cb family and social class 4
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The Changing Family
Types of families
Nuclear
Extended Single-parent
Changes in household spending patterns
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Evidence ofthe Dynamic
Nature of U.S.
Households -
Figure 10-2
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ConsumerSocialization
The process by which
children acquire the
skills, knowledge, and
attitudes necessary to
function as consumers.
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A Simple Model of the
Socialization Process - Figure 10.4
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Other Functions of the Family
Economic well-being
Emotional support
Suitable family lifestyles
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Family Decision Making
Dynamics of Husband-WifeDecision Making
Husband-Dominated
Wife-Dominated
Expanding Role of Children In Family DecisionMaking
Choosing restaurants and items in supermarkets
Teen Internet mavens
Pester power
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Framework of 10-year-old Influencer
Figure 10.5
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The Family Life Cycle
Traditional Family Life Cycle
Stage I: Bachelorhood
Stage II: Honeymooners Stage III: Parenthood
Stage IV: Postparenthood
Stage V: Dissolution
Modifications - the Nontraditional FLC
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Nontraditional FLC Family Stages
Alternative FLC Stage Definition/Commentary
Childless couples Increasingly acceptable with more career-
oriented married women and delayed
marriages
Couples who marry later in life Likely to have fewer or no children
Couples with first child in late 30s or later Likely to have fewer children. Want the
best and live quality lifestyle
Single parents I High divorce rate - about 50% lead to this
Single parents II Child out of wedlock
Single parents III Single person who adopts
Extended family Adult children return home. Divorced
adult returns home. Elderly move in with
children. Newlyweds live with in-laws.
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Dual Spouse Work Involvement (DSWI)
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Social Class
The division ofmembers of a society
into a hierarchy of
distinct status classes,
so that members of
each class have either
higher or lower status
than members of otherclasses.
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Social Class Measure and Distribution
Table 10.8
SOCIAL CLASSES and PERCENTAGE
Upper 4.3%
Upper-middle 13.8%
Middle 32.8%
Working 32.3%
Lower 16.8%
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Social Class Measurement
Subjective Measures
individuals are asked to estimate their own social-
class positions
Objective Measures
individuals answer specific socioeconomic
questions and then are categorized according to
answers
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Objective Measures
Single-variableindexes
Occupation
Education
Income
Composite-variable indexes
Index of StatusCharacteristics
SocioeconomicStatus Score
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Social Class Mobility
Upward mobility
Downward mobility
Rags to riches?
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GeodemographicClusters
A composite
segmentationstrategy that uses
both geographic
variables (zip codes,
neighborhoods) and
demographic
variables (e.g.,
income, occupation)to identify target
markets.
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What Is the Middle Class?
The middle 50 percent of household
incomes - households earning between
$25,000 and $85,000
The emerging Chinese middle class
Moving up to more near luxuries
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The Working Class?
Households earning $40,000 or less control
more than 30 percent of the total income in
the U.S.
These consumers tend to be more brand loyal
than wealthier consumers.
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The Techno Class
Having competency with technology
Those without are referred to as
technologically underclassed Parents are seeking computer exposure for
their children
Geeks now viewed as friendly and fun
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In What Ways Have the Prestige and
Status of Geeks Been Changing?
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The Change is Due to the
Importance of Computers.
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Consumer Behavior and
Social Class
Clothing, Fashion, and Shopping
The Pursuit of Leisure
Saving, Spending, and Credit Social Class and Communication
23Chapter Ten Slide9/14/2014
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