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Strategic Marketing Fall 2005 Tinker AFB Campus

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Title: Strategic Marketing Fall 2005 Tinker AFB Campus


1
Strategic Marketing Fall 2005Tinker AFB Campus
  • Chapter Six
  • Consumer Markets and Consumer Buyer Behavior

2
How and Why Consumers Buy Fig. 6.1 , p. 112
3
Cultural Factors
  • Culture - Values, perceptions, and preferences
    that are the most fundamental determinant of a
    person's wants and behavior.
  • Subcultures - Nationalities, religions, racial
    groups, and geographical regions.
  • Social Class - Hierarchically ordered divisions
    in a society members share similar values,
    interests, and behavior. Table 6.1, p. 114

4
Social Factors
  • Reference groups - All groups that have an
    influence on attitudes or behavior.
  • Family - the most influential primary reference
    group.
  • Roles and Statuses - Activities a person is
    expected to perform and the status associated
    with each.

5
Personal Factors
  • Age and Stage in the Life Cycle
  • People buy different goods over their lifetime.
  • Family life cycle, from independence to
    retirement and beyond, also shape buying habits.

6
Occupation and Economic circumstances
  • Blue collar versus white collar consumption
    issues.
  • Spending income, savings and assets, debts,
    borrowing power, and attitude toward spending
    versus saving all impact product choice.

7
Lifestyle - Pattern of living as expressed by
activities, interests, Opinions.
  • Psychographics - The science of using psychology
    and demographics to better understand consumers
    (VALS).

8
Personality and Self-Concept
  • Personality characteristics that influence buying
    behavior (self-confidence, socialibility, etc.,
    tie to brand personality.
  • Development of brand personalities to attract
    consumers with the same self concept (actual,
    ideal and others).

9
Psychological Factors
  • Motivation - Correlated to the strength of a need
    (Freud, Maslow, Herzberg).
  • Perception - Selective attention, selective
    distortion, selective retention.
  • Learning - Changes in behavior arising from
    experience.
  • Beliefs and Attitudes - A belief is a descriptive
    thought a person holds about something an
    attitude is a person's enduring favorable or
    unfavorable evaluations, emotional feelings, and
    action tendencies toward some object or idea.

10
The Consumer Buying Decision Process
  • Buying Roles. Five different roles initiator,
    influencer, decider, buyer and user

11
Buying Behavior Table 6.2, p. 121
  • Complex buying Behavior - High involvement,
    significant difference among brands.
  • Dissonance-Reducing Buying Behavior - High
    involvement, little or no perceived difference
    among brands. Purchase is fairly quick.
  • Habitual Buying Behavior - Low involvement,
    little or no brand difference.
  • Variety-Seeking Buying Behavior - Low involvement
    but perceived significant brand differences. May
    occur to relieve boredom.

12
The Stages in the Buying Decision Process Fig.
6.2, p. 122
  • Problem Recognition - Difference between actual
    state and desired state.
  • Information Search - Both internal and external
    sources. Fig. 6.3, p. 123
  • Evaluation of Alternatives - Different process
    for every consumer, involves weighing product
    attributes and their ability to deliver benefits.
  • Purchase Decision - Form a preference and
    intention to buy. Actual purchase can be
    influenced further by attitudes of others and
    unanticipated situational factors.

13
The Stages in the Buying Decision Process (cont.)
  • Postpurchase Behavior
  • Postpurchase Satisfaction - Understanding the
    differences between buyer expectation and the
    product's perceived performance. Minimizing the
    gap and achieving truthful representation.
  • Postpurchase Actions - Satisfaction or
    dissatisfaction will lead to subsequent behavior
    that can have both positive and negative effects.
  • Postpurchase Use and Disposal Fig. 6.4, p. 126
    - Learning more about use and disposal aids
    follow-on marketing and to enhance ecological
    awareness.

14
Marketing Skills Gauging Customer Satisfaction
  • There are many ways customers can and will
    indicate satisfaction and/or dissatisfaction-it
    is important to be sensitive to it.
  • Effective post-purchase communications can reduce
    product returns, speed problem resolution, and
    better understand product use.
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