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Consumer Behavior, Internet Marketing, and Advertising

Consumer Behavior, Internet Marketing, and Advertising

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Page 1: Consumer Behavior, Internet Marketing, and Advertising

Consumer Behavior, Internet Marketing, and Advertising

Page 2: Consumer Behavior, Internet Marketing, and Advertising

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall

1. Describe the factors that influence consumer behavior online.

2. Understand the decision-making process of consumer purchasing online.

3. Describe segmentation and how companies are building one-to-one relationships with customers.

4. Explain how consumer behavior can be analyzed for creating personalized services.

5. Discuss the issues of e-loyalty and e-trust in electronic commerce (EC).

6. Describe consumer market research in EC.

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Page 3: Consumer Behavior, Internet Marketing, and Advertising

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall

7. Describe the objectives of Web advertising and its characteristics.

8. Describe the major advertising methods used on the Web.

9. Describe various online advertising strategies and types of promotions.

10. Describe permission marketing, ad management, localization, and other advertising-related issues.

11. Relate Web 2.0 and social networks to Internet market research and advertising.

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Page 4: Consumer Behavior, Internet Marketing, and Advertising

• AIDA: Attention-Interest -Desire-Action Model– Describe the process consumers employ when making decisions based

on advertising message:1. A- Attention: to attract the attention of the customer2. I- Interest: by demonstrating features, advantages, and benefits.3. D-Desire: satisfy their needs.4. A-Action : take action towards purchasing5. S-Satisfaction: higher loyalty and lead to repurchase.

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Page 5: Consumer Behavior, Internet Marketing, and Advertising

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Page 6: Consumer Behavior, Internet Marketing, and Advertising

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall

• A GENERIC PURCHASING-DECISION MODEL– Five major phases:• Need identification• Information search

– product brokeringDeciding what product to buy

– merchant brokeringDeciding from whom (from what merchant) to buy a product

• Alternative evaluation• Purchase and delivery• Postpurchase behavior

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Page 7: Consumer Behavior, Internet Marketing, and Advertising

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall

• CUSTOMER DECISION SUPPORT IN WEB PURCHASING

• PLAYERS IN THE CONSUMER DECISION PROCESS– Initiator– Influencer– Decider– Buyer– User

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Page 8: Consumer Behavior, Internet Marketing, and Advertising

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall

• FROM MASS MARKETING TO ONE-TO-ONE MARKETING– Mass Marketing and Advertising– market segmentation

The process of dividing a consumer market into logical groups for conducting marketing research and analyzing personal information

– one-to-one marketing (relationship marketing)Marketing that treats each customer in a unique way

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Page 9: Consumer Behavior, Internet Marketing, and Advertising

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Page 10: Consumer Behavior, Internet Marketing, and Advertising

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Page 11: Consumer Behavior, Internet Marketing, and Advertising

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall

• personalizationThe matching of services, products, and advertising content with individual consumers and their preferences

• user profileThe requirements, preferences, behaviors, and demographic traits of a particular customer

• cookieA data file that is placed on a user’s hard drive by a remote Web server, frequently without disclosure or the user’s consent, which collects information about the user’s activities at a site

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Page 12: Consumer Behavior, Internet Marketing, and Advertising

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall

• behavioral targetingTargeting that uses information collected about an individual’s Web-browsing behavior, such as the pages they have visited or the searches they have made, to select an advertisement to display to that individual

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Page 13: Consumer Behavior, Internet Marketing, and Advertising

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall

• collaborative filteringA market research and personalization method that uses customer data to predict, based on formulas derived from behavioral sciences, what other products or services a customer may enjoy; predictions can be extended to other customers with similar profiles

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Page 14: Consumer Behavior, Internet Marketing, and Advertising

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall

• CUSTOMER LOYALTY– e-loyalty

Customer loyalty to an e-tailer or loyalty programs delivered online or supported electronically• Business Intelligence and Analytical Software

• SATISFACTION IN EC– Satisfaction is one of the most important success measures

in the B2C online environment• TRUST IN EC– trust

The psychological status of willingness to depend on another person or organization

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Page 15: Consumer Behavior, Internet Marketing, and Advertising

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Page 16: Consumer Behavior, Internet Marketing, and Advertising

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Page 17: Consumer Behavior, Internet Marketing, and Advertising

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• OBJECTIVES AND CONCEPTS OF MARKET RESEARCH ONLINE– What Are Marketers Looking For in EC Market

Research?• REPRESENTATIVE MARKET RESEARCH

APPROACHES– Market Segmentation Research– Online Sampling Methods– Online Surveys– Hearing Directly from Customers– Data Collection in the Web 2.0 Environment

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Page 18: Consumer Behavior, Internet Marketing, and Advertising

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– Observing Customers’ Movements Online• transaction log

A record of user activities at a company’s Web site• clickstream behavior

Customer movements on the Internet• Web bugs

Tiny graphics files embedded in e-mail messages and in Web sites that transmit information about users and their movements to a Web server

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Page 19: Consumer Behavior, Internet Marketing, and Advertising

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall

• spywareSoftware that gathers user information over an Internet connection without the user’s knowledge• clickstream data

Data that occur inside the Web environment; they provide a trail of the user’s activities (the user’s clickstream behavior) in the Web site• Web mining

Data mining techniques for discovering and extracting information from Web documents; explores both Web content and Web usage

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Page 20: Consumer Behavior, Internet Marketing, and Advertising

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall

• LIMITATIONS OF ONLINE MARKET RESEARCH– Accuracy of responses– Loss of respondents because of equipment

problems– The ethics and legality of Web tracking– The difficulty in obtaining truly representative

samples– The lack of understanding of the online

communication process and how online respondents think and interact in cyberspace

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Page 21: Consumer Behavior, Internet Marketing, and Advertising

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall

• HOW TO OVERCOME THESE LIMITATIONS– Identify the intended target audience or demographic

so that the right kind of sampling can be performed– Anonymity for target respondents may encourage

them to be more truthful in their opinions– Concerns about the security of the information

transmitted should be minimized– Companies may outsource their market research to

large and experienced companies that have specialized market research departments and expertise

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Page 22: Consumer Behavior, Internet Marketing, and Advertising

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall

• BIOMETRIC MARKETING• biometrics

An individual’s unique physical or behavioral characteristics that can be used to identify an individual precisely (e.g., fingerprints)

– By applying the technology to computer users, we can improve security and learn about the user’s profile precisely

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Page 23: Consumer Behavior, Internet Marketing, and Advertising

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall

• Advertising is an attempt to disseminate information in order to affect buyer–seller transactions– In traditional marketing, advertising was impersonal,

one-way mass communication that was paid for by sponsors

• interactive marketingOnline marketing, facilitated by the Internet, by which marketers and advertisers can interact directly with customers, and consumers can interact with advertisers/vendors

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Page 24: Consumer Behavior, Internet Marketing, and Advertising

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Page 25: Consumer Behavior, Internet Marketing, and Advertising

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• The Advertising Cycle– ad views

The number of times users call up a page that has a banner on it during a specific period; known as impressions or page views

– buttonA small banner that is linked to a Web site; may contain downloadable software

– pageAn HTML (Hypertext Markup Language) document that may contain text, images, and other online elements, such as Java applets and multimedia files; may be generated statically or dynamically

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Page 26: Consumer Behavior, Internet Marketing, and Advertising

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall

– click (click-through or ad click)A count made each time a visitor clicks on an advertising banner to access the advertiser’s Web site

– CPM (cost per thousand impressions)The fee an advertiser pays for each 1,000 times a page with a banner ad is shown

– conversion rateThe percentage of clickers who actually make a purchase

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Page 27: Consumer Behavior, Internet Marketing, and Advertising

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall

– click-through rateThe percentage of visitors who are exposed to a banner ad and click on it

– click-through ratioThe ratio between the number of clicks on a banner ad and the number of times it is seen by viewers; measures the success of a banner in attracting visitors to click on the ad

– hitA request for data from a Web page or file

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Page 28: Consumer Behavior, Internet Marketing, and Advertising

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall

– visit A series of requests during one navigation of a Web site; a pause of a certain length of time ends a visit

– unique visitA count of the number of visitors entering a site, regardless of how many pages are viewed per visit

– stickinessCharacteristic that influences the average length of time a visitor stays in a site

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Page 29: Consumer Behavior, Internet Marketing, and Advertising

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall

– Advertising Online and Its Advantages• Cost• Richness of format• Personalization• Timeliness• Location-basis• Linking• Digital branding

• advertising networksSpecialized firms that offer customized Web advertising

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Page 30: Consumer Behavior, Internet Marketing, and Advertising

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall

• BANNERS– banner

On a Web page, a graphic advertising display linked to the advertiser’s Web page

– keyword bannersBanner ads that appear when a predetermined word is queried from a search engine

– random bannersBanner ads that appear at random, not as the result of the user’s action

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Page 31: Consumer Behavior, Internet Marketing, and Advertising

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall

– Benefits and Limitations of Banner Ads• major benefit is users are transferred directly to an

advertiser’s site, often the shopping page• major disadvantage of banners is their cost

– banner swappingAn agreement between two companies to each display the other’s banner ad on its Web site

– banner exchangesMarkets in which companies can trade or exchange placement of banner ads on each other’s Web sites

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Page 32: Consumer Behavior, Internet Marketing, and Advertising

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall

• POP-UP AND SIMILAR ADS– pop-up ad

An ad that appears in a separate window before, after, or during Internet surfing or when reading e-mail

– pop-under adAn ad that appears underneath the current browser window, so when the user closes the active window the ad is still on the screen

• E-MAIL ADVERTISING• NEWSPAPER-LIKE AND CLASSIFIED ADS

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Page 33: Consumer Behavior, Internet Marketing, and Advertising

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall

• SEARCH ENGINE ADVERTISEMENT– URL Listing– Keyword Advertising– search engine optimization (SEO)

The craft of increasing site rank on search engines; the optimizer uses the ranking algorithm of the search engine (which may be different for different search engines) and best search phrases, and tailors the ad accordingly

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Page 34: Consumer Behavior, Internet Marketing, and Advertising

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall

• GOOGLE—THE ONLINE ADVERTISING KING• ADVERTISING IN CHAT ROOMS• OTHER FORMS OF ADVERTISING– Advertising in free Online Newsletters– Posting Press Releases Online– Video Ads– advergaming

The practice of using computer games to advertise a product, an organization, or a viewpoint

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Page 35: Consumer Behavior, Internet Marketing, and Advertising

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall

• social network advertisingOnline advertising that focuses on social networking sites– Types of Social Network Advertising• Direct advertising that is based on your network of

friends• Direct advertising placed on your social network site• Indirect advertising by creating “groups” or “pages”

– Sponsored Reviews by Bloggers

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Page 36: Consumer Behavior, Internet Marketing, and Advertising

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall

• viral marketingWord-of-mouth marketing by which customers promote a product or service by telling others about it

• affiliate marketingA marketing arrangement by which an organization refers consumers to the selling company’s Web site

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Page 37: Consumer Behavior, Internet Marketing, and Advertising

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall

• mobile advertisingAds sent to and presented on mobile devices– Mobile Marketing

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Page 38: Consumer Behavior, Internet Marketing, and Advertising

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall

• PERMISSION ADVERTISING– spamming

Using e-mail to send unwanted ads (sometimes floods of ads)

– permission advertising (permission marketing)Advertising (marketing) strategy in which customers agree to accept advertising and marketing materials (known as opt-in)

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Page 39: Consumer Behavior, Internet Marketing, and Advertising

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall

• localizationThe process of converting media products developed in one environment (e.g., country) to a form culturally and linguistically acceptable in countries outside the original target market

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Page 40: Consumer Behavior, Internet Marketing, and Advertising

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall

1. Do we focus on value-creating customers?2. Which Internet marketing/advertising channel do we

use?3. What metrics do we use to guide advertisers?4. What is our commitment to Web advertising?5. Should we integrate our Internet and non-Internet

marketing campaigns?6. Who will conduct the market research?7. Should we use intelligent agents? 8. What ethical issues should we consider in online

marketing?

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