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Attitudes, Intentions, and Behavior MKT 750 Dr. West.

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Presentation on theme: "Attitudes, Intentions, and Behavior MKT 750 Dr. West."— Presentation transcript:

1 Attitudes, Intentions, and Behavior MKT 750 Dr. West

2 Agenda Forecasting the Future Understanding Attitudes & Behavior Building Brands Preparing for Tivo case

3 Predicting Behavior Attitudes Preferences Intentions Behavior Social Norms

4 Consumer Attitudes Attitudes: represent what we like and dislike Preferences: represent attitudes toward one object in relation to another

5 Consumer Attitudes Just because consumers prefer brand X doesn’t mean they will necessarily buy brand X

6 Attitude toward the object: How do you feel about Dell computers? Dislike very much        Like very much Neutral Point Unfavorabl e Attitude Favorable Attitude Coding Options: (-3, -2, -1, 0,1, 2, 3)

7 Attitude Objects: A o Product Company Retailer Product attributes Brand associations (logo, symbol) Advertising and spokespersons

8 AntecedentsConsequences A company A brand A product Intention Behavior A store A ad A attributes

9 Elements of Attitudes Beliefs are subjective judgments about the relationship between two or more things e.g. Product Quality, Reliability, Nutritional Value Beliefs about a product’s attributes and their evaluation determine the favorability of one’s attitude toward the product

10 Social Norms Social Norms Theory of Reasoned Action: A Multi-Attribute Model Evaluation of Product Attributes Brand Beliefs Overall Product Evaluation Intention to Buy Behavior n A o =  b i e i + SN (Fishbein & Azjen) i =1 (e i )(b i )(A o )(BI)(B)

11 Running Shoes Shock absorbent +2+2+1 -1 Price less than $50 -1-3-1 +3 Durability +3+3+1 -1 Comfort +3+2+3 +1 Desired color +1+1+3 +3 Arch support +2+3+1 -2 Total score Brand Brand Brand Attribute Evaluation (e i ) A B C Beliefs (b i )

12 Running Shoes Durability +3+3+1 -1 Comfort +3+2+3 +1 Shock absorbent +2+2+1 -1 Arch support +2+3+1 -2 Desired color +1+1+3 +3 Price less than $50 -1-3-1 +3 Total score+29+22 - 6 Brand Brand Brand Attribute Evaluation (e i ) A B C Beliefs (b i ) (9) (3) (-3) (6) (9) (3) (4) (2) (-2) (6) (2) (-4) (1) (3) (3) (3) (3) (-3)

13 Stimulus Importance-Performance Grid HIGH LOW POOR GOOD POOR GOOD Neglected Opportunity Competitive Disadvantage Competitive Advantage Head-to-head competition Null Opportunity False Alarm False Advantage False Competition Poor Good Poor Good Poor Good Poor Good Attribute Our Competitor’sSimultaneous Importance Performance Performance Result

14 Benefits of Multi-attribute Model Diagnostic power-- examines WHY consumers like/dislike your product Segmentation based on attribute importance Competitive analysis Forecasting sales, new product development, persuasion strategies

15 Implications for Attitude Change Changing beliefs (b i ) Cadillac (Heritage Reborn) Changing attribute importance (e i ) Airbags & Safety Antibacterial soap

16 Implications for Attitude Change Add a new attribute Carbohydrates in beer?

17 Influencing Consumer Attitudes: Beliefs (b i ) are easier to change than desired benefits (e i ). Attitudes are easier to change when Involvement with the product category is low because attitudes are held with less confidence and commitment They are based on subjective or second hand information rather than personal experience

18 Building a New Brand Positioning Differentiation Adoption Product Life Cycle

19 Time Sales Accelerating Growth: build share, WOM Decelerating Growth: new segments, brand extensions Decline: harvest or rejuvenate Profit Emergence: create awareness and induce trial Maturity: control costs, increase efficiency, monitor competitors and trends

20 Product Adoption Process Types of Consumers 2½% Innovators 13½% Early Adopters 34% Early Majority 34% Late Majority 16% Laggards

21 Factors Affecting Adoption: The ACCORD Model Advantage – the degree to which the product appears superior Compatibility – matches the values and experiences of users Complexity – ease of understanding and usage Observability – the benefits of use observable and describable to others Riskiness – negative outcomes can be foreseen Divisibility – can the product be tried on a limited basis

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23 Launching TiVo Analyze the situation from the consumer standpoint. What is TiVo? What factors facilitate or inhibit TiVo’s adoption? Who is TiVo best suited for? Segmentation and targeting

24 Launching TiVo Analyze the situation from the networks, the advertisers, and the cable/satellite companies perspective: What do these stakeholders want TiVo to be?

25 Launching TiVo Think about the competition What are Microsoft’s potential strengths and weaknesses in this market? Evaluate Tivo’s action plan as given at the end of the case?

26 Tivo Commercials Network Executive Cops Educational TV Earl – my way

27 Assignment Read Chapters 10, 13, & 15 Write-up the Tivo case


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