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Published byHeather Todd Modified over 9 years ago
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Consumer Markets Purchasers and individuals in households Purchases are for personal consumption, not profit Business Markets Individuals and groups that purchase products for resale, direct use to produce other products, or use in daily business operations Purchasers classed as producers, resellers, government, and institutional markets
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Buying Behavior –The decision processes and acts of people involved in buying and using products Consumer Buying Behavior –Buying behavior of people who purchase products for personal use and not for business purposes
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Model of Consumer Behavior
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What Influences Consumer Behavior? Cultural Factors Social Factors Personal Factors
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Subcultures Nationalities Religions Racial groups Geographic regions
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Social Classes Upper uppers Lower uppers Upper middles Middle class Working class Upper lowers Lower lowers
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Social Factors Reference groups Social roles Statuses Family
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Roles and Status What degree of status is associated with various occupational roles?
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Personal Factors Age Values Life cycle stage Occupation Personality Self- concept Wealth Lifestyle
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The Family Life Cycle
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Key Psychological Processes Motivation MemoryLearning Perception
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Motivation Freud’s Theory Behavior is guided by subconscious motivations Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs Behavior is driven by the lowest, unmet need Herzberg’s Two-Factor Theory Behavior is guided by motivating and hygiene factors
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Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs
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Herzberg’s Two-Factor Theory
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Perception Selective Attention Subliminal Perception Selective Retention Selective Distortion
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Learning Changes in an individual’s thought processes and behavior caused by information and experience Behaviors that produce satisfying consequences are likely to be repeated. Consumers learn about products by experiencing the products personally. gaining additional product knowledge from seller-provided information. indirect information from other purchasers/users
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Level of Involvement and Consumer Problem-Solving Processes Level of Involvement –An individual’s intensity of interest in a product and the importance of the product for that person Routinized Response Behavior –The process used when buying frequently purchased, low-cost items that require little search-and-decision effort
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Limited Problem Solving –The process that buyers use when purchasing products occasionally or when they need information about an unfamiliar brand in a familiar product category Extended Problem Solving –The process employed when purchasing unfamiliar, expensive, or infrequently bought products Impulse Buying –An unplanned buying behavior resulting from a powerful urge to buy something immediately
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Consumer Buying Process Problem Recognition Information Search Evaluation Purchase Decision Postpurchase Behavior
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Consumer Buying Decision Process Problem Recognition –Occurs when a buyer becomes aware of a difference between a desired state and an actual condition –May occur rapidly or slowly Information Search –Internal search Buyers search their memories for information about products that might solve their problem –External search Buyers seek information from outside sources
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Evaluation of Alternatives –Consideration set A group of brands that the buyer views as alternatives for possible purchase –Evaluative criteria Objective and subjective characteristics that are important to a buyer –Framing the alternatives Describing the alternatives and their attributes in a certain manner to make a particular characteristic appear more important especially to the inexperienced buyer
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Purchase –Choosing the product or brand to be bought based on the outcome of the evaluation stage –The choice of seller may affect the final product selection. –Factors such as terms of sale, price, delivery, and warranties may affect the sale.
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Postpurchase Evaluation –Cognitive dissonance A buyer’s doubts shortly after a purchase about whether the decision was the right one –Buyers are mostly likely to seek reassurance after the purchase of an expensive, high- involvement product
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