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
Psychological Factors
Motivation
Motivation
is the inward drive we have to get what we need. In the mid-1900s,
Abraham Maslow, an American psychologist, developed the hierarchy of
needs shown in Figure 3.4 "Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs".
Figure 3.4 Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs

Maslow
theorized that people have to fulfill their basic needs - food, water,
and sleep - before they can begin fulfilling higher-level needs. Have
you ever gone shopping when you were tired or hungry? Even if you were
shopping for something that would make you the envy of your friends
(maybe a new car) you probably wanted to sleep or eat even more. (Forget
the car. Just give me a nap and a candy bar).
The need for food
is recurring. Other needs, such as shelter, clothing, and safety, tend
to be enduring. Still other needs arise at different points in time in a
person's life. For example, during grade school and high school, your
social needs probably rose to the forefront. You wanted to have friends
and get a date. Perhaps this prompted you to buy certain types of
clothing or electronic devices. After high school, you began thinking
about how people would view you in your "station" in life, so you
decided to pay for college and get a professional degree, thereby
fulfilling your need for esteem. If you're lucky, at some point you will
realize Maslow's state of self-actualization. You will believe you have
become the person in life that you feel you were meant to be.
Following
the economic crisis that began in 2008, the sales of new automobiles
dropped sharply virtually everywhere around the world - except the sales
of Hyundai vehicles. Hyundai understood that people needed to feel
secure and safe and ran an ad campaign that assured car buyers they
could return their vehicles if they couldn't make the payments on them
without damaging their credit. Seeing Hyundai's success, other carmakers
began offering similar programs. Likewise, banks began offering
"worry-free" mortgages to ease the minds of would-be homebuyers. For a
fee of about $500, First Mortgage Corp., a Texas-based bank, offered to
make a homeowner's mortgage payment for six months if he or she got laid
off.
While achieving
self-actualization may be a goal for many individuals in the United
States, consumers in Eastern cultures may focus more on belongingness
and group needs. Marketers look at cultural differences in addition to
individual needs. The importance of groups affects advertising (using
groups versus individuals) and product decisions.
Perception
Perception
is how you interpret the world around you and make sense of it in your
brain. You do so via stimuli that affect your different senses - sight,
hearing, touch, smell, and taste. How you combine these senses also
makes a difference. For example, in one study, consumers were
blindfolded and asked to drink a new brand of clear beer. Most of them
said the product tasted like regular beer. However, when the blindfolds
came off and they drank the beer, many of them described it as "watery"
tasting.
Consumers are bombarded with messages on television,
radio, magazines, the Internet, and even bathroom walls. The average
consumer is exposed to about three thousand advertisements per day. Consumers are surfing the Internet, watching
television, and checking their cell phones for text messages
simultaneously. Some, but not all, information makes it into our brains.
Selecting information we see or hear (e.g., television shows or
magazines) is called selective exposure.
Have you ever read or
thought about something and then started noticing ads and information
about it popping up everywhere? Many people are more perceptive to
advertisements for products they need. Selective attention is the
process of filtering out information based on how relevant it is to you.
It's been described as a "suit of armor" that helps you filter out
information you don't need. At other times, people forget information,
even if it's quite relevant to them, which is called selective
retention. Often the information contradicts the person's belief. A
longtime chain smoker who forgets much of the information communicated
during an antismoking commercial is an example. To be sure their
advertising messages get through to you and you remember them, companies
use repetition. How tired of iPhone commercials were you before they
tapered off? How often do you see the same commercial aired during a
single television show?
Another potential problem that
advertisers (or your friends) may experience is selective distortion or
misinterpretation of the intended message. Promotions for weight loss
products show models that look slim and trim after using their products,
and consumers may believe they will look like the model if they use the
product. They misinterpret other factors such as how the model looked
before or how long it will take to achieve the results. Similarly, have
you ever told someone a story about a friend and that person told
another person who told someone else? By the time the story gets back to
you, it is completely different. The same thing can happen with many
types of messages.
Video Clip
A Parody of an iPhone Commercial
Check out this parody on Apple's iPhone commercial.
Using
surprising stimuli or shock advertising is also a technique that works.
One study found that shocking content increased attention, benefited
memory, and positively influenced behavior among a group of university
students.
Subliminal advertising is the
opposite of shock advertising and involves exposing consumers to
marketing stimuli such as photos, ads, and messages by stealthily
embedding them in movies, ads, and other media. Although there is no
evidence that subliminal advertising works, years ago the words Drink
Coca-Cola were flashed for a millisecond on a movie screen. Consumers
were thought to perceive the information subconsciously and to be
influenced to buy the products shown. Many people considered the
practice to be subversive, and in 1974, the Federal Communications
Commission condemned it. Much of the original research on subliminal
advertising, conducted by a researcher trying to drum up business for
his market research firm, was fabricated. People are still
fascinated by subliminal advertising, however. To create "buzz" about
the television show The Mole in 2008, ABC began hyping it by airing
short commercials composed of just a few frames. If you blinked, you
missed it. Some television stations actually called ABC to figure out
what was going on. One-second ads were later rolled out to movie
theaters.
Different consumers perceive information
differently. A couple of frames about The Mole might make you want to
see the television show. However, your friend might see the ad, find it
stupid, and never tune in to watch the show. One man sees Pledge, an
outstanding furniture polish, while another sees a can of spray no
different from any other furniture polish. One woman sees a luxurious
Gucci purse, and the other sees an overpriced bag to hold keys and
makeup.
Learning
Learning refers to the
process by which consumers change their behavior after they gain
information or experience. It's the reason you don't buy a bad product
twice. Learning doesn't just affect what you buy; it affects how you
shop. People with limited experience about a product or brand generally
seek out more information than people who have used a product before.
Companies
try to get consumers to learn about their products in different ways.
Car dealerships offer test drives. Pharmaceutical reps leave samples and
brochures at doctor's offices. Other companies give consumers free
samples. To promote its new line of coffees, McDonald's offered
customers free samples to try. Have you ever eaten the food samples in a
grocery store? While sampling is an expensive strategy, it gets
consumers to try the product and many customers buy it, especially right
after trying in the store.
Another kind of learning is operant
or instrumental conditioning, which is what occurs when researchers are
able to get a mouse to run through a maze for a piece of cheese or a dog
to salivate just by ringing a bell. In other words, learning occurs
through repetitive behavior that has positive or negative consequences.
Companies engage in operant conditioning by rewarding consumers, which
cause consumers to want to repeat their purchasing behaviors. Prizes and
toys that come in Cracker Jacks and McDonald's Happy Meals, free tans
offered with gym memberships, a free sandwich after a certain number of
purchases, and free car washes when you fill up your car with a tank of
gas are examples.
Another learning process called classical
conditioning occurs by associating a conditioned stimulus (CS) with an
unconditioned stimulus (US) to get a particular response. The more
frequently the CS is linked with the US, the faster learning occurs and
this is what advertisers and businesses try to do. Think about a meal at
a restaurant where the food was really good and you went with someone
special. You like the person and want to go out again. It could be that
classical conditioning occurred. That is, the food produced a good
feeling and you may associate the person with the food, thus producing a
good feeling about the person.
Attitude
Attitudes are "mental
positions" or emotional feelings, favorable or unfavorable evaluations,
and action tendencies people have about products, services, companies,
ideas, issues, or institutions". Attitudes tend to be enduring, and because they are
based on people's values and beliefs, they are hard to change. Companies
want people to have positive feelings about their offerings. A few
years ago, KFC began running ads to the effect that fried chicken was
healthy - until the U.S. Federal Trade Commission told the company to
stop. Wendy's slogan that its products are "way better than fast food"
is another example. Fast food has a negative connotation, so Wendy's is
trying to get consumers to think about its offerings as being better.
An
example of a shift in consumers' attitudes occurred when the
taxpayer-paid government bailouts of big banks that began in 2008
provoked the wrath of Americans, creating an opportunity for small banks
not involved in the credit bailout and subprime mortgage mess. The
Worthington National Bank, a small bank in Fort Worth, Texas, ran
billboards reading: "Did Your Bank Take a Bailout? We didn't". Another
read: "Just Say NO to Bailout Banks. Bank Responsibly!" The Worthington
Bank received tens of millions in new deposits soon after running these
campaigns.