Consumer Decision Making Process
Consumer Decision Making Process
Experience
Post-decision Behavior
Purchase
Output
1. Trial Post-purchase Evaluation
2. Repeat purchase
Generic Decision Making Model
Problem recognition
Search
Alternative evaluation
Choice
Post-acquisition evaluation
Alternative Perspectives on
Consumer Decision Making
Decision Making: Emphasizes the rational, information
processing approach to decision making
Experiential Perspective: Emphasizes that consumers
are “feelers” as well as thinkers, that consumers are
symbolic, and that consumers buy in order to obtain
sensations and emotions - impulse purchase,
compulsive consumption, variety seeking
Behavioral Influence: Contingencies of the
environment influence behavior, e.g., lighting, physical
arrangement of space, strong reinforcers.
Three Perspective on Decision Making
1. Traditional Decision Making
A. High Involvement Decisions
Problem Extensive Extended Complex Acquisition
Recognition Search alternative choice Evaluation
Evaluation
B. Low Involvement Decisions
Problem Limited Minimal Simple Acquisition
Recognition Search alternative Choice evaluation
Evaluation Process
Perspective in decision making
Experiential Perspective
Problem
Recognition Search for Alternative Choice Acquisition
(Affect driven) Affect based evaluation ( affect based) evaluation
Solution (Comparison
of affect)
3. Behavioral Influence
Nature of Discrepancy
Problem Recognized
satisfaction
Marketing Strategy for Problem
Recognition
Marketing managers have four concerns related
to problem recognition:
1. They need to know what problems consumers
are facing
2. Must know how to develop the marketing mix to
solve consumer problems
3. They occasionally want to cause consumers to
recognize problems
4. There are times when managers desire to
suppress problem recognition among consumers
Marketing Strategy for Problem Recognition
Measuring consumer problems
i. Intuition: analyze a given product category and logically
determine where improvements could be made
ii. Survey:
iii. Focus group
a. Activity analysis: determine what problems, according to
consumers, occur during the performance of the activity
b. Product analysis: problems with purchase or use of
product/brand
c. Problem analysis: starts with list of problems and ask
respondents to indicate which activities/ brands are associated
with those problems
d. Human Factor Research: determine human capabilities in such
areas as vision, strength , fatigue and effect on these capabilities
by lighting, temperature, and sound
Marketing Strategy for Problem Recognition
Reacting to problem recognition:
Product development, modifying channels of
distribution, changing pricing policy, revising
advertising campaign
Each firm must be aware of the consumer
problems it can solve, which consumers have
these problems, and situations in which these
problems arise
Activating Problem Recognition
Generic versus Selective Problem Recognition
Marketing Strategy for Problem Recognition
i. Generic problem recognition
Involves a discrepancy that a variety of brands within
a product category can reduce. A firm will attempt to
influence generic problem :
a. It is early in the product life cycle
b. The firm has a very high percentage of the
market
c. External search after problem
recognition is apt to be limited
d. It is an industry-wide cooperative effort
ii. Selective problem recognition:
Firms attempt to cause selective problem recognition
to gain or maintain market share.
Approaches to activating problem recognition
Awareness set:
alternative consumer Unawareness Set:
aware of Alternatives not known
Specific
alternatives Alternatives considered
Purchased but not purchased
Information Sources for
Purchase Decision Information
sources
Internal External
information Information
Actively Passively
acquired Active Search
acquired
PERSONAL IMPERSONAL
Compensatory rule “Iselected the computer that came out best when I
balanced the good ratings against the bad ratings.”