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Knowledge and Understanding
Chapter 4 Knowledge and Understanding
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Learning Objectives Connection between consumer knowledge and consumer understanding. Schemas, associations, images, categories, and prototypes. Categorization and comprehension. How product features, price, and other marketing elements induce consumers to make inferences about products.
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Chapter Overview: Knowledge and Understanding (Exhibit 4.1)
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Overview of Knowledge and Understanding
Knowledge content Knowledge structure Categorization Comprehension
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Knowledge Content Schemas and Associations Types of schemas Images
Types of associations Favorability Uniqueness Salience Types of schemas Images Scripts
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Images Brand image Brand’s personality Brand extension Licensing
Brand alliance Protecting brand images
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Brand Personality Framework (Exhibit 4.4)
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Marketing Implications
Creating new schemas, images, & personalities Brand extensions Licensing Brand alliances Developing existing schemas, images, & personalities Changing schemas, images, & personalities Protecting brand images
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Scripts Special type of schemas that represent our knowledge of a sequence of actions involved in performing an activity Helps marketers understand how consumers buy and use an offering May want consumer to consider brand as part of scripted activity
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Knowledge Structure Categories and their structures
Taxonomic structures Goal-derived structures Why consumers differ in their knowledge
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Taxonomic Categories and Their Structure
Graded structure Position to prototype Close Away Competitive Retail store and site design What affects prototypicality? Correlated associations Hierarchical structure
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Hierarchical Structure Levels
Superordinate Basic Subordinate
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Taxonomic Category Structure (Exhibit 4.6)
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Goal-Derived Categories
Things belong in the same category if they fulfill same consumer goal.
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Construal Level Theory
Low-level construal—concrete High-level construal—abstract
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Why Consumers Differ in Their Knowledge
Cultural system Associations linked to concept Category members Category prototypes Correlated associations Goal-derived categories Level of expertise
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Using Knowledge to Understand— Categorization
Inferences Elaboration Evaluation Consideration and choice Satisfaction
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Using Knowledge to Understand— Comprehension
Objective Subjective Miscomprehension Effects of: MAO Cultural system Improving objective comprehension
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Comprehension and Product Warnings
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Consumer Inference Brand names/symbols inferences
Misleading names/labels Inappropriate/similar names Product features/packaging Product attributes Country of origin Package design Color
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Consumer Inference (cont’d)
Price Retail atmospherics/display Advertising/selling Pictures Language Ethical issues
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Atmospherics Influence (Exhibit 4.13)
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Language Inference Juxtaposed imperatives Implied superiority
Incomplete comparisons Multiple comparisons
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Ad Stimuli Compared
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