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MARKETING MANAGEMENT12th edition

6 Analyzing

Consumer Markets

Kotler Keller 6-2

Chapter Questions

• How do consumer characteristics influence buying behavior?

• What major psychological processes influence consumer responses to the marketing program?

• How do consumers make purchasing decisions?

• How do marketers analyze consumer decision making?

6-3

Emerging Trends in Consumer Behavior

Metrosexual –Straight urban manwho enjoys shoppingand using groomingproducts

6-4

What Influences Consumer Behavior?

Cultural Factors

Social Factors

Personal Factors

6-5

Culture

The fundamental determinant of a person’s wants and behaviors acquired through socialization

processes with familyand other key institutions

6-6

Subcultures

Nationalities

Religions

Racial groups

Geographic regions

Special interests

6-7

Insight into the subculture of wine enthusiasts

6-8

Fast Facts About American Culture

• The average American:– chews 300 sticks of gum a year– goes to the movies 9 times a year– takes 4 trips per year – attends a sporting event 7 times each

year

6-9

Social Classes

Upper uppersLower uppersUpper middlesMiddle class

Working classUpper lowersLower lowers

6-10

Characteristics of Social Classes

• Within a class, people tend to behave alike• Social class conveys perceptions of inferior

or superior position• Class may be indicated by a cluster of

variables (occupation, income, wealth)• Class designation is mobile over time

6-11

Social Factors

Referencegroups

Social roles Statuses

Family

6-12

Reference Groups

Membership groups

Primary groups

Secondary groups

Aspirational groups

Dissociative groups

6-13

Family

• Family of Orientation– Religion– Politics– Economics

• Family of Procreation– Everyday buying

behavior

6-14

Targeting Women and Their Families

6-15

Roles and Statuses

What degree of status is associated with various occupational roles?

6-16

Personal Factors

Age

Values

Life cyclestage

Occupation

Personality

Self-concept

Wealth

Lifestyle

6-17

Behavior changesaccording to life cycle stage

•Family•Psychological•Critical life events

6-18

Brand Personality

Sincerity

Excitement

Competence

Sophistication

Ruggedness

6-19

Lifestyle Influences

Multi-tasking

Time-starved

Money-constrained

6-20

Figure 6.1 Model of Consumer Behavior

6-21

Key Psychological Processes

Motivation

MemoryLearning

Perception

6-22

Motivation

Freud’sTheory

Behavioris guided by subconsciousmotivations

Maslow’sHierarchyof Needs

Behavioris driven by

lowest, unmet need

Herzberg’sTwo-Factor

Theory

Behavior isguided by

satisfiers anddissatisfiers

6-23

Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs

6-24

Herzberg’s Two-Factor Theory

6-25

Perception

Selective Attention

Subliminal Perception

Selective Retention

Selective Distortion

6-26

Figure 6.3 Dole Mental Map

6-27

Encoding Brand Associations

6-28

Figure 6.4 Consumer Buying Process

Problem Recognition

Information Search

Evaluation

Purchase Decision

PostpurchaseBehavior

6-29

Problem Recognition

6-30

Sources of Information

Personal

ExperientialPublic

Commercial

6-31

Figure 6.5 Successive Sets

6-32

Evaluation of AttributesTable 6.3

6-33

Figure 6.6 Stages between Evaluation of Alternatives and Purchase

6-34

Non-compensatory Models of Choice

• Conjunctive– Each brand must meet minimum cutoff

standard on attribute A and attribute B and attribute C, etc.

• Lexicographic– Chose brand that has the best performance on

most important criterion.• Elimination-by-aspects

– Eliminate brands that do not meet minimum standards of performance.

6-35

Perceived Risk

Functional

Physical

Financial

Social

Psychological

Time

6-36

Figure 6.7 How Customers Use and Dispose of Products

6-37

Other Theories of Consumer Decision Making

Involvement• Elaboration

Likelihood Model• Low-involvement

marketing strategies

• Variety-seeking buying behavior

Decision Heuristics• Availability• Representativeness• Anchoring and

adjustment

6-38

Mental Accounting

• Consumers tend to…– Segregate gains– Integrate losses– Integrate smaller losses with larger gains– Segregate small gains from large losses

6-39

Marketing Debate

Is Target Marketing Ever Bad?

Take a position:1. Targeting minorities is exploitative.2. Targeting minorities is a soundbusiness practice.

6-40

Marketing Discussion

What are your mental accounts?

Do you have rules you employ inspending money?Do you follow Thaler’s four principlesin reacting to gains and losses?

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