Consumer Behaviour: DR Ajitabh Dash
Consumer Behaviour: DR Ajitabh Dash
Dr Ajitabh Dash
Definition (1st school of Thought)
“The behavior that consumers display in searching
for, purchasing, using, evaluating and disposing of
products and services that they expect will satisfy
their needs.”
A "consumer" is anyone who typically engages in any
one or all of the activities described in the above
definition.
Consumer Behavior includes all the decisions a
consumer makes when spending their time, effort and
money.
Scope
Includes answers to the following:
‘What’ the consumers buy: goods and services
‘Why’ they buy it: need and want
‘When’ do they buy it: time: day, week, month, year,
occasions etc.
‘Where’ they buy it: place
‘How often they buy’ it: time interval
‘How often they use’ it: frequency of use
Second School of Thought
Consumer behaviour is the set of value-seeking activities
that take place as people go about addressing realised
needs.
value-seeking activities=Basic Exchange
process
Role of Marketers
Two Consumer Entities
Dr Ajitabh Dash
Definition
Defined as the “process involved in analyzing problems,
searching solutions, evaluating and choosing among
alternatives and evaluating outcomes”.
Often called the consumer information processing model
MODELS OF CONSUMERS
Economic:- Price sensitive and rational
Passive : irrational and impulsive, easily succumbs to the
selling and promotional efforts of the marketer.
Cognitive :-Consumer decisions are based on information
gathering and processing
Emotional : emotional and impulsive, takes decisions
based on emotions
Steps in Decision-Making Process
Problem Recognition
Information Search
Evaluation
of Alternatives
Purchase
Post purchase
Behavior
Problem Recognition: perceiving a need
A stage of perceiving a deficiency/need. A need could be
triggered off by an internal stimulus or an external
stimulus. Consumer may face two types of problem.
Actual State changes (AS type): - the product is failing, or the
consumer is running short of it; - there is a problem that exists.
Desired State changing (DS type): - there is an imbalance
between the actual state and the desired state - another product
seems better and superior to the one that is being currently
used.
Information search : seeking value
Defined as the actions taken to identify and obtain
information to solve a consumer problem.
Internal Source: the retrieval of information from long-term
memory
External Source: acquiring information from outside sources
Personal sources, such as friends and family.
Public sources, including various Consumer
informatics center.
Marketer-dominated sources, such as
advertising, company websites, and salespeople
Outcome of Information Search
Evoked Set
• Group of brands,
resulting from
information search, from
which a buyer can
choose.
Purchase!
Evaluation of alternative : Assessing Value
Compares the different alternatives available on certain
criteria mentioned as below:
i) Generation of choice set;
ii) Application of Decision Rules.
Generation of Choice Set
Consumer moves from an evoked set towards the choice set.
Evoked set/Consideration set: This is the set of alternatives
that he actively considers while making a purchase decision;
these exist either in his memory or feature prominently in the
environment. The consumer perceives them to be acceptable.
Inept set: These are those alternatives from the evoked set that
the consumer excludes from further consideration, as he
perceives them to be inferior and unacceptable.
Inert set: These are those alternatives from the evoked set that
the consumer excludes from further consideration, as he is
indifferent towards them and perceives them as ones without
much advantages or benefits.
Choice set: This comprises the final set of one or two brands
from which he finally decides.
Application of Decision Rules
There can be two kinds of Decision Rules, viz.,
Compensatory rules and Non-compensatory rules.
Compensatory rules
Non-compensatory rules
Conjunctive rule: A minimally acceptable cut off point is established
for each attribute.
Disjunctive rule:
Lexicographic rule: First ranks the attributes in terms of relevance.
Then compares the various alternatives in terms of a single attribute
considered most important.
Purchase decision: Buying value
Trials/First purchase: Trials could be elicited through
market testing, or through promotional tactics such as free
samples, coupons, etc.
Repeat purchases: If the consumer is satisfied, he would
buy the brand again. Repeat purchases lead to brand
loyalty.
a) where to buy from? (Place: Real/brick and mortar or
virtual/online);
b) whom to buy from? (Which store: Depends on reputation
of seller, past experience, etc.)
b) when to buy? (Time: Emergency or Routine; During
season, off season, sale, rebate etc.)
Post purchase evaluation : Value in
Consumption or Use
After buying a product, consumer compares it
with expectations and is either satisfied or
dissatisfied.
Satisfaction or dissatisfaction affects
consumer value perceptions
consumer communications
repeat-purchase behavior.
Cognitive Dissonance
?
Did I make a good
decission ? Can minimize
through:
Did I buy the right Effective
product ? Communication
Follow-up
Did I get the value ? Guarantees
Warranties
Stage in
Marketers
Buying
objective
Process
Need Generate
awareness,
Recognition Positioning
Information Lead
Search Generation
Purchase Facilitate
purchase
Sales support,
Post-purchase
relationship
Evaluation marketing
Variations in purchase decision process
LessLess High
involvement
Involvement involvement
Routine response behaviour
Involves little effort seeking external
information and evaluating alternatives.
Typically used for low-priced, frequently purchased
products.
Examples :- tooth paste, soap, milk etc.
Limited decision making
Involves the use of moderate information-seeking efforts.
Often used when the buyer has little time or effort to
spend.
Example :- shopping goods like digital camera.
Extensive decision making
Each stage of the consumer purchase decision
process is used
Considerable time and effort on external
information search and in identifying
and evaluating alternatives.
Example :- house, car etc
The study of CB helps the marketer in:
Analyzing the environment: identifying opportunities and
fighting threats
Segmenting, targeting and positioning
Designing the marketing-mix
Designing the competitive strategy
Governmental and Non-profit Organization and Social
Marketing
Simple Out line of Consumer Behaviour