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
Personal Factors
Personality and Self-Concept
Personality
describes a person's disposition, helps show why people are different,
and encompasses a person's unique traits. The "Big Five" personality
traits that psychologists discuss frequently include openness or how
open you are to new experiences, conscientiousness or how diligent you
are, extraversion or how outgoing or shy you are, agreeableness or how
easy you are to get along with, and neuroticism or how prone you are to
negative mental states.
Do personality traits predict people's
purchasing behavior? Can companies successfully target certain products
to people based on their personalities? How do you find out what
personalities consumers have? Are extraverts wild spenders and
introverts penny pinchers?
The link between people's
personalities and their buying behavior is somewhat unclear. Some
research studies have shown that "sensation seekers," or people who
exhibit extremely high levels of openness, are more likely to respond
well to advertising that's violent and graphic. The problem for firms is
figuring out "who's who" in terms of their personalities.
Marketers
have had better luck linking people's self-concepts to their buying
behavior. Your self-concept is how you see yourself - be it positive or
negative. Your ideal self is how you would like to see yourself -
whether it's prettier, more popular, more eco-conscious, or more "goth,"
and others' self-concept, or how you think others see you, also
influences your purchase behavior. Marketing researchers believe people
buy products to enhance how they feel about themselves - to get
themselves closer to their ideal selves.
The slogan "Be All That
You Can Be," which for years was used by the U.S. Army to recruit
soldiers, is an attempt to appeal to the self-concept. Presumably, by
joining the U.S. Army, you will become a better version of yourself,
which will, in turn, improve your life. Many beauty products and
cosmetic procedures are advertised in a way that's supposed to appeal to
the ideal self people seek. All of us want products that improve our
lives.
Gender, Age, and Stage of Life
While demographic
variables such as income, education, and marital status are important,
we will look at gender, age, and stage of life and how they influence
purchase decisions. Men and women need and buy different products. They also
shop differently and in general, have different attitudes about
shopping. You know the old stereotypes. Men see what they want and buy
it, but women "try on everything and shop ‘til they drop". There's some
truth to the stereotypes. That's why you see so many advertisements
directed at one sex or the other - beer commercials that air on ESPN and
commercials for household products that air on Lifetime. Women
influence fully two-thirds of all household product purchases, whereas
men buy about three-quarters of all alcoholic beverages. The shopping differences between men and women seem to be
changing, though. Younger, well-educated men are less likely to believe
grocery shopping is a woman's job and would be more inclined to bargain
shop and use coupons if the coupons were properly targeted at
them. One survey found that approximately 45 percent of
married men actually like shopping and consider it relaxing.
One
study by Resource Interactive, a technology research firm, found that
when shopping online, men prefer sites with lots of pictures of products
and women prefer to see products online in lifestyle context - say, a
lamp in a living room. Women are also twice as likely as men to use
viewing tools such as the zoom and rotate buttons and links that allow
them to change the color of products.
Video Clip
What Women Want versus What Men Want
Check
out this Heineken commercial, which highlights the differences between
"what women want" and "what men want" when it comes to products.
Many
businesses today are taking greater pains to figure out "what men
want". Products such as face toners and body washes for men such as the
Axe brand and hair salons such as the Men's Zone and Weldon Barber are a
relatively new phenomenon. Some advertising agencies specialize in
advertising directed at men. There are also many products such as kayaks
and mountain bikes targeted toward women that weren't in the past.
You
have probably noticed that the things you buy have changed as you age.
Think about what you wanted and how you spent five dollars when you were
a child, a teenager, and an adult. When you were a child, the last
thing you probably wanted as a gift was clothing. As you became a teen,
however, cool clothes probably became a bigger priority. Don't look now,
but depending on the stage of life you're currently in, diapers and
wrinkle cream might be just around the corner.
If you're single
and working after graduation, you probably spend your money differently
than a newly married couple. How do you think spending patterns change
when someone has a young child or a teenager or a child in college?
Diapers and day care, orthodontia, tuition, electronics - regardless of
the age, children affect the spending patterns of families. Once
children graduate from college and parents are empty nesters, spending
patterns change again.
Empty nesters and baby boomers are a huge
market that companies are trying to tap. Ford and other car companies
have created "aging suits" for young employees to wear when they're
designing automobiles". The suit simulates the restricted mobility
and vision people experience as they get older. Car designers can then
figure out how to configure the automobiles to better meet the needs of
these consumers.
Your chronological age, or actual age
in years, is one thing. Your cognitive age, or how old you perceive
yourself to be, is another. A person's cognitive age affects his or her
activities and sparks interests consistent with his or her perceived
age. Cognitive age is a significant predictor of
consumer behaviors, including people's dining out, watching television,
going to bars and dance clubs, playing computer games, and
shopping. Companies have found that many
consumers feel younger than their chronological age and don't take
kindly to products that feature "old folks" because they can't identify
with them.
Lifestyle
If you have ever watched the television
show Wife Swap, you can see that despite people's similarities (e.g.,
being middle-class Americans who are married with children), their
lifestyles can differ radically. To better understand and connect with
consumers, companies interview or ask people to complete questionnaires
about their lifestyles or their activities, interests, and opinions
(often referred to as AIO statements). Consumers are not only asked
about products they like, where they live, and what their gender is but
also about what they do - that is, how they spend their time and what
their priorities, values, opinions, and general outlooks on the world
are. Where do they go other than work? Who do they like to talk to? What
do they talk about? Researchers hired by Procter & Gamble have gone
so far as to follow women around for weeks as they shop, run errands,
and socialize with one another. Other companies have paid
people to keep a daily journal of their activities and routines.
A
number of research organizations examine lifestyle and psychographic
characteristics of consumers. Psychographics combines the lifestyle
traits of consumers and their personality styles with an analysis of
their attitudes, activities, and values to determine groups of consumers
with similar characteristics. One of the most widely used systems to
classify people based on psychographics is the VALS (Values, Attitudes,
and Lifestyles) framework. Using VALS to combine psychographics with
demographic information such as marital status, education level, and
income provide a better understanding of consumers.