Consumer behaviour
Étude de cas : Consumer behaviour. Recherche parmi 300 000+ dissertationsPar Claudia Fernandes • 25 Octobre 2020 • Étude de cas • 5 654 Mots (23 Pages) • 539 Vues
Consumer Behavior
Lens to explore consumer behaviour:
- Micro lens: try to understand 🡪 Sensory perceptions, Attitudes, Motivations, Decision making, Identify construction
- Meso lens: social group 🡪 Family, Social class, Tribes, Brand, Communities
- Macro lens : culture 🡪 Myths, Globalization, Cultural, Changes, Social media
Session 1: Consumer as individual decision makers
Introduction
Exploring consumer behaviour involves understanding:
- How do consumers see the world 🡪 perception?
- How does consumer make decision 🡪 motivation?
- How the link between worldviews & consumption decisions 🡪 self
[pic 1][pic 2][pic 3]
Components of consumers’ worldview / components of decision making progress
Exploring Consumer worldview
Perception
We do not perceive all add! (sensory overload)
We are not influenced by all of them
- Perception is a selective, transformative process
- 3 stages: Selection, organization, interpretation of diverse stimuli
[pic 4]
From stimuli to meanings
Focus on sensation:
The design of a product has a big impact on its success or failure
Senses help us to decide if a product is appealing or not
Especially vision 🡺 why? E.g.: associations between colours and feelings
Colour | Association | Mkt application |
Optimistic, youthful | Used to grab window shoppers’ attention | |
Trust and security | Banks | |
Wealth | Used to create relaxation in stores | |
Aggressive | Call to action: subscribe, buy, sell |
- Role of sensory marketing: for sound, smell, touch, taste
Focus on attention:
- Attention is the degree to which consumers focus on stimuli during the exposure
- Attention to a given stimuli depends on:
- Multitasking
- Perceptual vigilance
- The message itself
Focus on interpretation:
- the meaning we assign to sensory stimuli
Principles guiding interpretations:
- Gestalt: the whole is greater than the sum of its parts
- Principle of closure: we see an incompletely image as a complete one
- Principle of similarity: We group together that object share the same features
Self
- the beliefs consumers hold about their attributes, and how they evaluate them
Several components:
- Self-esteem: the idea of yourself and actual self 🡪 the idea of beauty had change
- Self-consciousness: the sensitivity to the image that we communicate to the others
- The extended self: materials object can be integrating to the construction of our identity
- The digital self
Self and multiple roles
The self is multiple and contextual: different with your family and friends: Cf symbolic interactionism
Performing different roles in the same day: focus on gender role
Motivation
- The reasons people purchase a product can vary widely
- Motivation is the process that lead people to behave as they do
- When a need is aroused that consumer want to satisfy
- We are motivated to approach a goal and seek our products helping us to reach it.
- Not always a smooth process! [pic 5]
- Underlying (sometimes competing) values often drive motivations
Understanding decision making
Learning
- refers to a relatively permanent change in behaviour which comes with experience
- Personal experience or observation of events affecting others
- Purposive learning or incidental learning
Mental associations between products/brands, feelings and events are learnt
How do we learn and remember things?
- Behavioural theories (can’t understand what is going on in their mind): external stimulus 🡪 observable response (e.g.: repetition, positive reinforcement)
- Cognitive theories (try to understand what happened in their mind): focus on internal process (e.g.: observational learning 🡪 attention, retention in memory, skill production, relevant situation, behaviour)
Focus on memory
Products are memory makers!
- Reminding prior experiences
- Reminding the consumers’ past
- Reminding a past…: That consumers may not even know!
- Historicizing the brand: legibility to the brand
Attitude
- a predisposition to evaluate a product/brand (set of criteria): Positive or negative or no one
3 components of attitude 🡪 not the same impact on the attitude, there is hierarchy:
- Affects: the way a consumer feels about an object
- Beliefs: what a consumer know about an object
- Behaviour: what a consumer is doing or plans to do
The formation of attitudes: traditional approach:[pic 6]
YET 🡪 Case of experiential consumption where affects come first; then actions, then beliefs
Attitudes are consistent: Consumers value harmony between their thoughts, feelings and behaviours[pic 7]
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