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Consumer and Business Buyer Behavior

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Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs. Perception. Perception. Information Inputs. Interpretation ... advertising, and packaging to trigger recognition of needs or problems. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Consumer and Business Buyer Behavior


1
3
  • Consumer and Business Buyer Behavior

2
ROAD MAP Previewing the Concepts
  • Understand the consumer market and the major
    factors that influence consumer buyer behavior.
  • Identify and discuss the stages in the buyer
    decision process.
  • Describe the adoption and diffusion process for
    new products.
  • Define the business market and identify the major
    factors that influence business buyer behavior.
  • List and define the steps in the business buying
    decision process.
  • Understand the STP process as a heart of
    strategic marketing

3
Consumer Buying Behavior
  • Refers to the buying behavior of people who buy
    goods and services for personal use.
  • These people make up the consumer market.
  • The central question for marketers is
  • How do consumers respond to various marketing
    efforts the company might use?

4
Model of Buyer Behavior
5
Factors Influencing Consumer Behavior
Cultural Culture Subculture Social Class
Social Reference Groups Family Roles Status
Personal Age Life-Cycle Stage Occupation Economi
c Situation Lifestyle Personality Self-Concept
Psychological Motivation Perception Learning Belie
fs Attitudes
6
Culture
  • Culture is the Most Basic Cause of a Person's
    Wants and Behavior.

Culture is learned from family, church, school,
peers, colleagues. Culture includes basic values,
perceptions, wants, and behaviors. Components of
culture values, language, myths, customs,
rituals, laws, material artifacts
7
Culture
  • Subculture
  • Groups of people with shared value systems based
    on common life experiences.
  • Based on
  • demographics
  • personality, lifestyle, and psychographics
  • Examples of Major Groups
  • Hispanic Consumers
  • African-American Consumers
  • Asian-American Consumers
  • Mature Consumers

8
Marketers and Culture
  • must understand the culture of consumers to whom
    they market
  • identify subcultures which will be attractive
    target market segments
  • link the marketing mix to culture
  • INTERNATIONAL MARKETING
  • cultural differences and similarities
  • key segmentation question
  • are cultures different enough to be distinct
    target market segments?

9
Marketing to a Subculture
Sears is widely considered one of the most
successful marketers to the U.S. Hispanic
population. Its Spanish-language Web site
features content and events carefully tailored to
Hispanic consumers.
10
Culture
  • Social Class
  • Societys relatively permanent and ordered
    divisions whose members share similar values,
    interests, and behaviors.
  • Measured by a combination of occupation, income,
    education, wealth, and other variables.

11
Major American Social Classes
12
Social Factors
  • Membership
  • Reference (opinion leaders)
  • Aspirational
  • Groups
  • Most important consumer
  • buying organization
  • Family
  • Role Expected activities
  • Status
  • Esteem given to role by society
  • Roles
  • Status

13
Opinion Leaders
Marketers use buzz marketing by enlisting or even
creating opinion leaders to spread the word about
their brands.
14
Personal Factors
Age and Life-Cycle Stage
Occupation
Economic Situation
15
Personal Factors
Lifestyle
Pattern of Living as Expressed in Psychographics
Activities
Interests
Opinions
16
Personality Self-Concept
  • Personality refers to the unique psychological
    characteristics that lead to relatively
    consistent and lasting responses to ones own
    environment.
  • Self-concept suggests that peoples possessions
    contribute to and reflect their identities.
  • Workaholism
  • Compulsiveness
  • Self confidence
  • Friendliness
  • Adaptability
  • Ambitiousness
  • Dogmatism
  • Authoritarianism
  • Introversion
  • Extroversion
  • Aggressiveness
  • Competitiveness

17
Maslows Hierarchy of Needs
18
Perception
  • Perception
  • Information Inputs
  • Interpretation
  • Selective Exposure
  • Selective Distortion
  • Selective Retention

19
Perception
  • Information inputs are the sensations received
    through the sense organs.
  • Perception is the process of selecting,
    organizing, and interpreting information inputs
    to produce meaning.
  • Selective Attention the process of selecting
    some inputs to attend to while ignoring others.
  • An input is more likely to reach a persons
    awareness if it relates to an anticipated event.
  • Selective distortion is an individuals changing
    or twisting of information when it is
    inconsistent with personal feelings or beliefs.
  • Selective retention is remembering information
    that supports personal feelings and beliefs and
    forgetting inputs that do not.

20
Learning, Beliefs Attitudes
  • Learning a relatively permanent change in
    behavior due to experience.
  • Interplay of drives, stimuli, cues, responses,
    and reinforcement.
  • Strongly influenced by the consequences of an
    individuals behavior
  • Behaviors with satisfying results tend to be
    repeated.
  • Behaviors with unsatisfying results tend not to
    be repeated.
  • A belief is a descriptive thought that a person
    holds about something.
  • Attitude describes a persons consistently
    favorable or unfavorable evaluations, feelings,
    and tendencies toward an object or idea.

21
Buying Decision Process
22
Buying Decision Process
  • Step 1 Need Recognition
  • Buyer becomes aware of a difference between a
    desired state and an actual condition.
  • Individual may be unaware of the problem or need.
  • Marketers may use sales personnel, advertising,
    and packaging to trigger recognition of needs or
    problems.
  • Recognition speed can be slow or fast.

23
Need Recognition
Need recognition can be triggered by advertising.
This ad from Americas Dairy Farmers alerts
consumers of their need for more dairy products
to build strong bones.
24
Buying Decision Process
  • Step 2 Information Search
  • This stage begins after the consumer becomes
    aware of the problem or need.
  • The search for information about products will
    help resolve the problem or satisfy the need.
  • There are various sources of information.

25
Sources of Information
  • - Most effective source
  • - Family, friends, neighbors
  • Personal
  • - Advertising, salespeople
  • - Receives the most information
  • from these sources
  • Commercial
  • - Mass Media
  • - Consumer-rating groups
  • Public
  • - Handling the product
  • - Examining the product
  • - Using the product
  • Experiential

26
Buying Decision Process
Consumers May Use Careful Calculations Logical
Thinking
Consumers May Buy on Impulse and Rely on Intuition
Consumers May Make Buying Decisions on Their Own
Consumer May Make Decisions After Talking With
Others
Marketers Must Study Buyers to Find Out How They
Evaluate Brand Alternatives
27
Buying Decision Process
Factors That Influence Purchase Decision
Unexpected Situational Factors
Attitudes Of Others
28
Buying Decision Process
Consumer satisfaction is a function of consumer
expectations and perceived product performance.
Performance lt Expectations
Disappointment
Performance Expectations Satisfaction
Performance gt Expectations Delight
29
Buying Decision Process
  • Cognitive dissonance a buyers doubts shortly
    after a purchase about whether it was the right
    decision.
  • Aftermarketing?

30
Consumer Behaviour
During the purchase
After the purchase
Before the purchase
buying behaviour
consumer behaviour
CONSUMER
consumption behaviour
31
Business Markets Business Buyer Behavior
  • The business market is vast and involves far more
    money and items than do consumer markets.
  • Business buyer behavior refers to the buying
    behavior of the organizations that buy goods and
    services for use in the production of other
    products and services that are sold, rented, or
    supplied to others.

32
Business Markets
  • Nature of the Buying Unit
  • Business purchases involve more decision
    participants.
  • Business buying involves a more professional
    purchasing effort.
  • Market Structure and Demand
  • Contains far fewer but larger buyers.
  • Customers are more geographically concentrated.
  • Business demand is derived from consumer demand.

33
Types of Decisions and the Decision Process
Business buyers usually face more complex buying
decisions.
Business buying process tends to be more
formalized.
Buyers and sellers are much more dependent on
each other.
34
Business Markets
B2B marketers often roll up their sleeves and
partner with customers to jointly create
solutions. Here, Fujitsu promises, Our
technology will keep you moving upward, and our
people wont let you down.
35
Model of Business Buyer Behavior
36
Major Types of Buying Situations
  • The buyer routinely reorders
  • something without any
  • modifications.
  • Straight Rebuy
  • The buyer wants to modify
  • product specifications,
  • prices, terms, or suppliers.
  • Modified Rebuy
  • The buyer purchases a
  • product or service for the
  • first time.
  • New Task

37
Participants in the Business Buying Process
  • Decision-making unit of a buying organization is
    called its buying center.
  • Not a fixed and formally identified unit.
  • Membership will vary for different products and
    buying situations.
  • Buying Center Members
  • Users
  • Deciders
  • Influencers
  • Buyers
  • Gatekeepers

38
Buying Center
Allegiance Healthcare Corporation deals with a
wide range of buying influences, from purchasing
executives and hospital administrators to the
surgeons who actually use its products.
39
Major Influences on Business Buyer Behavior
40
The Business Buying Process
41
Rest Stop Reviewing the Concepts
  • Describe the consumer market and the major
    factors that influence consumer buyer behavior.
  • Identify and discuss the stages in the buyer
    decision process.
  • Describe the adoption and diffusion process for
    new products.
  • Define the business market and identify the major
    factors that influence business buyer behavior.
  • List and define the steps in the business buying
    decision process.

42
Segmentation, targeting, positioning
43
The process of market segmentation and target
marketing
The disaggregated market
The segmented market
The target market
1
2
3
1
2
3
Marketing mix targeted at segment 3
Segment 3 is judged to be most attractive and a
marketing mix strategy is designed for that
target market
The characteristics of individual customers are
understood
Customers are grouped into segments on the basis
of having similar characteristics
44
Segmenting consumer markets
45
Macro and microsegmentation of organizational
markets
46
Segmenting organizational markets
Macrosegmentation
Choice criteria
Organizational size
Industry
Geographic location
47
Target marketing strategies
  • Undifferentiated marketing
  • Differentiated marketing
  • Focused marketing
  • Customized marketing

48
Target marketing strategies
  • Undifferentiated marketing

Whole market
49
Example of Undifferentiated Strategy Example
ORGANISATION
MARKETING MIX
TARGET MARKET
  • Product
  • Price
  • Promotion
  • Distribution

Post Office
Everybody
50
Target marketing strategies
  • Differentiated marketing

Marketing mix 1
Marketing mix 2
Marketing mix 3
51
Example of Differentiated Strategy
Marketing Mix 1
Utilitarian Customer

Marketing Mix 2
Trendy- Casual
LEVIs
Marketing Mix 3
Price shopper
Marketing Mix 4
Mainstream
Tradition- alist
Marketing Mix 5
52
Target marketing strategies
  • Focused marketing

53
Example of Focused Strategy
Independent DIY Shops
Unserved
MARKETING MIX
ORGANISATION
  • Product
  • Price
  • Promotion
  • Distribution

Cement Manufacturer
Builders Merchants
Unserved
National DIY Chains
54
Target marketing strategies
  • Customized marketing

Marketing mix 1
Marketing mix 2
Marketing mix 3
55
Example of Customized Strategy
INDIVIDUAL MIXES
ORGANISATION
INDIVIDUAL CUSTOMERS
Marketing Mix 1
Nissan
Industrial Electronic Systems Supplier
Marketing Mix 2
Birdseye
Marketing Mix 3
Heinz
Marketing Mix 4
Levis
56
Key tasks in positioning
Where and how we compete
57
Identifying Possible Competitive Advantages
58
Anheuser-Busch Positioning to Social Class
Segments
Upper-class lifestyle
Aspiring
Upper-middle-class target market (12.5)
Michelob - Upper-middle-class product
position super premium price prestige themes
status/professional backgrounds
Upper-middle- class lifestyle
Contented
Aspiring
Middle-class target market (36)
Budweiser - Middle-class product
position premium price achievement, sharing
themes middle-class backgrounds
Middle-class lifestyle
Contented
Aspiring
Working-class target market (38)
Busch - Working-class product position popular
price sports themes working-class backgrounds
Working-class lifestyle
Contented
  • The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 1998

59
Keys to successful positioning
Successful positioning
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