Five Stages of Consumer Behavior: A. Problem Recognition: Perceiving A Need
Five Stages of Consumer Behavior: A. Problem Recognition: Perceiving A Need
Behind the visible act of making a purchase lies a decision process that must be investigated.
The purchase decision process is the stages a buyer passes through in making choices about which produ
1. problem recognition,
2. information search,
Five Stages
3. alternative evaluation,
of
4. purchase decision, and
Consumer Behavior
5. post-purchase behavior.
two steps of information Internal search Scanning one’s memory to recall previous experiences with
Often sufficient for frequently purchased products.
Do not buy
E. Postpurchase Behavior: Value in Consumption or Use
After buying a product, the consumer compares it with expectations and is either satisfied or dissatisfied.
Satisfaction or dissatisfaction affects
o consumer value perceptions
o consumer communications
o repeat-purchase behavior.
Many firms work to produce positive postpurchase communications among consumers and contribute to
between sellers and buyers.
Cognitive Dissonance. The feelings of postpurchase psychological tension or anxiety a consumer often ex
Firms often use ads or follow-up calls from salespeople in this postpurchase stage to try to convince buye
decision.
o is expensive,
o can have serious personal consequences, or
o could reflect on one’s social image.
2. Personality
o A person's consistent behavior or responses to recurring situations.
o Research suggests that key traits affect brand and product-type preferences.
o Cross-cultural analysis also suggests that residents of different countries have a national character, or a distinct
personality characteristics common among people of a country or society.
o Personality characteristics are often revealed in a person’s self-concept, which is the way people see themselve
way they believe others see them.
B. Perception
o The process by which an individual uses information to create a meaningful picture of the world by
selecting,
organizing
interpreting
o Perception is important because people selectively perceive what they want and it affects how people see risks
purchase.
1. Selective Perception
o Filtering
exposure,
comprehension, and
Selective perception
retention
o in the human brain’s attempt to organize and interpret information.
o Consumers can pay attention to messages that are consistent with their own attitudes a
Selective exposure o Consumers can ignore messages that are inconsistent.
o Consumers do not remember all the information they see, read, or hear.
Selective retention
o Consumers see or hear messages without being aware of them.
o This is a hotly debated issue with more popular appeal than scientific support.
Subliminal perception
o Research suggests that such messages have limited effects on behavior
2. Perceived Risk
o Anxieties felt
Consumes cannot anticipate the outcomes of a purchase
Believe that there may be negative consequences.
o Marketers try to reduce a consumer's perceived risk and encourage purchases by strategies such as providing
Free trial of a product
Securing endorsements from influential people
Providing warranties and guarantees.
C. Learning
o Those behaviors that result from
Repeated experience
Thinking.
1. Behavioral Learning
o The process of developing automatic responses to a situation built up
o through repeated exposure to it.
2. Cognitive learning
o Involves making connections between two or more ideas
o or simply observing the outcomes of others’ behaviors
o and adjusting one's accordingly.
3. Brand loyalty
o Is a favorable attitude and consistent purchase of a single brand over time.
o Brand loyalty differs across countries
D. Values, Beliefs, and Attitudes
1. Attitude Formation
o A learned predisposition to respond to an object or class of objects in a consistently favorable or unf
way.
Attitude
o Shaped by our values and beliefs, which are learned.
o personally or socially preferable modes of conduct or states of existence that are enduring.
Values
o consumer's subjective perception of how well a product or brand performs on different attributes.
Beliefs
2. Attitude Change
o Changing beliefs about the extent to which a brand has certain
Approaches
attributes.
to try to
o Changing the perceived importance of attributes.
change consumer
o Adding new attributes to the product.
attitudes
E. Lifestyle
Self-orientation Resources
o Three patterns of attitudes and activities that help people reinforce their social self- o income
image. o education
o The three patterns are oriented toward o self-
principles, confidence
status, o health
action. o eagernes
buy
o intelligen
o energy le
A. Personal Influence
B. Reference Groups
Reference groups are people to whom an individual looks as a basis for self-appraisal or as a source of personal
groups have an important influence on the purchase of luxury products but not of necessities. :
Membership o one to which a person actually belongs
group
o one with which a person wishes to be ide
Three groups have clear marketing Aspiration group
implications
o one from which a person wants to mainta
Dissociative
differences in values or behaviors
group
C. Family Influence
o Family influences on consumer behavior result from three sources:
consumer socialization
passage through the family life cycle
decision making within the family.
Consumer Consumer socialization is the process by which people acquire the skills, knowledge, and attit
Socialization as consumers
o
o
o The distinct phases that a family progresses through from childr
Family Life formation to retirement o
Cycle o Each phase bringing with it identifiable purchasing behaviors. childr
o
o
D. Social Class
o The relatively permanent, homogeneous divisions in a society into which people sharing similar v
behavior are grouped.
o Determinants of social class include
occupation,
source of income (not level of income)
education.
o Social class is a basis for identifying and reaching particularly good prospects for products and se
Upper classes are targeted by companies for items such as financial investments, expensiv
Middle classes represent a target market for home improvement centers and automobile p
Lower classes are targeted for products such as sports and scandal magazines.