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Chapter 1 Consumers Rule

Chapter 1 Consumers Rule. By Michael R. Solomon. Consumer Behavior Buying, Having, and Being Sixth Edition. Opening Vignette: Gail. What useful ways can marketers categorize Gail as a consumer? How do others influence Gail’s purchase decisions?

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Chapter 1 Consumers Rule

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  1. Chapter 1Consumers Rule By Michael R. Solomon Consumer Behavior Buying, Having, and Being Sixth Edition

  2. Opening Vignette: Gail • What useful ways can marketers categorize Gail as a consumer? • How do others influence Gail’s purchase decisions? • What role did brand play in Gail’s surfing habits? • What other factors influence Gail’s evaluation of products?

  3. What is Consumer Behavior? • Consumer Behavior: • The study of the processes involved when individuals or groups select, purchase, use, or dispose of products, services ideas, or experiences to satisfy needs and desires • Role Theory: • Identifies consumers as actors on the marketplace stage • Consumer Behavior is a Process: • Exchange: A transaction in which two or more organizations give and receive something of value

  4. Some Issues That Arise During Stages in the Consumption Process Figure 1.1

  5. Consumer Behavior InvolvesMany Different Actors • Consumer: • A person who identifies a need or desire, makes a purchase, and then disposes of the product • Many people may be involved in this sequence of events. • Purchaser / User / Influencer • Consumers may take the form of organizations or groups.

  6. Consumers’ Impact onMarketing Strategy • Market Segmentation: • Identifies groups of consumers who are similar to one another in one or more ways and then devises marketing strategies that appeal to one or more groups • Demographics: • Statistics that measure observable aspects of a population • Ex.: Age, Gender, Family Structure, Social Class and Income, Race and Ethnicity, Lifestyle, and Geography

  7. A Lesson Learned • Nike was forced to pull this advertisement for a running shoe after disabilities rights groups claimed the ads were offensive. • How could Nike have done a better job of getting its message across without offending a powerful demographic?

  8. Market Segmentation Finely-tuned marketing segmentation strategies allow marketers to reach only those consumers likely to be interested in buying their products.

  9. Consumers’ Impact onMarketing Strategy (cont.) • Relationship Marketing: Building Bonds with Consumers • Relationship marketing: • The strategic perspective that stresses the long-term, human side of buyer-seller interactions • Database marketing: • Tracking consumers’ buying habits very closely, and then crafting products and messages tailored precisely to people’s wants and needs based on this information

  10. Marketing’s Impact on Consumers • Marketing and Culture: • Popular Culture: • Music, movies, sports, books, celebrities, and other forms of entertainment consumed by the mass market. • Marketers play a significant role in our view of the world and how we live in it.

  11. Popular Culture Companies often create product icons to develop an identity for their products. Many made-up creatures and personalities, such as Mr. Clean, the Michelin tire man and the Pillsbury Doughboy, are widely recognized figures in popular culture.

  12. Marketing’s Impact on Consumers: The Meaning of Consumption • The Meaning of Consumption: • People often buy products not for what they do, but for what they mean. • Types of relationships a person may have with a product: • Self-concept attachment • Nostalgic attachment • Interdependence • Love

  13. Discussion Question • What kind of statement does the Nike Swoosh make?

  14. Marketing’s Impact on Consumers: The Meaning of Consumption (cont.) • Consumption includes intangible experiences, ideas and services in addition to tangible objects. • Four types of Consumption Activities: • Consuming as experience • Consuming as integration • Consuming as classification • Consuming as play

  15. Marketing’s Impact on Consumers: The Global Consumer • By 2006, the majority of people on earth will live in urban centers. • Sophisticated marketing strategies contribute to a global consumer culture. • Even smaller companies look to expand overseas. • Globalization has resulted in varied perceptions of the United States (both positive and negative).

  16. The Global Consumer American products like Levi jeans are in demand around the world.

  17. Marketing’s Impact on Consumers: Virtual Consumption • The Digital Revolution is one of the most significant influences on consumer behavior. • Electronic marketing increases convenience by breaking down the barriers of time and location. • U-commerce: • The use of ubiquitous networks that will slowly but surely become part of us (i.e., wearable computers, customized advertisements beamed to cell phones, etc.) • Cyberspace has created a revolution in C2C (consumer-to-consumer) activity.

  18. Virtual Brand Communities

  19. Blurred BoundariesMarketing and Reality • Marketers and consumers coexist in a complicated two-way relationship. • It’s increasingly difficult for consumers to discern the boundary between the fabricated world and reality. • Marketing influences both popular culture and consumer perceptions of reality.

  20. Blurred Boundaries Marketing managers often borrow imagery from other forms of popular culture to connect with an audience. This line of syrups adapts the “look” of a pulp detective novel.

  21. Marketing Ethics and Public Policy • Business Ethics: • Rules of conduct that guide actions in the marketplace • The standards against which most people in the culture judge what is right and what is wrong, good or bad • Notions of right and wrong differ among people, organizations, and cultures.

  22. Needs and Wants:Do Marketers Manipulate Consumers? • Consumerspace • Do marketers create artificial needs? • Need: A basic biological motive • Want: One way that society has taught us that need can be satisfied • Are advertising and marketing necessary? • Economics of information perspective: Advertising is an important source of consumer information. • Do marketers promise miracles? • Advertisers simply don’t know enough to manipulate people.

  23. Discussion Question • This ad was created by the American Association of Advertising Agencies to counter charges that ads create artificial needs. • Do you agree with the premise of the ad? Why or why not?

  24. Public Policy and Consumerism • Consumer efforts in the U.S. have contributed to the establishment of federal agencies to oversee consumer-related activities. • Department of Agriculture • Federal Trade Commission • Food and Drug Administration • Securities and Exchange Commission • Environmental Protection Agency • Culture Jamming: • A strategy to disrupt efforts by the corporate world to dominate our cultural landscape

  25. The Consumer Product Safety Commission

  26. Culture Jamming • Adbusters Quarterly is a Canadian magazine devoted to culture jamming. This mock ad skewers Benetton.

  27. Consumerism and Consumer Research • Kennedy’s “Declaration of Consumer Rights” (1962) • Green Marketing: • When a firm chooses to protect or enhance the natural environment as it goes about its activities • Reducing wasteful packaging • Donations to charity • Social Marketing: • Using marketing techniques to encourage positive activities (e.g. literacy) and to discourage negative activities (e.g. drunk driving)

  28. Consumer Related Issues • UNICEF sponsored this advertising campaign against child labor. The field of consumer behavior plays a role in addressing important consumer issues such as child exploitation.

  29. The Dark Side of Consumer Behavior • Consumer Terrorism: • An example: Susceptibility of the nation’s food supply to bioterrorism • Addictive Consumption: • Consumer addiction: • A physiological and/or psychological dependency on products or services • Compulsive Consumption: • Repetitive shopping as an antidote to tension, anxiety, depression, or boredom

  30. The Dark Side of Consumer Behavior (cont.) • Consumed Consumers: • People who are used or exploited, willingly or not, for commercial gain in the marketplace • Illegal Activities: • Consumer Theft: • Shrinkage: The industry term for inventory and cash losses from shoplifting and employee theft • Anticonsumption: • Events in which products and services are deliberately defaced or mutilated

  31. Consumer BehaviorAs a Field of Study • Consumer behavior only recently a formal field of study • Interdisciplinary influences on the study of consumer behavior • Consumer behavior studied by researchers from diverse backgrounds • Consumer phenomena can be studied in different ways and on different levels

  32. Journal of Consumer Research

  33. The Pyramid of Consumer Behavior Figure 1.2

  34. Consumer Behavior Disciplines • The Issue of Strategic Focus • Should CB have a strategic focus or be studied as a pure social science? • The Issue of Two Perspectives on Consumer Research • Positivism (modernism): • Paradigm that emphasizes the supremacy of human reason and the objective search for truth through science • Interpretivism (postmodernism): • Paradigm that emphasizes the importance of symbolic, subjective experience and meaning is in the mind of the person

  35. Positivist vs. Interpretivist Approaches to CB

  36. Taking it From Here:The Plan of the Book • Section I – Consumer Behavior • Section II – Consumers as Individuals • Section III – Consumers as Decision Makers • Section IV – Consumers and Subcultures • Section V – Consumers and Culture

  37. The Wheel of Consumer Behavior Figure 1.3

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