analyzing consumer markets / marketing management by kotler keller

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Analyzing Consumer Markets

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Page 1: Analyzing Consumer Markets / Marketing Management By Kotler Keller

Analyzing Consumer Markets

Page 2: Analyzing Consumer Markets / Marketing Management By Kotler Keller

Sequence of the Lecture/Discussion

• What Influences Consumer Behavior?

• What major psychological processes influence consumer

responses to the marketing program?

• Consumer Buying Process

Page 3: Analyzing Consumer Markets / Marketing Management By Kotler Keller

What Influences Consumer Behavior?

Cultural FactorsCultural Factors

Social FactorsSocial Factors

Personal FactorsPersonal Factors

Page 4: Analyzing Consumer Markets / Marketing Management By Kotler Keller

What Influences Consumer Behavior?

Cultural FactorsCultural Factors

Page 5: Analyzing Consumer Markets / Marketing Management By Kotler Keller

What is Culture?

Culture is the fundamental determinant of a

person’s wants and behaviors acquired

through socialization processes with family

and other key institutions.

Page 6: Analyzing Consumer Markets / Marketing Management By Kotler Keller

Subcultures

Nationalities Nationalities

ReligionsReligions

Racial groupsRacial groups

Geographic regionsGeographic regions

Page 7: Analyzing Consumer Markets / Marketing Management By Kotler Keller

What Influences Consumer Behavior?

Cultural FactorsCultural Factors

Social FactorsSocial Factors

Page 8: Analyzing Consumer Markets / Marketing Management By Kotler Keller

Social Factors

Referencegroups

Social Roles

Statuses

Family

Page 9: Analyzing Consumer Markets / Marketing Management By Kotler Keller

Reference GroupsReference groups are all the groups that have a direct (face to face) or indirect influence on attitudes or behavior. Reference groups influence members in at least three ways:

• expose an individual to new behaviors and lifestyles• influence attitudes and self-concept• create pressures for conformity that may affect product and brand

choices.

•Groups having a direct influence are called Membership groups.•In Primary groups , people interact fairly continuously and informally, such as family, friends, neighbors, and coworkers.•People also belong to Secondary groups, such as religious, professional, and trade-union groups, which are more formal and require less continuous interaction.

Page 10: Analyzing Consumer Markets / Marketing Management By Kotler Keller

Reference Groups

People are also influenced by groups to which they do not belong:•Aspirational groups are those a person hopes to join•Dissociative groups are those whose values or behavior an individual rejects.

Where reference group influence is strong, marketers must determine how to reach and influence the group’s opinion leaders.

Page 11: Analyzing Consumer Markets / Marketing Management By Kotler Keller

Family

FAMILY is the most important consumer buying organization in

society and family members constitute the most influential

primary reference group. There are two families in the buyer’s

life:

•The family of orientation consists of parents and siblings. From

this, a person acquires an orientation toward religion, politics, and

economics and a sense of personal ambition ,self-worth, and

love.

•A more direct influence on everyday buying behavior is the family

of procreation , the person’s spouse and children.

Page 12: Analyzing Consumer Markets / Marketing Management By Kotler Keller

Roles and Status

A Role consists of the activities a person is expected to

perform. Each role in turn implies a Status. A senior vice

president of marketing may be seen as having more status

than a sales manager, and a sales manager may be seen as

having more status than an office clerk. People choose

products that reflect and communicate their role and their

actual or desired status in society

Page 13: Analyzing Consumer Markets / Marketing Management By Kotler Keller

What Influences Consumer Behavior?

Cultural FactorsCultural Factors

Social FactorsSocial Factors

Personal FactorsPersonal Factors

Page 14: Analyzing Consumer Markets / Marketing Management By Kotler Keller

Personal Factors

Age

Values

Life cyclestage

Occupation

Personality

Self-concept

Wealth

Lifestyle

Page 15: Analyzing Consumer Markets / Marketing Management By Kotler Keller

Age and Life Cycle Stage

• Our taste in food, clothes, furniture, and recreation is

often related to our age.

• It is also shaped by the family life cycle and the

number, age and gender of people in the household

at any point in time.

Page 16: Analyzing Consumer Markets / Marketing Management By Kotler Keller

The Family Life Cycle

Page 17: Analyzing Consumer Markets / Marketing Management By Kotler Keller

Occupation and Economic Circumstances

• Occupation also influences consumption patterns.

• Product and brand choice are also affected by economic

circumstances: spendable income ,savings ,assets ,debts ,

borrowing power, and attitudes toward spending and

saving.

Page 18: Analyzing Consumer Markets / Marketing Management By Kotler Keller

• Personality. Each person has personality characteristics that

influence his or her buying behavior. Personality means a

set of distinguishing human psychological traits that lead to

relatively consistent and enduring responses to

environmental stimuli (including buying behavior).

• Self Concept. It is how we view our selves. Consumers

often choose and use brands that relate with their actual

self-concept , although the match may instead be based on

the consumer’s ideal self-concept (how we would like to

view ourselves) or even on others’ self-concept(how we

think others see us)

Personality and Self-concept

Page 19: Analyzing Consumer Markets / Marketing Management By Kotler Keller

Lifestyle and Values

• A lifestyle is a person’s pattern of living in the world as

expressed in activities, interests and opinions. It portrays

the person interacting with his or her environment.

• Values are the belief systems that underlie attitudes and

behaviors. Values go much deeper than behavior or

attitude and determine people’s choices and desires over

the long term.

Page 20: Analyzing Consumer Markets / Marketing Management By Kotler Keller

Key Psychological Processes

Motivation

MemoryLearning

Perception

Page 21: Analyzing Consumer Markets / Marketing Management By Kotler Keller

Motivation• Freud’s Theory .Sigmund Freud assumed the psychological

forces shaping people’s behavior are largely unconscious,

and that a person cannot fully understand his or her own

motivations.

• Maslow’s Theory. Abraham Maslow explained that human

needs are arranged in a hierarchy from most to least pressing

—physiological needs, safety needs, social needs, esteem

needs, and self-actualization. People will try to satisfy their

most important need first and then try to satisfy the next most

important.

Page 22: Analyzing Consumer Markets / Marketing Management By Kotler Keller

Maslow’s Hierarchy of

Needs

Page 23: Analyzing Consumer Markets / Marketing Management By Kotler Keller

Motivation• Herzberg’s Theory. Frederick Herzberg developed a two-

factor theory that distinguishes dissatisfiers (factors that

cause dissatisfaction) from satisfiers (factors that cause

satisfaction).The absence of dissatisfiers is not enough to

motivate a purchase; satisfiers must be present. Herzberg’s

theory has two implications. First, sellers should do their best

to avoid dissatisfiers. Second, the seller should identify the

major satisfiers or motivators of purchase in the market and

then supply them.

Page 24: Analyzing Consumer Markets / Marketing Management By Kotler Keller

Herzberg’s Two-Factor Theory

Page 25: Analyzing Consumer Markets / Marketing Management By Kotler Keller

Perception is the process by which we select, organize, and

interpret information inputs to create a meaningful picture of

the world. It is the way to look at things , a way of regarding,

understanding, or interpreting something in your own personal

manner. People emerge with different perceptions of the same

object because of three perceptual processes:

•selective attention

•selective distortion

•selective retention

Page 26: Analyzing Consumer Markets / Marketing Management By Kotler Keller

• Selective Attention .Attention is the allocation of processing

capacity to some stimulus. Voluntary attention is something

purposeful; involuntary attention is grabbed by someone or

something.

• Selective Distortion is the tendency to interpret information

in a way that fits our preconceptions. Consumers will often

distort information according to prior brand and product

beliefs and expectations.

• Selective Retention causes us to remember good points

about a product we like and forget good points about

competing products.

Page 27: Analyzing Consumer Markets / Marketing Management By Kotler Keller

Learning and Memory

• Learning induces changes in our behavior arising from

experience.

• Memory may be short term or long term. Short-term

memory (STM) is a temporary and limited repository of

information and Long-term memory (LTM) is a more

permanent, essentially unlimited repository. All the

information and experiences we encounter as we go

through life can end up in our Long-term memory

Page 28: Analyzing Consumer Markets / Marketing Management By Kotler Keller

Consumer Buying Process

Problem Recognition

Information Search

Evaluation

Purchase Decision

PostpurchaseBehavior

Page 29: Analyzing Consumer Markets / Marketing Management By Kotler Keller

• The buying process starts when the buyer recognizes a

problem or need triggered by internal or external stimuli.

With an internal stimulus, one of the person’s normal

needs such as hunger, thirst ,etc rises . A need can also

be aroused by an external stimulus such as a friend’s new

car or a television ad for a vacation which inspires

thoughts about the possibility of making a purchase.

• The person then enters an information search: looking for

reading material, phoning friends, going online, and

visiting stores to learn about the product.

Consumer Buying Process

Page 30: Analyzing Consumer Markets / Marketing Management By Kotler Keller

Sources of Information

Personal

ExperientialPublic

Commercial

Page 31: Analyzing Consumer Markets / Marketing Management By Kotler Keller

• Evaluation. The consumer sees each product as a bundle

of attributes with varying abilities to deliver the benefits.

The attributes of interest to buyers vary by product.

Consumers will pay the most attention to attributes that

deliver the sought-after benefits.

Consumer Buying Process

Page 32: Analyzing Consumer Markets / Marketing Management By Kotler Keller

A Consumer’s Evaluation of Brand Beliefs About Laptops

Page 33: Analyzing Consumer Markets / Marketing Management By Kotler Keller

Stages between Evaluation of Alternatives and Purchase

Page 34: Analyzing Consumer Markets / Marketing Management By Kotler Keller

• Purchase Decision. After Evaluation , two factors can intervene between the purchase intention and the purchase decision:• The attitudes of others. The influence of another person’s

attitude depends on two things: • The intensity of the other person’s negative attitude

toward our preferred alternative .• Our motivation to comply with the other person’s

wishes.• Unanticipated situational factors or perceived risk may

cause a person to change the purchase intention.

Consumer Buying Process

Page 35: Analyzing Consumer Markets / Marketing Management By Kotler Keller

Perceived Risk

FunctionalFunctional

PhysicalPhysical

FinancialFinancial

SocialSocial

PsychologicalPsychological

TimeTime

Page 36: Analyzing Consumer Markets / Marketing Management By Kotler Keller

• Postpurchase Behavior • Postpurchase Satisfaction. Satisfaction is a function of the

closeness between expectations and the product’s perceived performance.If performance falls short of expectations, the consumer is disappointed; if it meets expectations, the consumer is satisfied; if it exceeds expectations, the consumer is delighted.

• Postpurchase Actions .A satisfied consumer is more likely to purchase the product again and will also tend to say good things about the brand to others. Dissatisfied consumers may abandon or return the product.

• Postpurchase Uses and Disposal

Consumer Buying Process

Page 37: Analyzing Consumer Markets / Marketing Management By Kotler Keller

How Customers Use and Dispose of Products

Page 38: Analyzing Consumer Markets / Marketing Management By Kotler Keller

Any Queries ?