(Brief) Chapter 7
(Brief) Chapter 7
(Brief) Chapter 7
Freudian Systems
The id is about immediate gratification, selfish and illogical.
It operates according to the pleasure principle
The ego relies on the symbolism in products to compromise between the demands of the id
and the prohibitions of the superego.
The connection between product symbolism and motivation: The product stands for, or
represents, a consumer’s true goal, which is socially unacceptable or unattainable
Many popular applications of Freud’s ideas revolve around the use of objects that resemble
sex organs
Most Freudian applications in marketing relate to a product’s supposed sexual symbolism.
He believed communicate repressed desires in the form of symbolically rich stories.
For example: some analysts speculate that owning a sports car is a substitute for sexual
gratification..
Motivational Research
Motivational Research borrowed Freudian ideas to understand the deeper meaning of
product and advertisement.
Motivational research had great appeal to at least some marketers for several reasons:
● Motivational research is less expensive to conduct than large-scale
● The knowledge a company derives from motivational research may help it develop
marketing communications that appeal to deep-seated needs
● Some of the findings seem intuitively plausible after the fact
=> The approach is most useful
some ad agencies today still use some forms of motivational research
Neo-Freudian Theories
Neo-Freudian are Freud’s colleagues and students who felt that an individual’s personality is
more influenced by how he or she handles relationships with others than by how he or she
resolves sexual conflicts.
Karen Horney
Karen Horney described people as
● compliant: moving toward others (are more likely to gravitate toward name-brand
products)
● detached: away from others (are more likely to be tea drinkers)
● aggressive: against others (preferred brands with a strong masculine orientation)
Other well-known neo-Freudians include:
● Alfred Adler proposed that a prime motivation is to overcome feelings of inferiority
relative to others
● Harry Stack Sullivan focused on how personality evolves to reduce anxiety in social
relationships
Carl Jung
He went on to develop analytical psychology:
● believed that the cumulative experiences of past generations shape who we are
today
● proposed that we each share a collective unconscious, a storehouse of memories we
inherit from our ancestors
These shared memories create archetypes which involve themes, such as birth, death, or
the devil.
Jung’s ideas may seem a bit far-fetched, but advertising messages do in fact often include
archetypes.
For example: Young & Rubicam (Y&R), a major advertising agency, uses the archetype
approach in its BrandAsset® Archetypes model.
Trait Theory
The Big Five Personality Traits
The most widely recognized approach to measuring personality traits is the so-called
Big Five (also known as the Neo-Personality Inventory). This is a set of five
dimensions that form the basis of personality:
● openness to experience,
● conscientiousness,
● extroversion,
● agreeableness,
● neuroticism
Problems with Trait Theory in Consumer Research
Because consumer researchers categorize large numbers of consumers according to
whether they exhibit various traits, we can apply this approach to segment markets
However, marketing researchers simply have not been able to predict consumers’
behaviors on the basis of measured personality traits. These are some logical
explanations for these less-than-stellar results:
A lifestyle defines a pattern of consumption that reflects a person’s choices of how to spend his or her
time and money, and these choices are essential to define consumer identity.
Lifestyle defines a pattern of consumption that reflects a person’s choices of how to spend his or her
time and money.
Thus, people, products, and settings combine to express a consumption style, as Figure 7.3
diagrams.
Product Complementarity and Co-Branding Strategies
Product complementarity occurs when the symbolic meanings of different products relate to one
another.
Consumers use these sets of products we call a consumption constellation to define, communicate,
and perform social roles.
Psychographics
Psychographics go beyond simple demographics to help marketers understand and reach different
consumer segments.
Buyer Personas
When marketers combine personality variables with knowledge of lifestyle preferences, they have a
powerful lens they can focus on consumer segments. It’s common to create a fictional profile of a
“core customer” who inspires product design and communications decisions.
Demographics allow us to describe who buys, but psychographics tells us why they do.
• A lifestyle profile
• A product-specific profile
AIOs
Psychographic techniques help marketers to identify their heavy users. Then they
can better understand how they relate to the brand and the benefits they derive from
it
Marketers constantly search for new insights so they can identify and reach groups of
consumers united by common lifestyles. To meet this need, many research
companies and advertising agencies develop their own lifestyle segmentation
typologies.
Core Values
What sets cultures apart is the relative importance, or ranking, of these universal
values. This set of rankings constitutes a culture’s value system.
Not every individual will endorse these values equally; in some cases, values may even
seem to contradict one another.
It is usually possible to identify a general set of core values that uniquely define a
culture.
Some analysts argue that our focus on acquiring physical objects is shifting a bit
toward the consumption of experiences instead.
Culture values?
We term the process of learning the beliefs and behaviors endorsed by one’s own
culture enculturation.
The process of learning the value system and behaviors of another culture is called
acculturation.
Socialization agents, including parents, friends, and teachers, impart these beliefs to
us.
Our possessions play a central role in our lives, and our desire to accumulate them
shapes our value systems.
One study found that when people who score high on this value fear the prospect of
dying, they form even stronger connections to brands.Another study reported that
consumers who are “love-smitten” with their possessions tend to use these
relationships to compensate for loneliness and a lack of affiliation with social
networks.
Some prominent marketers are subtly shifting their emphasis from bragging rights
and toward providing other benefits to prospective owners.
Provenance: Shoppers are willing to pay more for an item when they know exactly
where it comes from, and they are assured that “real people” have thoughtfully
selected the things from which they choose.
Of late one important trend that runs counter to materialism is minimalism. This
label describes a simple lifestyle, with an emphasis on getting rid of things you don’t
need.
A few hardy souls even commit to living off the grid, without access to creature
comforts such as electricity and indoor plumbing. Decluttering has become an
obsession for many, and an art form that followers revere for its Zen-like flavor.
· A custom
· A more
· A convention
All three types of crescive norms may jointly define a culturally appropriate behavior.
Much of what we know about these norms we learn vicariously as we observe the
behaviors of actors in television commercials, sitcoms, print ads, and other media.
That reminds us why the marketing system is such an important element of culture.
Syndicated Surveys
A number of companies track changes in values through large-scale surveys and sell the
results of these studies to marketers.
Today, many other syndicated surveys also track changes in values
It helps Advertising agencies stay on top of important cultural trends and shape the
messages they craft for clients, such as the GlobalScan (operated by the advertising agency
Backer Spielvogel Bates