Unit 2
Unit 2
Input Variables
The stimulus inputs refer to the idea or information clue about the
brand and its product in terms of product quality, distinctiveness, price,
service offered and availability.
Significant Stimuli: the physical traits of the product and the brand. It includes
the product’s price, quality, availability, distinctive characteristics and service.
Symbolic Stimuli: The marketing strategies like advertisement and publicity
creates a psychological impact on the buyer’s perception of a product’s and
visible features.
Social Stimuli: comprises of the various environmental factors which are
considered as a source of information for the buyers. It includes family, social
class and reference groups.
Hypothetical Constructs
central part of the model.
It includes all those psychological variables which play a vital role in the buyer’s decision-
making process.
Perceptual Constructs
the consumer’s procurement and perception of the information provided at the
input stage.
It is an essential element since it drives the buyer’s brand selection and purchases,
which includes:
Sensitivity to Information: The buyer’s level of understanding or openness
towards the information received by him/her.
Perceptual Bias: On the grounds of individual perception of each brand, the
buyer is partial towards a particular brand.
Search for Information: The buyer also seeks for more information to ensure
the right decision-making.
Learning Constructs
The learning constructs define the buyer’s knowledge, opinion, attitude and end decision on
product or brand selection.
Following are the various learning constructs of a buyer:
Motive: The specific goal or purpose for which the product purchase is carried out.
Choice Criteria: The set of principles or benchmarks defined for product selection.
Brand Comprehension: The information about the product or brand pertained by the buyer.
Attitude: The buyer’s perspective and willingness to purchase a product of a particular brand
defines his/her attitude.
Confidence: The trust or faith of the buyer in a specific brand and its products builds his/her
confidence.
Intention: The buyer’s purchase motive, preference criteria, brand comprehension, consumer
attitude and confidence, results in the selection of a particular brand.
Satisfaction: After-purchase, the buyer evaluates his/her level of contentment, to find out
whether the product has fulfilled the expectations or not.
Output Variables
the result of the buyer’s decision-making can be seen in the form of his/her
response towards the input variables.
It consists of five major components which are arranged systematically
below:
Attention: The buyer’s level of concentration and alertness with which he/she understands the
information provided, is termed as attention.
Brand Comprehension: The awareness of the buyer regarding a particular brand and its products is
known as brand comprehension.
Attitude: The buyer’s evaluation of a brand in terms of individual likes and dislikes, determines
his/her behaviour, interest and awareness towards it.
Intention: The aim or objective of the buyer for purchasing a product can be seen as the buying
intention.
Purchase Behaviour: All the above elements result in the actual purchase of a product by the buyer.
Exogenous Variable
There are certain other external factors which influence the buying behaviour of an individual or a firm by
hampering the product purchase of a prefered brand.
The exogenous variables are the environmental forces or components of this model. These are as follows:
Importance of Purchase: If the buyer perceives the product to be less crucial, involving a low cost,
then there is a little brand preference.
Personality Variables: Personal traits like ego, self-esteem, anxiety, dominance, authoritarian, etc.
influences a buyer’s decision-making while purchasing a product.
Social Class: A buyer’s social group, including the family, friends and other reference groups impact the
selection or rejection of a particular brand.
Culture: The buyer’s values, beliefs and ideas frame his/her purchase motive and inhibitors.
Organization: The buyer’s interaction with the social groups define their authority, status and power.
The hypothetical constructs of a buyer are affected by such formal or informal communications.
Time Pressure: The buyer, at times, is under the pressure of taking a timely decision, which makes
him/her look for alternatives if the product of the preferred brand is unavailable at the moment.
Financial Status: The buyer’s inability to purchase a product or unaffordability restricts him/her from
buying it.
Conclusion
The Howard Sheth Model majorly emphasizes repetitive buying
behaviour of the consumers or industrial buyers.
This is an empirical approach towards understanding the buyer’s
mindset while purchasing a product or service. It has been
intensively applied and tested to check its viability.
Still, the model lacks reliability due to its dependency on the
hypothetical constructs, which are challenging to be pragmatically
examined.
Engel Kollat Blackwell Model
Thismodel of the cognitive process that helps to predict what
customers are going to buy.
three different categories
Present Situation – this is where the customer is at the current moment,
Desired State – this is where the customer wants to be in the future and it
will help them achieve their goals
Pathway for Movement from one state to another – this includes various
steps that may include various products or services which can help move
towards their desired state.
Five stages of this model
Information input
Information processing
Decision process stage
Decision process variables
External influences.
Information Input
At this stage the consumer gets information from marketing and non-marketing
sources, which also influence the problem recognition stage of the decision-making
process.
If the consumer still does not arrive to a specific decision, the search for external
information will be activated in order to arrive to a choice or in some cases if the
consumer experience dissonance because the selected alternative is less satisfactory
than expected.
Information Processing
This stage consists of the consumer’s exposure, attention, perception, acceptance, and
retention of incoming information.
The consumer must first be exposed to the message, allocate space for this
information, interpret the stimuli, and retain the message by transferring the input to
long-term memory.
Decision Process Stage:
The central focus of the model is on five basic decision-process stages: Problem recognition,
search for alternatives, alternate evaluation (during which beliefs may lead to the formation of
attitudes, which in turn may result in a purchase intention) purchase, and outcomes.
But it is not necessary for every consumer to go through all these stages; it depends on whether it
is an extended or a routine problem-solving behavior.
Variables Influencing the Decision Process:
This stage consists of individual and environmental influences that affect all five stages of the
decision process.
Individual characteristics include motives, values, lifestyle, and personality; the social influences
are culture, reference groups, and family. Situational influences, such as a consumer’s financial
condition, also influence the decision process.
The Webster and Wind Model