consumer.
The name of the framework – PEACCC – has been selected in order that is serves as an acronym
that is as simple to remember as possible. If named in a way that better reflects the arrangement of
the internal, interactive and external factors, the acronym is CACPEC, which is much harder to say
and thus much harder to remember.
Framework Hypothesis
Key to this framework is the concept that all these aspects work holistically within each decision
making process. Depending on the type of decision being made and the individual involved, various
factors may have a greater or lesser impact, but each of these factors need to be considered both
in isolation and in conjunction.
Although the framework above separates each of these factors, real consumer decision making
isn’t necessarily as clear cut. As Demasio (1995) indicates, there is no rational decision making
without the influence of emotional factors. People who have suffered damage to the emotional
centres of their brains end up being terrible rational decision makers because they are unable to
determine something as simple as which outcome they might prefer to achieve, or how their
decisions will impact on other people.
Other examples showing the difficulty in tying consumer behaviour to only one of the above
components will be shown in further sections of this paper.
Page 3 of 21
Summary of Model Components
As an overview of the model and a brief description of each component:
1. Cognitive (Mind) – the reasoning, fact-based aspect of decision making that can (with
effort) override certain other components of consumer decision making; linked to conscious
behaviour.
2. Affective (Heart) – the feeling, emotional component that has a huge role in influencing
behaviour; linked to more unconscious behaviour and works faster than the cognitive
component.
3. Conative (Will) – the component responsible for seeing a decision acted upon; the drive
that turns cognitive and / or affective processes into actions.
4. Physical (Body) – the physical state that the consumer is in; existing physical states (e.g.
pain, hunger) have a major impact on how people perceive the world and made decisions
about it.
5. Environmental (World) – the stimuli that is occurring outside of the consumer; the presence
of absence of stimuli (e.g. the smell of baking bread) influence consumer decisions.
6. Cultural (Tribe) – shared beliefs and social behaviours across a broad or narrow (i.e.
subculture) consumer group that will influence how stimuli is interpreted and what is the
“acceptable” response to that stimuli.
Framework Rules and Assumptions
1. Consumer behaviour is governed by a combination of cognitive, affective, conative, physical, environmental and cultural factors.
2. Making choices around behaviour requires consumers to spend mental effort or bear a level of mental load; the amount of effort / load required depends on the nature of the behaviour and the level of consumer investment in that behaviour.
3. Consumers have a limited amount of mental load to spend on a daily basis. 4. Consumers are naturally disposed to use as little mental effort / keep mental load low when
making decisions (i.e. are “cognitive misers”) about their behaviour. 5. Expending more mental load on their consumer behaviour requires a conscious choice.
Consumers can minimise the impact of other components on their behaviour through strong active cognitive and conative focus, but this generates a heavy mental load.
6. Affective, cognitive and conative components form the ‘internal’ factors of consumer behaviour. All three are important components, but their relative influence will change depending on the nature of the decision and how much mental load is spent on that behaviour.
7. Environmental and cultural factors form the ‘external’ factors of consumer behaviour. Their
relative influence will also change depending on the nature of the decision and how much
mental load is spent on that behaviour.
8. The physical component forms the link between the ‘internal’ factors and ‘external’ factors of consumer behaviour and decision making.
9. Emotional states, physical states, environmental cues and cultural norms can provide decision-making short-cuts that help reduce mental load.
10. Familiar behavioural patterns (e.g. habits) also reduce mental load. Consumers experience physical and mental discomfort if these patterns are disrupted.
11. Conscious and active decision-making can over-ride the contributions of the other components, but this requires mental load capacity to be available to do so.
Page 4 of 21
We will now explore each of the above components in more detail and justify their place in the
framework.
Cognition – I Think, Therefore I Am
The roots of cognition in consumer behaviour research can be tied back to the inherently rational
consumer brought to us thanks to the field of Economics. The history of Homo Economicus (the
“Economic Human”) goes back a long way, with Mill (1844) attributed as being the first to fully coin
the idea as understood in the modern context. The Homo Economicus model of behaviour posits
that people behave:
To maximise their individual self-interest; and
To minimise the effort taken to achieve that self-interest.
Behaving in this fashion is perceived to be ‘economically rational behaviour’, often shortened to
‘rational behaviour’. Homo Economicus is generally treated as knowing and understanding
everything they need to know to make a decision, and then choosing the option that maximises
their rewards while minimising the costs required to achieve those rewards.
This approach eschewed any requirement for understanding other facets of human behaviour while
still being able to predict decision outcomes. Framing rationality in this way made it easy to
understand – we perceive that we have a high degree of cognitive control over our behaviour – and
relatively easy to model mathematically (and gave Economics a strong lock the term ‘rational
behaviour’ within a social science context – a hold it still has to this day1). Consumer models that
focused on maximising utility – a cognitive process of weighing rewards versus the resources
required to obtain those rewards – became popular. Cognitive was king.
This approach also fit with other thinking on consumer decision making of the time. Behaviourists
were only interested in the outcomes resulting from the presentation of certain stimuli (LeDoux,
1996). Models such as those proposed by Nicosia (1966), Engel Kollat Blackwell (1973) and
Howard Sheth (1969) showed lists of steps that consumers would go through in making a decision
– identifying the need, looking for information, evaluating the alternatives, and so on. Consumer
decision making was seen to be a deliberate and carefully evaluated process.
1 It should always be checked when you see the term ‘rational’ in relation to consumer behaviour if the author
is really referring to ‘economic rationality’. Economic rationality is a long way from real world rationality that includes factors such as social contracts and the emotional reactions of others (although some will argue that mathematical utilities can be applied to such concepts) – a person who is self-interested and energy-minimising wouldn’t make decisions most would see as rational; the perception of such behaviour would be that it was selfish. This distinction is important because by placing ‘rational’ squarely in the grounds of economic rationality, all other factors are pushed towards the ‘irrational’ side of the ledger. Given that ‘irrationality’ is generally a negative space to be in, this gives rational (read: economically rational) behaviour even more weight when discussing consumer behaviour and what should be considered ‘correct’ (read: rational). There is evidence of this effect in how behavioural economics currently has almost cornered the market as the arbiter of what is rational and what isn’t, despite other factors such as emotions arguably also having a place behind a more holistic consideration of rational behaviour (e.g. not accepting a high-paying job if it would lead to excessively loneliness, or perhaps helping someone push their stalled car off the road – and not asking money for such an act! – to experience the simple joy of their thanks). It is for this reason that this paper avoids the term ‘rational’ and uses terms such as ‘cognitive’ or ‘mental’ instead.
Page 5 of 21
The appeal of a cognitively-based consumer decision approach is obvious. It appears widely
applicable, mostly clear in terms of the nature of inputs required to obtain the desired outputs and
makes general logical sense. However, it has been recognised that these kind of models have a
number of deficiencies – Homo economicus is a fictional creature, while the decision models might
be wonderfully descriptive, they lack specificity in application (Rau & Samiee, 1981).
It has also been recognised that rather than fully considering information within a cognitive
evaluation, consumers often take mental shortcuts on the way to making a decision. Biases and
heuristics play a large part in how people consider information. Behavioural economics has helped
in developing a much greater understanding of those information processing shortcuts through the
work of authors such as Kahneman (2011) and how to use that understanding to enhance decision
making through the work of authors such as Thaler & Sunstein (2009).
This theory of biases and shortcuts fits with another cognitive decision theory – that most
consumers are cognitive misers when processing new information (Fiske & Tailor, 1984). Rather
than taking all information on board, people are most easily able to process information that fits with
what they already know or believe. New or contradictory information requires a lot more effort to
process, so is more likely to be ignored… which is certainly not the behaviour of a Homo
economicus!
The important role of emotion in decision making has also been receiving increasing attention over
the past decade. As previously mentioned, Damasio (1995) showed that rational decisions can’t be
made without the influence of emotion. Where Descartes is famous for the quote, “I think, therefore
I am”, it is much more accurate to say, “I think and feel, therefore I am” because there is no true
separation between the areas of cognition and emotion.
Kahneman (2011) discusses the roles in decision making of System 1 and System 2 thinking –
where System 2 is the slower, energy-hungry, information processing cognitive arbiter, System 1 is
the impulsive, intuitive, instinctive and more emotive decision force. Both Systems come into play
during decision making, with Kahneman arguing that although System 2 has the final say, it can
easily be led astray by the fast moving and convincing System 1.
Although cognitive-driven decision models have fallen from grace in recent times, it is important to
recognise that the cognitive mind has a strong influence over the decision being made. Gibson
(2008) showed while a distracted consumer can be swayed into their selection through prior
exposure to stimuli, a consumer that is paying attention (and spending the mental energy) is still in
charge of their own decisions. What matters is the amount of mental load being spent in processing
a choice – a high mental load would correspond to spending a lot mental energy on evaluating
options on informational terms and potentially downplaying emotional aspects (similar to ensuring
System 2 is behind the wheel in a decision) while a low mental load would reflect a situation of
limited resources or cognitive miserliness which could see a more impulsive decision made.
Affective – I Am, I Feel
The recent interest in emotions as part of the decision making process can be tied to Damasio
(1995) and neuroscience’s increasing understanding of how the brain works, but it should not be
forgotten that for several decades research into emotions was dismissed as a waste of resources.
Since the 1960s psychological models have focused on the cognitive and behaviourist aspects of
human nature, leaving emotion as a “ghost in the machine” (Ryle, 1949). Cognitive science kept the
Page 6 of 21
focus on passionless thinking, reasoning and intellect while behaviourists (led by industry pioneer
B.F. Skinner) were known to ridicule those who considered anything outside of that which was
directly observable (LeDoux, 1996). Emotion in consumer behaviour might have been noted, but it
was relegated to minor status (if recognised at all) –
“[A] reading of much of the literature in this field in the period ranging from the 1960s to the early
1980s could have led you to the conclusion that consumers act in a semiautomatic, non-emotional
manner, weighing purely cognitive factors such as price and performance in arriving at a decision.”
(Engel, Blackwell, Miniard, 1995, p406).
But this view of consumer behaviour has changed over recent times. Neuroscience has however
been clear in showing that emotional systems are a key part of decision-making and that the ‘purely
rational’ person makes incredibly poor decisions, if they can decide at all (Damasio, 1994). It has
also been uncovered that there is a long-term emotional memory function in the brain, separate
from the long-term cognitive memory function. Whilst the cognitive memory remembers the details
of what happened, the emotional memory remembers the emotions felt during that situation
(LeDoux, 1996).
The importance of emotion likely comes from its ability to bypass other parts of the brain and work
at an unconscious level. For much of the human timeline emotions promoted the survival of the
species – it was important for emotional reactions to occur without much conscious processing
time, such as recoiling from danger or recognising friend versus foe (LeDoux, 1996).
Emotional reactions function as the gatekeeper to further cognitive and behavioural reactions
(Poels & Dewitte, 2006) so although it may feel as if the cognitive mind is in control, the fact is that
emotion is working behind (and sometimes in front of) the scenes, influencing the consumer.
Studies have shown this influence – for example, angry people see the world as more threatening
(Markman, 2010) while happy people make decisions more quickly and spend less time reviewing
potentially relevant information (Isen & Means, 1983).
One of the complexities around emotion is that there are many that may have an influence on
people. There are no shortage of emotional models using indicators such as facial expressions,
physiological symptoms, neurochemical arrangement or linguistic arrangement that attempt to
classify emotion into categories such as “basic / universal”, “complex” and “social”. To show this
complexity in emotional classification, Table 1 shows the Parrot (2001) arrangement of primary,
secondary and tertiary emotions – although highly detailed, it is still to be determined if it is
complete or even fully accurate. Unfortunately, this is true of almost any emotional model.
At this point in time there is little disagreement about the importance of emotions in consumer
decision making, but there is still a long way to go in terms of understanding and classifying the
effects of emotion and in gaining a consensus around how emotions fit together. (For example,
within the Parrot (2001) categorisation arousal has been included as a tertiary emotion to lust. The
author disagrees that arousal is more accurately characterised as a physical state that is caused by
the emotion lust and not an emotion itself.)
Page 7 of 21
Table 1: Categorisation of Emotion – Parrot (2001)
Primary emotion Secondary emotion Tertiary emotions
Love
Affection Adoration, affection, love, fondness, liking, attraction, caring, tenderness, compassion, sentimentality
Lust Arousal, desire, lust, passion, infatuation
Longing Longing
Joy
Cheerfulness Amusement, bliss, cheerfulness, gaiety, glee, jolliness, joviality, joy, delight, enjoyment, gladness, happiness, jubilation, elation, satisfaction, ecstasy, euphoria
Zest Enthusiasm, zeal, zest, excitement, thrill, exhilaration
Contentment Contentment, pleasure
Pride Pride, triumph
Optimism Eagerness, hope, optimism
Enthrallment Enthrallment, rapture
Relief Relief
Surprise Surprise Amazement, surprise, astonishment
Anger
Irritation Aggravation, irritation, agitation, annoyance, grouchiness, grumpiness
Exasperation Exasperation, frustration
Rage Anger, rage, outrage, fury, wrath, hostility, ferocity, bitterness, hate, loathing, scorn, spite, vengefulness, dislike, resentment
Disgust Disgust, revulsion, contempt
Envy Envy, jealousy
Torment Torment
Sadness
Suffering Agony, suffering, hurt, anguish
Sadness Depression, despair, hopelessness, gloom, glumness, sadness, unhappiness, grief, sorrow, woe, misery, melancholy
Disappointment Dismay, disappointment, displeasure
Shame Guilt, shame, regret, remorse
Neglect Alienation, isolation, neglect, loneliness, rejection, homesickness, defeat, dejection, insecurity, embarrassment, humiliation, insult
Sympathy Pity, sympathy
Fear
Horror Alarm, shock, fear, fright, horror, terror, panic, hysteria, mortification
Nervousness Anxiety, nervousness, tenseness, uneasiness, apprehension, worry, distress, dread
Page 8 of 21
Conative – The Power or Ability to Prefer or Choose
Despite the power of cognition and affect in influencing how a consumer places values on various
factors within a decision, there still comes a point where the decision has to be made. Without that
point, the options and factors being considered circle in a continuous loop, leading to either
frustration at an inability to decide or an eventual move away from considering the decision at all.
Early consumer decision making models (such as Engel Kollat Blackwell (1973)) proposed a formal
approach to choice, particularly as the importance / involvement in the choice increased. Under
such models, once a need had been recognised, a detailed information search would occur,
followed by careful evaluation of alternatives until a choice was made. However, it has been
recognised that such models don’t reflect reality – consumers make shortcuts when making
decisions as discussed above. A consumer may purchase a house – a high-involvement decision if
ever there was one – after seeing it for the first time because they “fell in love” with the place.
Conation is the process by which the cognitive and affective components are combined to form and
drive action on the decision itself. It is the use of will to self-direct and self-regulate (Huitt, 1999), but
it should recognised (and be obvious) that not all self-directed decisions are beneficial to the
consumer. Indeed, willpower is often a matter of effortful self-control, ideally to resist natural
impulses (Gots, 2011) that have short-term benefits but longer-term negatives e.g. eating an extra-
large piece of delicious cheesecake. It might taste good now, but later on it may be a decision that
is regretted!
Conation requires mental load, which is something that can be both built up and depleted. People
can be trained to increase their self-discipline (and thus be able to spend more time in making a
decision) (Gots, 2011), but having to use conative ability to do something unpleasant depletes that
ability in future. For example, people who are made to complete a task that requires will power
(such as eating radishes instead of chocolates or to supress emotions) are more likely to give up at
a task quicker than those who haven’t required as much conative effort (Baumeister, et al, 1998).
Active, energy-intensive conation is potentially something that some organisations want consumers
to avoid. Referring to Gibson (2008) and Shiv & Fedorikhan (1999), it has been shown that
distractions or increased mental load leave consumers more vulnerable to making less considered,
more impulsive decisions.
There is also evidence that human nature is designed against requiring large amounts of mental
energy for every decision, hence the power of habit on behaviour. If conative effort can be spent
over enough a long enough period on a behaviour and with a suitable reward from that behaviour is
received, then that behaviour will become a habit – something that occurs almost automatically and
requiring a lot less conative effort over time. It has been shown that people with habitual behaviours
experience the joy of the reward just anticipating that behaviour, and feel distinctly at loss if they
aren’t able to indulge in the habit (Duhrigg, 2012b). This helps to explain why habits are easy to
follow, but hard to break.
Conation – the actual moment of decision-making – is something that is receiving increasing
attention within neuroscientific circles in order to understand how the brain works (an in-depth view
of this can be seen at PsychWiki, 2012). There is physical evidence of conation occurring – pupils
dilate in response to mental load being applied, so when that processing stops, pupil dilation stops
Page 9 of 21
as well (Kahneman, 2011). However, our exact understanding of conation is still in its infancy and
no doubt this area that will uncover some interesting developments over the next decade.
Physical – A Wave Is Continuous With the Ocean
The three previous components are internal to a consumer, and thus relatively invisible to those
looking to understand consumer behaviour (at least without close, direct observation and / or
expensive monitoring equipment). But the physical aspects of a consumer are much easier to
observe, and in some cases have been perceived to be the only factor that really matters.
Behaviourists weren’t interested in what was going on inside a consumer unless it led to action
happening on the outside.
However, it isn’t reasonable to divorce the internal decision processes (i.e. cognitive, affective,
conative) from the body that enacts the outcome. Both influence each other – it is impossible to
separate the wave from the ocean, although the physical element of consumer decision-making has
generally been excluded from consideration.
This is a very big oversight given the weight of evidence that a consumers’ physical condition has a
dramatic influence on their behaviour. People who are hungry will spend more effort and resources
going for food items and less attracted by non-food items (ScienceDaily, 2011). Sleep-deprived
consumers are also more likely to have increased appetite due to changes in hormonal balance
(Taheri et al, 2004). The old adage of “never go shopping when you are hungry” should be updated
to say, “never go shopping when you are hungry or tired”!
Being tired doesn’t just change behaviour in relation to appetite – it changes the ability of people to
apply mental load to tasks. One study of judges found that they would grant parole to 65% of cases
they saw immediately after a meal, but this parole rate gradually decreased to nearly zero as the
judges approached their next meal time, suggesting that “tired and hungry judges tend to fall back
on the easier default position of denying requests for parole” (Danziger, Levav & Avnaim-Pesso,
2011).
In a similar vein, recent discoveries also indicate it is impossible to untie emotional states to
physical conditions. Cosmetic Botox injections are used to reduce lines and wrinkles in the human
face, but have found to have the side effect of reducing the ability of a person to both feel emotion
(Davis et al., 2010) and to recognise it in others (Neal and Chartrand, 2011). Without the physical
ability of the body to provide mirrored facial feedback, people lose the ability to empathise with
others and feel it within themselves.
Consumer aspects such as gender or physiological capabilities should also be considered as part
of the physical component, given how important such things are to the consumer decision-making
process.
The link between the physical and other aspects of consumer behaviour are also shown through the
power of habit. After a consumer has built up a habit, the brain reward system starts to anticipate
the sensation that comes with that habit in front of actually receiving it, while also objecting to not
experiencing that sensation. This relationship can be both positive and negative – a positive habit
such as brushing teeth is continued when a consumer desires the tingly feel of a clean mouth (and
misses it when they can’t do it) is a net benefit to a consumer, while problem gambling (and the
gambler growing to anticipate the sensation of gambling rather than focus on winning / losing) is
clearly a net negative. (Duhrigg, 2012b) Not engaging in a habit has a physical impact.
Page 10 of 21
There are also other physical conditions such as pain, arousal, relaxation and pleasure that
influence consumer behaviour. Sometimes these and the above aspects are treated as cognitive
and / or affective states, but this isn’t broadly correct – they are physical states. Consumer decision-
making is not purely driven by the nebulous world of the mind; the physical interface between the
mind and the broader world has a great deal of say in determining what a consumer does.
Environmental – The Experience of Our World
What is occurring in the world around a consumer has a large impact on consumer behaviour. In
this case, the term “environment” refers to the tangible and intangible elements around the
consumer, from macro-elements such as the weather to more variable factors such as store fronts
and product / service packaging.
It is important to recognise (although obvious) that consumers act differently if the weather is hot
versus if the weather is cold, or if they are in an environment where they are resource- and option-
rich (such as if they have a full bank account and heading into a retail shopping district) to one
where they are resource- and option-poor.
Weather is an obvious external factor that influences behaviour. Impulse purchases of ice cream
are higher in summer than winter, and higher still on bright, sunny summer days than on overcast
summer days (ConvenienceStore.co.uk, 2010). Seasonal factors influence the types of clothes and
accessories worn, as well as the types and cost of food that may be available.
Seasons also influence emotions, which in turn directs behaviour. Seasonal Affective Disorder is a
depressive illness with a seasonal pattern. People sleep more, eat more and usually crave
carbohydrates (which leads to weight gain), have a lot less energy and don't want to spend time
with others. It is believed that reduced exposure to sunlight is at least partly responsible for this
condition. (BeyondBlue.org.au, 2007) There have also been links between hotter weather,
increased violent behaviour (Keim, 2011) and higher suicide rates (BBC, 2007).
The senses of smell, sight, taste, hearing and touch are all touch points where the environment and
consumer’s physical being interact, with each having its own impact on behaviour. Sight is
recognised as a very important sense, given how critical it is to our interpretation of the world
around us, but it can also have subtle effects on the other senses. Sensation transference means
that consumers transfer what they perceive on a product’s packaging means they also experience
when they consume the product (i.e. taste, touch, smell). An example of this transference is that
adding more yellow to a drink’s packaging sees consumers believing it tastes more lemony, even
though the underlying recipe is unchanged (Gladwell, 2005).
A similar association effect means that the environment has a big impact on how stimuli are treated.
There is the famous example that showed that a world-class violinist busking in a busy subway
station barely attracted any attention, but that same violinist attracts $1000 a minute in international
concert halls (Weingarten, 2007). Although a number of factors are at play in that experiment, a key
one is environment – no-one expects to see a famous violinist playing for money in a subway so the
location had a negative effect on his perceived skill levels and audience interest. In a similar
fashion, it would be expected that a restaurant with high-class, fashionable décor would be
perceived to provide a better quality meal than a café with a lower-class interior, even if the actual
food they served was exactly the same.
Page 11 of 21
Sounds and scents in the surrounding environment also can impact consumer behaviour. Music
can influence the quantity and nationality of wine purchased in a liquor store (North, Hargreaves &
McKendrick, 1997) or change perceptions of how a wine tastes through priming effects (North,
2011), while numerous studies indicate that music tempo change physical heart rates (Bernardi,
Porta & Sleight, 2005) and emotional states (Mok & Wong, 2003).
It seems obvious to say that where a consumer is has a dramatic influence on the kinds of
decisions they will make, but environmental factors are conspicuously absent from numerous
consumer behaviour models.
Culture – Everybody Knows
Circling around all these other factors influencing consumer behaviour – even more so than if it
something that effects everyone, such as if the temperature is hot or cold – is culture. It may be
perceived that environment has a greater impact, but human history dictates that where
environment clashes with culture, it often comes off second best. Humankind has been responsible
for an awesome (in many senses of the word) change in the environment due to cultural
requirements. When the English arrived in Australia, they continued to wear the same kind of
clothes they would have worn in their much more temperate motherland. Culture dictated they
ignore the environment. Even today we do our best to modify the world around us (e.g. through air
conditioners, transport options, changes to natural landforms) so that we can live a lifestyle that we
want to, not one forced onto us by the environment.
Culture is crucial to understanding how consumers behave because people are heavily influenced
by others around them. Through both explicit and implicit observation along with individual and
group interaction, people learn the kinds of behaviours that are acceptable and those that aren’t.
Different consumer groups will have different collective cultures under a much larger societal
culture, with each determining a wide range of factors around behaviour.
Culture dictates how consumers cognitively process information. People brought up in a Western-
individualist culture are much more likely to focus on only the main parts of images they see and
are more likely to focus on individual personal characteristics when processing information, while
those raised in an Eastern-collectivist culture are more likely to describe the whole image presented
to them and to focus on situational factors contained within presented information (Winerman,
2006).
Emotions are also heavily influenced by cultural factors. Ekman (1972) indicates that recognition of
core emotional types are universal between cultures – a smile is seen as linked to joy in all cultures,
a frown is tied to anger, etc. – but that expressions of emotions are culturally driven. There are a
deep set of cultural norms that indicate what is “acceptable” when it comes to the time and place for
emotion, such as displays of grief at a funeral (e.g. quiet sobbing versus loud wailing and open
anguish) or public displays of affection (e.g. hugs and kisses versus respectful bowing). There are
also emotional states that are unique to certain cultures, such as ‘amok’ (violent frenzy) in Malaysia
and ‘amae’ (indulgent feeling of dependency, akin to what a child feels towards a mother, between
adults) in Japan (Prinz, 2004).
Culture also dictates reactions to physical states. How people react to the signs of age – such as
seeking to minimise them through Botox injections versus proudly displaying characteristics that will
be greeted with respect – or what they are willing to put up with in order to ‘fit’ with a particular
cultural image – such as wearing uncomfortable shoes or clothes that are expected within a
Page 12 of 21
particular social setting and putting fashion before comfort – are examples of culture driving
physically-oriented consumer behaviours. Culture also strongly influences behaviour towards
environmental conditions, such as reactions to different colour schemes (Mills, 2009) or what kinds
of traditions accompany different times of the year.
When it comes to consumer behaviour, it should be recognised that culture often helps consumers
in their decision-making by reducing the amount of mental load required. It provides a short-cut –
when provided with common cultural experiences, everybody knows what their reactions should be.
Little energy needs to be spent in weighing up choices, unless the consumer is considering options
that may go against cultural norms or be considered taboo.
Combining the Components
As indicated in the discussion on each component above, there is a lot of interplay within this
framework. Although the framework shown in Figure 1 shows clear delineations between the
components, hopefully it is clear that it is harder in the real world to cleanly separate things. For
example, if emotions strongly influence conation, and environment and cultural factors influence
emotion, it can be hard to draw a straight line between only emotional factors and consumer
behaviour. There are a lot of inter-relationships going on that blur the line.
A summary of some of these interactions / component influences is included in Table 2 below.
Page 13 of 21
Table 2: Partial Summary of Component Interactions
Cognitive
Influence
Affective
Influence
Conative
Influence
Physical
Influence
Environmental
Influence
Cultural
Influence
Cognitive
Component
Emotional
associations
influences
how
information
is processed
Creates
history of
decision-
making for
consideration
in similar
situation
Physical
state
changes
how much
mental
load can
be applied
Provides
external stimuli
to be
considered
Changes
perspective
given to
focus on
decision
factors
Affective
Component
Can provide
information
to (weakly)
overcome
emotional
biases
Can override
emotional
reactions
Physical
state can
enhance /
restrict
emotions
Influences
emotional
status e.g.
Seasonal
Affective
Disorder
Dictates
acceptable
emotional
displays
Conative
Component
Contributes
facts /
knowledge
for
consideration
Strong
emotional
reactions
can short-cut
decision-
making
Physical
state
changes
how much
mental
load can
be applied
Sensation
transference
dictates how
stimuli is
perceived
Influences
decisions
by
evaluating
what
others
would do
Physical
Component
Dictates the
desired level
of mental
load to apply
to the
decision
Emotions
cause
physiological
reactions
Physical
component
required to
apply / enact
decision
Environmental
stimuli changes
physical
experience
around the
decision
Determines
physical
norms for
decision-
making
Environmental
Component
Conscious
processing of
external
stimuli
Emotional
weights on
stimuli
dictate how
they are
valued
Bounded
decision-
making
based on
what is
available
around the
consumer
Physical
state (e.g.
hot, cold)
influences
perception
of external
stimuli
Norms
dictate
acceptable
patterns of
behaviour
Cultural
Component
Base level of
culturally-
related info /
knowledge
(i.e. the
‘facts’ that
everyone
knows)
Feelings /
emotions
that are
shared
across a
homogenous
cultural
group
Importance
of the
decision
within the
cultural
setting
Determines
what
cultural
role applies
(e.g. male
versus
female)
Provides
external stimuli
that interacts
with cultural
values / norms
However, such uncertainty doesn’t help make the framework easy to use, so it makes sense to treat
the components as separate when using it for analysis purposes. It may not be easy to always
cleanly place a decision factor into one component, but this is for the reason that sometimes factors
will stretch across two (or more) components.
Page 14 of 21
Using the PEACCC Framework in a Market Research Context
Following the concept that this framework should be easy to use, the simplest approach for its use
is to classify key decision elements to their appropriate component. Figure 3 provides an example
of a silo-based approach to the PEACCC framework.
Figure 3: A Silo-Based Approach to the PEACCC Framework
This approach works well when classifying qualitative information. As an example, let’s use the
PEACCC silos to briefly cover the kind of consumer behaviour factors that may be in play when a
person is deciding which financial institution to take a mortgage from.
Page 15 of 21
Figure 4: PEACCC Framework Silos – Example of a Consumer Selecting a Mortgage
The PEACCC model can also be used from a project-planning or informational perspective to
ensure that all facets of consumer behaviour are being covered. As a brief overview, market
research techniques can be classified under the PEACCC framework:
Figure 5: Classifying Selected Market Research Techniques / Approaches Using the
PEACCC Framework
Page 16 of 21
Framework Limitations
Three recognised limitations of this framework are:
1. Omission of a time-related component
2. Possibility of further splitting of the components into ‘conscious’ versus ‘unconscious’
aspects
3. The relative influence of each component within specific decision-making situations
Time As Part of Consumer Behaviour
Without doubt time is an important part of consumer behaviour. It takes time to consider a decision,
to execute it and to evaluate the outcomes. Sometimes it is only possible to determine if the
‘correct’ consumer behaviour path was taken after time has elapsed, while time can also see short-
term benefits turn into longer-term detriments. Also, all components change over time – as a
consumer learns, achieves and experiences more, their cognitive, affective, conative and even
physical components will change. Such changes can occur over minutes or span years.
As it stands, the PEACCC framework isn’t able to include a time component on the grounds that
time provides a different dimension for consumer behaviour. This framework works best as a
‘snapshot’ model of consumer behaviour, but it certainly can be used to analyse ‘current’ consumer
behaviour and then also be used to develop a list of ideal or future behaviours that it is intended /
desired for the consumer to move to. It could also be used to map previous consumer behaviours –
what they knew, their moods, values, etc. – alongside current consumers and evaluate how various
components have changed.
‘Conscious’ Versus ‘Unconscious’ Impact of Components
There is also the potential for the existing PEACCC components to be split into ‘conscious’ versus
‘unconscious’ (or ‘active’ versus ‘passive’, or ‘recognised’ versus ‘unrecognised’) sub-components.
A number of long-established consumer behaviour models appear to treat the factors that surround
decision-making as being recognised and acknowledged, but more recent findings indicate this isn’t
true – a lot can be going on below the surface that isn’t consciously processed by consumers.
As examples:
Cognitive processes can be focused on a problem at hand (active) or passively absorbing
facts or processing other problems in the background (passive)
Consumers can be aware (conscious) or unaware (unconscious) of their own emotional
state (e.g. not recognising that you are angry or in a good mood until someone else points it
out to you)
Although conation requires a degree of active involvement, it is also possible for decisions to
be made where the consumer wonders after why they chose what they chose
Consumers can be unaware of their physical state until attention is drawn to it by external
stimuli (e.g. recognising you are hungry after smelling baking bread)
Environmental factors have both a conscious (e.g. the consumer sees the high quality décor
of a restaurant) and unconscious (e.g. French music playing in the background causes the
consumer to buy French wine) impacts
Page 17 of 21
Cultural values and their influence on consumer behaviour may be recognised (e.g. moral
values dictating acceptable advertising content guidelines) or unrecognised (e.g. gender or
racial biases)
In order to keep the PEACCC framework straightforward to use, the separation of active / passive
or conscious / unconscious components hasn’t been formally included. With that in mind, anyone
looking to use the PEACCC framework for in-depth analysis of consumer behaviour should
recognise that such above- and below-the-surface influences do exist and should be considered.
Relative Influence of Components Within Specific Decision-Making Contexts
This issue is discussed in the section below.
Next Steps
This paper is a justification for the relevance and applicability of the PEACCC framework. As
described, this framework can be easily used for qualitative analysis using the suggested ‘silo’
analysis approach.
Moving forward, the challenge will be in understanding the relative importance of each component
within different industry sectors and consumer decision contexts. Different consumer decisions will
have different internal (i.e. cognitive, affective, conative), physical and external (environmental,
cultural) requirements. For instance, a common and familiar consumer behaviour such as going to
the beach in Australia is probably a relatively easy behaviour to consider. The consumer has likely
been to the beach many times before, knows what to expect, knows what they require to enact this
behaviour and Australia has a long history of a beach culture that provides a lot of baseline
knowledge to that consumer.
However, an unfamiliar and unestablished behaviour is going to see the relative importance of the
different components change. For instance, buying a high-tech gadget in an entirely new category
where there is a high degree of uncertainty about the future and capability of the device, less
tangible elements because it is providing online services, no established culture to consider or
influence the decision – this kind of decision will likely fall more heavily on internal and physical
factors (i.e. the look and feel of the device) than the unestablished external components.
Another ‘next step’ for this framework will be seeing its (hopeful) adoption and use among a wider
audience. The author would appreciate any feedback on the framework from those who have used
it, or be happy to answer any questions about its theoretical underpinnings. Indeed, just knowing
that it has been used by people other than the author would be a reward, so please contact the
author even just to say that the framework was useful in a project!
Page 18 of 21
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