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Bell Ringer #1 - Chapter 3 Create a list of disposable/need expenses and another for discretionary/want expenses using the items listed below. Electric Bill Anniversary Present Make – up Gas for your car Tickets to Football Game New Jeans Lunch at Runza Rent Payment Groceries Lunch Money for Child
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Chapter 3 Your Role as a Consumer
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Consumption, Income, and Decision Making Video
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Vocab: Consumer: any person or group that buys or uses goods and services to satisfy personal needs and wants. The ability to consume depends on available income and how much of it a person chooses to spend now or save.
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INCOME DISPOSABLEDISCRETIONARY Income remaining for a person to spend or save after all taxes have been paid. Spend on: ▫Food ▫Clothing ▫Shelter ▫Bills associated with shelter ▫ie. necessities Money income a person has left to spend on extras after necessities have been bought. Examples: ▫Luxury items ▫Entertainment ▫“Non-necessities” ▫Or – put into savings
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VS 1 Consumer decision making deals with consumers’ choices about how to spend their income.
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What are four things that can make a difference in a person’s earning power? 1.Education 2.Occupation 3.Experience 4.Health
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Decision Making as a Consumer Involve three main considerations: 1.Scarce resources ▫Income & time ▫Research the product – the time and money you spend on the product ultimately cannot be used for anything else.
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2. Opportunity Cost – see page 68 (figure 3.2) ▫If you pick a high quality product over a medium or low-quality, you will pay more money. ▫What features are important to you? ▫Is it a need or want? ▫Is it worth paying the extra money? Chart in Motion
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3. Rational Choice —choosing the alternative that has the greatest perceived value from among comparable- quality products. Each person’s value system is different.
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Figure 2
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Activity—Rational Choice Choose a product you like and create two advertisements. The first ad should emphasize why buying this product is a rational choice. The second ad should appeal to the fun or light side of the product and the desire to buy it, even if it’s not a rational purchase. Example-Coke (thirst—rational & drink b/c everyone else does–more fun)
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Three Basic Buying Principles 1.Gathering information 2.Using advertising wisely 3.Comparison shopping
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Gathering Information Shopping tips: o You should obtain only as much information as is worthwhile. o Ask salespeople for accurate information. o Use a standard search engine on the Internet, and visit various sites in order to compare different information. o Read reviews other people have written about different brands and models of the product
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Before making purchases, especially of big- ticket items, consumers should gather information and compare products from different sources.
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Using Advertising Wisely competitive advertising: advertising that attempts to persuade consumers that a product is different from and superior to any other
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informative advertising: advertising that benefits consumers by providing useful information about a product Look at page 72-73
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Be Aware of Deceptive Advertising Bait and Switch-- ad that attracts consumers with a low-priced product, then tries to sell them a higher-priced product
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FYI Studies reveal that Americans are bombarded with 3,000 to 5,000 advertising messages a day. The assault is so overwhelming that people scarcely notice most of these messages.
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Comparison Shopping getting information on the types and prices of products available from different stores and companies Warranty-the promise of a manufacturer to repair or replace a product within a certain period of time if it is faulty
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Comparison shopping continued… Brand nameGeneric Word, picture, or logo on a product that helps consumers distinguish it from similar products. General name for a product rather than a specific brand name given by the manufacturer.
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Decision Making Process – 5 Steps 1.Identify the Problem 2.List the Alternatives 3.Determine the Pros and Cons 4.Make the best Decision 5.Evaluate the Decision
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With A Neighbor Share with a neighbor the big decision you wrote about in your notes. Tell them what your alternatives were Tell them which decision you made Tell them how it turned out – would you make the same decision again? What would you do differently?
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Decision Making Con’t People often make a chart or list to help them make decisions. Let’s practice using the chart on the back of your note sheet using the 5 steps. ▫Identify the problem – Need to choose a college ▫List the alternatives – UNL, UNK, SCC, Kansas State, Harvard
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Decision Making practice con’t Determine Pros and Cons ▫List criteria –Tuition cost is $85 per credit hour or less, Must have 2000 students or less, Must have dorms and cafeteria plans, Must be within a 2 hour drive of Lincoln, Have a marching band program, Have an abroad program for the Junior and Senior year ▫Check Alternatives and Criteria for pros and cons
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UNL $85 per credit hour Has 8,000 students Has dorm/cafeterias for students Less than a 2 hour drive Has a top marching band program No abroad studies programs
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UNK $85 per credit hour Has 1700 students Less than a 2 hour drive from Lincoln Has dorm/cafeteria programs Has a marching band program Has an abroad studies program
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SCC $60 per credit hour Has 1000 students Less than a 2 hour drive from Lincoln No dorm program has a cafeteria No marching band program No study abroad program
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Kansas State College $125 per credit hour (out of state rate) Has dorm/cafeteria plans More than a 2 hour drive Has 2,000 students Has marching program Has an abroad study program
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Harvard $275 per credit hour Has 3,500 students Much more than a 2 hour drive Has a dorm/food program Has a marching band Has a study abroad program
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Decision Making Practice con’t Make the best Decision. ▫? Evaluate the Decision ▫Best college experience ever!
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