Week 1 Introduction To CB
Week 1 Introduction To CB
There is only one boss the customer. And he can fire everyone from the Chairman down
Sam Walton, Founder, WalMart Stores
when individuals or groups select, purchase, use, or dispose of products, services, ideas, or experiences to satisfy needs and desires (Solomon,2006)
in when evaluating, acquiring, using or disposing of goods and services Loudon and Della Bitta Those acts of individuals directly involved in obtaining, using, and disposing of economic goods and services, including the decision processes that precede and determine these acts JF Engel
Definition of consumer
A consumer is a person who identifies a need or desire, makes a
Blackwell 2006
(Blackwell 2005)
Marketing strategy
Encourage consumers to see that existing does not match desired Provide information when and where consumers are likely to search
Example
Create TV commercial showing excitement of owning new car Advertising slots with high target market viewership New car brochures for dealers Exciting easy to navigate websites Research most important choice criteria Create advertising to communicate superiority on key choice criteria
Alternative evaluation
Understand how consumers compare brands and communicate own brand superiority
Product choice/purchase
Understand how consumers choose (choice heuristics) and provide communications that encourage brand decision
Swiss made , Vorsprung durch technik (Country of origin) Long history of the brand Recommended by experts Provide scientific evidence
storing of data Preferences develop based on more limited use of information Outcomes from purchase decisions, whether satisfaction or dissonance shape future purchase decisions
Influencer
Buyer
A person who intentionally, or unintentionally influences the purchase decision , the actual purchase and/or the use of the product or service
User
other of how customers behave and of the consequences their reactions to product, price, promotion and distribution strategies are likely to have for the attainment of corporate objectives. In affluent competitive economies successful marketing depends above all on matching the marketing mix which results from the integration of these strategies to the willingness of consumers to buy and in doing so more effectively than ones rivals (Gordon Foxhall)
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and make systematic use of the information available to them. We do not subscribe to the view that human social behaviour is controlled by unconscious motives or overpowering desires, rather people consider the implications of their actions before they decide to engage or not engage in a given behaviour
Ajzen and Fishbein (1980)
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EVALUATING alternative options for need satisfaction DEVELOPING beliefs, attitudes, opinions re purchase intention
ACTING translate to behavioural intention RE-EVALUATING extent of satisfaction
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processes is the key to retail success. Psychologists have identified that we have two main shopping modes: alpha and beta. In the alpha state, attention is fully engaged and the decision process is conscious. But 80% of our shopping is carried out in beta mode..(when)..all decision making, orientation and interaction is subconsciously controlled.
Siemon Scamell-Katz (2002)
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SOLVING
LIMITED PROBLEM
SOLVING
HABITUAL PROBLEM
and close examination of alternatives Reduced search and evaluation based on prior knowledge of product/market Repeat purchase with little or no evaluation
SOLVING
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PRICE
service, warranties
Price awareness, brand/price sensitivity, price
PLACE PROMOTION
image
How to promote, gain attention,
communicate message, encourage trial, encourage repurchase, build loyalty, purchase influences
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and positive WOM Dissatisfaction more likely to lead to brand switching, complaints and negative WOM Expectancy disconfirmation with performance approach (Oliver 1997) and the Balancing Paradigm (Fournier and Mick 1999) are two current theories of consumer satisfaction
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Disconfirmation
Satisfaction/dissatisfaction
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value (maximise perception of benefits/minimise perception of costs/minimise perception of risk) Consumers make purchase decisions to solve problems and reduce dissonance (store choice and product choice). Marketing activities should aid consumer decision making. Purchase behaviour is driven by multiple motives and the marketing offer should deliver multiple sources of satisfaction
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