Topic Draft-Household Consumers Demand
Topic Draft-Household Consumers Demand
Topic Draft-Household Consumers Demand
Peter and Olson (2010) stated it is important to recognize that influencing overt consumer
behavior is most critical. It thought consumers must perform more than one overt behavior
but not intermediate steps in the influence process, and then marketing strategies can work
well. Practically it is passive transformation process from organizational strategies.
Obviously, this is less possible currently that consumers are more free to choose what they
want and substitute commodities ubiquitously.
Herrmann and Röder (1997) had analyzed food demand at the retail level and explained how
traditional econometric variables such as prices, income and newly-concerned food demand
variables as nutrition, attitude affected consumers demand. The two important conclusions
come up that are firstly price elasticities of retail demand are strongly affected by the way
price changes are communicated inside and outside the stores and sociodemographic variables
as well as health and diet information significantly affect food consumption.
Bio-food industry focuses on the customer demand and choice is a marketing way-out
differentiating from the GM food and involved intensively-farmed food. This is also fitting
for the market orientation theory that is popular among researches, a lot of scholars stressed
on the importance of market orientation from upstream to downstream industry chain to
organizational strategies. Jaworski and Kohli (1993)‘s findings showed market orientation is
helped by the visibility of top management emphasis on market orientation, the presence of
reward systems for employees for getting data and its’ feedback to market needs. In addition,
different levels of market turbulence, competitive intensity, or technological turbulence robust
the relationship between market orientation and business performance. A recent book is
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turning to transform food and agribusiness around the customer from Lindgreen et al. (2010)
explained from the days the consumers had been taking agricultural food granted as simply
commodities to market-oriented practices are fully implemented, customer value are added
more and more through appropriate routes of exploitation, during which win-win
opportunities are formed. They do collected the cases proofs to suggest managers that they
could benefit from upstream to downstream through more value-added process transforming
to customers, however, industry benefit and consumers benefit is not going to crossing but
fluctuate at any point of consumers’ shifting demand. Looking back to the bio-food is really
occupied the much more of market share or still “tip of the iceberg” or long-held in niche
market? Need to be observed.
Accompanied by consumers’ demand and choice, the food safety and nutrition consideration
gradually instilled by public education, knowledge transferring and research suggestions. In
2006 Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) and World Health Organization (WHO)
indicated food safety problem potentially exists with risk in many countries due to the
complexity of food production systems and the ever-changing nature of international trade in
foods, FAO and WHO (2006). European Commission (2006) given the creation of an
inventory of existing food quality assurance scheme (FQAS) within the EU-25. The
international organizations, institutes of official authorities including FAO, WHO, European
Food Safety Authority (EFSA) and Council Regulation (EEC) set a lot of policies and
regulations following “From the Farm to the Fork” for food, particularly organic food, from
raw materials to production, quality inspection until final products those legislation decreases
the agility of the chain to respond to changes in demand but forces actors to ensure that the
information of organic origin is passed on from farmers to consumers as opinion from Kottila
and Rönni (2010).
Not only those quality perception affect consumers’ purchase decision, but also others
combined layout design relative to food package or labeling. Grebitus et al. (2009) specified
that consumers’ increasing knowledge about food technologies and changes in food labeling
regulation influence agribusiness’ future product development and marketing strategies.
Against those backgrounds, the proper marketing strategy is needed to be specialized in terms
of customers’ demand and choice. As Mulder (2007) indicated marketers should make
communication efforts that are based on information that offer a platform to talk to
consumers.
Integrated marketing communication (IMC) has a long-term argument from theory forming,
launching, and enlarging to practical applying. The cross-functional process for creating and
nourishing profitable relationships with customers and stakeholders by strategically
controlling or influencing all messages sent to these groups and encouraging data driven,
purposeful dialogue with them, as is definition from Tom Duncan wrote in IMC. It changes a
traditional marketing-mix: 4 P’s (product, price, place, promotion) to the 4 C’s customer, cost,
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convenience, communication which focus more customers and relationship-based marketing
effort.
The objective of this study is to how much extent the multivariable facts affecting the
household consumers’ demands on bio-food purchase under strict food quality inspection,
various package designs, distribute channels, and how bio-food market can communicate
more and more highly-diversified-demand consumers by scientific education, individual
health requirement, driving by anti-disease plan to implement proper strategies to survival in
huge agro-food market.
The primary methods firstly may be used to data collection from household consumers’ who
often go to supermarket and bio-food stores or using home-purchase. The necessitate
projecting data generalization is questionnaires and web-based survey. Some summarized
public data may from policy bodies officially. The Statistical Package for the Social Science
(SPSS) software computation is no doubt applied to categorized math result coming out.
Part I. Theoretical
3. Methodological Approach
3.1 Data Collection
3.2 Analysis
European Commission (2005). The Organic Farming in the European Union - Facts and
Figures. Report G2EW-JKD(2005). URL: http://ec.europa.eu/agriculture/organic/files/consumer-confidence/consumer-
demand/facts_en.pdf (accession Date 16.06.2010) http://ec.europa.eu/agriculture/organic/consumer-confidence/consumer-demand_en
FAO and WHO (2006). Food safety risk analysis - A guide for national food safety
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Kottila, M.-R., Rönni, P. (2010). Communication Between Actors of Food Chains: Case
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