Marketing Management Chapter 08

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    SHH Kazmi, 2007

    Excel BooksMarketing Management Text and Cases,S H H Kazmi8-1

    Consumer Behaviour - Personal and Organisational

    Marketing Management Text and Cases

    Excel Books8-1

    Consumer

    Behaviour -Personal and

    Organisational

    8Chapter

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    SHH Kazmi, 2007

    Excel BooksMarketing Management Text and Cases,S H H Kazmi8-2

    Consumer Behaviour - Personal and Organisational

    Consumer behaviour refers to the mental and emotional processes and the

    observable behaviour of consumers during searching, purchasing, and post

    consumption of a product or service.

    Satish K. Batra and S. H. H. Kazmi, Consumer Behaviour, Excel Books, 2004.

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    Consumer Behaviour - Personal and Organisational

    Various Factors Influencing Consumer Behaviour

    Social Factors

    Culture and Subculture Roles

    and Family Social Class

    Reference Groups

    Psychological Factors

    Motivation Perception

    Learning Attitudes

    Personality

    Personal

    Factors

    Demographic Factors

    Lifestyle Situational factors

    Involvement Level

    Problem

    Recognition

    Information

    Search

    Alternatives

    Evaluation

    Purchase

    Action

    Postpurchase

    Actions

    Consumer Decision-Making Process

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    SHH Kazmi, 2007

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    Consumer Behaviour - Personal and Organisational

    Social FactorsSocial factors refer to forces that other people exert and which affect

    consumers purchase behaviour. These include culture and subculture, roles

    and family, social class, and reference groups.

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    Consumer Behaviour - Personal and Organisational

    Culture and SubcultureCulture influences consumers through the norms and values established by

    the society in which they live.

    Subcultures exist within a given dominant culture.

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    Consumer Behaviour - Personal and Organisational

    Roles and Family

    Joint Decision-Making Process

    Initiator

    (Needrecognition)

    Gatekeeper

    (Informationsearch)

    Influencer

    (Evaluation ofalternatives)

    Decision-

    maker(Decision to

    buy)

    Buyer

    (Purchase)

    User

    (Consumption) &evaluation

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    Consumer Behaviour - Personal and Organisational

    Social ClassSocial class defines the ranking of people in a society into a hierarchy of distinct

    status classes; upper, middle and lower, so that the members of each class

    have relatively the same status based on their power and prestige.

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    Consumer Behaviour - Personal and Organisational

    Reference GroupsA reference group refers to a group of people with whom an individual

    identifies herself/himself and the extent to which that person assumes many

    values, attitudes, or behaviours of group members.

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    Consumer Behaviour - Personal and Organisational

    Psychological FactorsPsychological factors are internal to an individual and generate forces within that

    influence her/his purchase behaviour. The major forces include motives,

    perception, learning, attitude, and personality.

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    Consumer Behaviour - Personal and Organisational

    MotivationThis refers to driving forces within an individual produced by a state of tension

    caused by unfulfilled needs, wants, and desires.

    Motivation Process

    Learning

    Unfulfilled

    Needs, Wants

    and Desires

    Felt

    Tension

    Drive Appropriate

    Behaviour

    Goal or Need

    Fulfilment

    Cognitive

    Processes

    Tension

    Reduction

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    Consumer Behaviour - Personal and Organisational

    Motivation Research

    Some of the methods used to probe the subconscious mind include:

    In-depth interviews

    Projective techniques

    Association tests

    Focus group

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    Consumer Behaviour - Personal and Organisational

    Perception

    Perception is the process by which an individual selects, organises, and

    interprets stimuli into a meaningful and coherent picture of the world.

    Perception includes three distinct processes:

    Sensation

    Information selection

    Interpreting the information

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    Consumer Behaviour - Personal and Organisational

    LearningLearning is viewed as a relatively permanent change in behaviour occurring as a

    result information or experience, both direct and indirect.

    There are two basic approaches to learning:

    (1) behavioural approach, and

    (2) cognitive learning approach.

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    Consumer Behaviour - Personal and Organisational

    PersonalityPersonality refers to a dynamic concept that describes the growth and

    development of an individuals whole psychological system, which looks at

    some aggregate whole that is greater than the sum of the parts.

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    Consumer Behaviour - Personal and Organisational

    Marketers consider four main theories of personality as more relevant to their

    purpose and include

    (1) Self-concept theory: Self-concept describes the totality of an individuals

    thoughts and feelings having reference to herself/himself as an attitude

    object.

    (2) Psychoanalytic theory: Personality is the result of childhood conflicts

    between three fundamental components of personality: Id, Ego, and

    Superego.

    (3) Social-cultural theory: Social and cultural variables are more important than

    biological drives in the development of individual personality.

    (4) Trait theory: Personality is composed of a set of traits that are relatively

    stable and describe a general pattern of behaviour.

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    Consumer Behaviour - Personal and Organisational

    Personal FactorsPersonal factors include those aspects that are unique to a person and influence

    purchase behaviour. These include demographic factors, lifestyle, and situational

    factors.

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    Consumer Behaviour - Personal and Organisational

    Demographic FactorsDemographic factors include individual customers age, gender, education,

    occupation, income, marital status, family size, etc. These characteristics affect

    the purchase and consumption behaviour of persons.

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    Consumer Behaviour - Personal and Organisational

    LifestyleLifestyle is an indicator of how people live and express themselves on the basis

    of their activities, interests, and opinions.

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    Consumer Behaviour - Personal and Organisational

    Situational FactorsAll those factors particular to a time and place that do not follow from a

    knowledge of personal (intra-individual) and stimulus (choice alternative)

    attributes and that have a demonstrable and systematic effect on current

    behaviour.

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    Consumer Behaviour - Personal and Organisational

    Involvement LevelConsumer involvement is considered as an important variable that can help

    explain how consumers process the information and how this information might

    influence their purchase or consumption related behaviour.

    There are several broad types of involvement related to the product, themessage, or the perceiver.

    Product involvement

    Advertising involvement

    Purchase situation involvement

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    Consumer Behaviour - Personal and Organisational

    Consumer Decision Processes

    There are various types of consumer-decision processes.

    Nominal decision-making

    Extended decision-making

    Limited decision-making

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    Consumer Behaviour - Personal and Organisational

    Involvement Level and Types of Decision- Making

    Level ofinvolvement

    High

    Low

    Nominal Limited Extended

    Types of Decision-making

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    Consumer Behaviour - Personal and Organisational

    Consumer Decision-making ProcessConsumer decision-making generally involves five stages:

    Problem or need recognition,

    information search,

    alternatives evaluation,

    purchase, and

    post-purchase evaluation.

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    Consumer Behaviour - Personal and Organisational

    Stages in

    Consumer

    Decision

    Process

    NeedRecognition

    Alternatives

    Evaluation

    Post-purchase

    action

    Nisha is fed up with her now obsolete computer

    with CRT monitor. She needs a 15 laptop

    for easy mobility and comfort.

    Nisha surfs the Internet to learn about laptops.

    Nisha considers several brands in terms of

    reputation, features service support, and price.

    Nisha chooses one model of IBM laptop. It has

    features that appeal to her, dealer gives her

    Rs. 800 discount, and she buys it.

    Dissonance and evaluation.

    Information

    Search

    Store Selection

    and

    Purchase

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    Consumer Behaviour - Personal and Organisational

    Organisational Consumer

    The decision-making process by which organisations establish the need for

    purchased products and services and identify, evaluate and choose among

    alternative brands and suppliers.

    Organisational buyer characteristics differ from final consumers in several

    important aspects.

    Group-based Decision-making

    Technical Knowledge

    Rational Motives Dominate

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    Consumer Behaviour - Personal and Organisational

    Decision Approach and Purchase PatternsOrganisational purchases and buying patterns differ from final consumers in

    many ways.

    Formality

    Negotiations

    Less Frequent Purchases

    Reciprocity

    Service

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    Consumer Behaviour - Personal and Organisational

    Types of Decision Situations

    Straight Re-buy

    Modified Re-buy

    New Task

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    Consumer Behaviour - Personal and Organisational

    Organisational Buyer Decision ProcessThe size of a decision-making unit (DMU) may vary according to how new,

    complex and important the purchase decision is; and how centralised,

    structured and specialised the organisation is.

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    Consumer Behaviour - Personal and Organisational

    Problem RecognitionThe first stage of organisational buying decision involves recognising a need

    or problem.

    Product SpecificationParticipants involved in the decision-making process assess the problem or

    need and determine what is required to resolve or satisfy it.

    Product and Vendor Search

    The organisation tries searching for possible products to solve the problem,and also to locate firms who may qualify to be suitable suppliers for those

    products.

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    Consumer Behaviour - Personal and Organisational

    Product and Vendor Evaluation

    The buying centre makes an evaluation to determine which products meet

    the laid down specifications. Various vendors are also evaluated on criteria

    such as price, delivery, service, warranty, credit terms, etc.

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    Consumer Behaviour - Personal and Organisational

    Information gathered during evaluation stage is used to select finally the

    product to be purchased, as well as the vendor from which the purchase

    will be made.

    Product and Vendor Selection

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    Consumer Behaviour - Personal and Organisational

    Performance EvaluationThe last stage in purchase decision process involves an evaluation of the

    product as well as vendor performance.