Completion requirements
Read this chapter, which discusses consumers' decision-making process and examines the situational, personal, psychological, and societal factors influencing their buying decisions.
Factors That Influence Consumers' Buying Behavior
Key Takeaways
- Situational influences are temporary
conditions that affect how buyers behave. They include physical factors
such as a store's buying locations, layout, music, lighting, and even
scent. Companies try to make the physical factors in which consumers
shop as favorable as possible. If they can't, they utilize other tactics
such as discounts. The consumer's social situation, time factors, the
reason for their purchases, and their moods also affect their buying
behavior.
- Your personality describes your disposition as other
people see it. Market researchers believe people buy products to enhance
how they feel about themselves. Your gender also affects what you buy
and how you shop. Women shop differently than men. However, there's some
evidence that this is changing. Younger men and women are beginning to
shop more alike. People buy different things based on their ages and
life stages. A person's cognitive age is how old one "feels" oneself to
be. To further understand consumers and connect with them, companies
have begun looking more closely at their lifestyles (what they do, how
they spend their time, what their priorities and values are, and how
they see the world).
- Psychologist Abraham Maslow theorized that
people have to fulfill their basic needs - like the need for food,
water, and sleep - before they can begin fulfilling higher-level needs.
Perception is how you interpret the world around you and make sense of
it in your brain. To be sure their advertising messages get through to
you, companies often resort to repetition. Shocking advertising and
product placement are two other methods. Learning is the process by
which consumers change their behavior after they gain information about
or experience with a product. Consumers' attitudes are the "mental
positions" people take based on their values and beliefs. Attitudes tend
to be enduring and are often difficult for companies to change.
- Culture prescribes the way in which you should live and affects the
things you purchase. A subculture is a group of people within a culture
who are different from the dominant culture but have something in common
with one another - common interests, vocations or jobs, religions,
ethnic backgrounds, sexual orientations, and so forth. To some degree,
consumers in the same social class exhibit similar purchasing behavior.
Most market researchers consider a person's family to be one of the
biggest determinants of buying behavior. Reference groups are groups
that a consumer identifies with and wants to join. Companies often hire
celebrities to endorse their products to appeal to people's reference
groups. Opinion leaders are people with expertise in certain areas.
Consumers respect these people and often ask their opinions before they
buy goods and services.