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Motivation and Emotion: Driving Consumer Behavior
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Motivations “ Motivations are the inner reasons or driving forces behind human actions as consumers are driven to address real needs. Motivations are the impetus toward providing the intended reasons for a consumer’s actions.”
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What Drives Human Behavior? Homeostasis –refers to the fact that the body naturally reacts in a way to maintain a constant, normal bloodstream. The aim of homeostasis behavior is to maintain an individual in a current acceptable state. Self-Improvement –aims at changing a person’s current state to a level that is more ideal and not simply maintaining the current state of existence.
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Simple Classification of Consumer Motivations Utilitarian motivation - A drive to acquire products that consumers can use to accomplish things Hedonic motivation - Involves a drive to experience something personally gratifying
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Regulatory Focus Theory Consumers orient their behavior either through a prevention or promotion focus –Prevention focus - Orients consumers toward avoiding negative consequences –Promotion focus - Orients consumers toward the pursuit of their aspirations or ideals
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Consumer Involvement Degree of personal relevance a consumer finds in pursuing value from a given consumption act Types of involvement: –Product –Shopping –Situational –Enduring –Emotional
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Emotions Psychobiological reactions to appraisals –Psychobiological - They involve psychological processing and physical responses –Visceral responses - Certain feeling states are tied to behavior in a very direct way
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Cognitive Appraisal Theory Describes how specific types of thoughts can serve as a basis for specific emotions Cognitive appraisals: –Anticipation –Agency –Equity –Outcomes
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Measuring Emotion Autonomic measures – Automatically record visceral reactions or neurological brain activity Self-report measures –Less obtrusive than biological measures
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PANAS and PAD PANAS –Positive-affect-negative-affect scale –Assesses a person’s emotional state PAD – Pleasure-arousal-dominance – Used to study retail atmospherics
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Understand how different consumers express emotions in different ways.
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Differences in Emotional Behavior Emotional involvement –The type of deep personal interest that evokes strongly felt feelings associated with some object or activity
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Differences in Emotional Behavior Emotional expressiveness –Extent to which a consumer shows outward behavioral signs and otherwise reacts obviously to emotional experiences Emotional intelligence –Capture one’s awareness of the emotions experienced in a situation, and an ability to control reactions to these emotions
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Emotion and Cognitive Learning Interplay Semantic wiring –Consumers link concepts for memory retrieval –The active process and storage of knowledge is influenced by emotions –When marketing presents a product that evokes emotions, consumer recall is likely to increase
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Emotion and Cognitive Learning Interplay Mood-congruent recall –Events are associated with moods –When a mood can be controlled by marketing, consumers evaluations of a product can be influenced
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Schema-Based Affect Emotions become stored as part of the meaning for a category
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Self-Conscious Emotions Specific emotions that result from some evaluation or reflection of one’s own behavior –Include pride, shame, guilt, and embarrassment
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Emotional Contagion http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TN8YQVM 1GQI http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TN8YQVM 1GQI Emotional contagion - Represents the extent to which an emotional display by one person influences the emotional state of a bystander Emotional labor - Workers have to overtly manage their own emotional displays as part of the requirements of the job
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Video http://www.cengage.com/marketing/book_content/babin_9781133629689/videos/ch05/index.html
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