SlideShare ist ein Scribd-Unternehmen logo
1 von 77
Consumer Behavior
i
Objectives
• Developing an understanding of the internal and
external influences which shape the behaviour
of both consumer and organisational buyers
• Identifying the discrete stages of the buying
process undertaken by consumers and
organisational buyers
• Appreciating how an understanding of buyer
behaviour can be used in market segmentation
and target marketing and
Why do we need to study
Consumer Behaviour
•Because no longer
can we take the
customer/consumer
for granted.
sanjeev sahani
• All managers must become
astute (intelligent/smart)
analysts of consumer
motivation and behaviour
sanjeev sahani
DEFINITION
• Consumer Behaviour may be defined as the
decision process and physical activity individuals
engage in when evaluating , acquiring, using or
disposing of goods and services.
• According to Belch and Belch "consumer
behaviour is the process and activities people
engage in when searching for,
selecting,purchasing, using, evaluating and
disposing of products and services so as to
satisfy their needs and desires".
Nature of Consumer Behaviour
• Systematic process : Consumer behaviour is a
systematic process relating to buying decisions
of the customers. The buying process consists
of the following steps :
• Need identification to buy the product
• Information search relating to the product
• Listing and evaluating the alternatives
• Purchase decision
• Post purchase evaluation by the marketer
sanjeev sahani
Nature of Consumer Behaviour
• Influenced by various factors: Consumer
behaviour is influenced by a number of factors
the factors that influence consumers include
marketing, personal, psychological, situational,
social and cultural etc.
• Different for different customers : All
consumers do not behave in the same manner.
Different consumers behave differently. The
different in consumer behaviour is due to
individual factors such as nature of the
consumer's lifestyle, culture etc.
Nature of Consumer Behaviour
• Different for different products : Consumer behaviour is
different for different products there are some consumers
who may buy more quantity of certain items and very low
quantity of some other items.
• Vary across regions : The consumer behaviour vary
across States, regions and countries. For instance, the
behaviour of urban consumers is different from that of
rural consumers. normally rural consumers are
conservative (traditional) in their buying behaviour
Nature of Consumer Behaviour
• Vital for marketers : Marketers need to have a good
knowledge of consumer behaviour they need to study
the various factors that influence consumer behaviour of
the target customers. The knowledge of consumer
behaviour enables marketers to take appropriate
marketing decisions.
• Reflect status : Consumer buying behaviour is not only
influenced by status of a consumer coma but it also
reflect it. Those consumers who owned luxury cars,
watches and other items are considered by others as
persons of higher status.
Nature of Consumer Behaviour
• Result in spread effect : Consumer behaviour as
a spread effect. The buying behaviour of one
person may influence the buying behaviour of
another person. For instance, a customer may
always prefer to buy premium brands of clothing,
watches and other items etc. This may influence
some of his friends, neighbours and colleagues.
This is one of the reasons why marketers use
celebrities like Shahrukh Khan, sachin to
endorse their brands.
Nature of Consumer Behaviour
• Undergoes a change : The consumer
behaviour undergoes a change over a
period of time depending upon
changes in age , education and income
level etc, for example, kids may prefer
colourful dresses but as they grow up
as teenagers and young adults, they
may prefer trendy clothes.
sanjeev sahani
Nature of Consumer Behaviour
• Information search : Search for information is a
common consumer behaviour. Consumers cannot
purchase goods and services if they are unaware
that a good or service exists. When a consumer
decides to buy a certain item, his decision must be
based on the information he has gathered about
what products our services are available to fulfill his
needs. There might be a product available that would
be better suited to the consumers needs, but if he is
unaware of product, he will not buy it.
Nature of Consumer Behaviour
• Brand loyalty : Brand loyalty is another
characteristic of consumer behaviour. Brand loyalty
is the tendency of a consumer to buy product
products or services from a certain company that
one likes or equates with having high quality goods
and services. For example, if Naina's first car was a
Honda as a teenager and the car lasted 200,000
miles, she might have a tendency to buy hondas
again in the future due to her previous positive
experience. This brand loyalty may be so strong that
she forgoes the information search all together when
considering for next vehicle.
•
Scope of Consumer Behaviour
1) Consumer behaviour and marketing management
2) Consumer behaviour and non profit and social
marketing
3) Consumer behaviour and government decision
making
i) Government services
ii) consumer protection
4) Consumer behaviour and demarketing
5) Consumer behaviour and consumer education
Scope of Consumer Behaviour
• 1) Consumer behaviour and marketing management :
Effective business managers realise the importance
of marketing to the success of their firm. A sound
understanding of consumer behaviour is essential to
the long run success of any marketing program. In
fact, it is seen as a corner stone of the Marketing
concept, an important orientation of philosophy of
many marketing managers. The essence of the
Marketing concept is captured in three
interrelated orientations consumers needs and
wants, company integrated strategy.
Scope of Consumer Behaviour
• Consumer behaviour and non profit and social
marketing : In today's world even the non-profit
organisations like government agencies, religious
sects, universities and charitable institutions have to
market their services for ideas to the "target group
of consumers or institution." At other times these
groups are required to appeal to the general public
for support of certain causes or ideas. Also they
make their contribution towards eradication of the
problems of the society. Thus a clear understanding
of the consumer behaviour and decision making
process will assist these efforts.
Scope of Consumer Behaviour
• 3) Consumer behaviour and government decision
making : In recent years the relevance of consumer
behaviour principles to government decision
making. Two major areas of activities have been
affected:
• i) Government services: It is increasingly and that
government provision of public services can benefit
significantly from an understanding of the
consumers, or users, of these services.
• ii) consumer protection: Many Agencies at all levels
of government are involved with regulating business
practices for the purpose of protecting consumers
welfare.
Scope of Consumer Behaviour
• Consumer behaviour and demarketing: It has become
increasingly clear that consumers are entering an era of
scarcity in terms of some natural gas and water. These
scarcities have led to promotions stressing conservation
rather than consumption. In other circumstances,
consumers have been encouraged to decrease or stop their
use of particular goods believed to have harmful effects.
Programs designed to reduce drug abuse, gambling, and
similar types of conception examples. These actions have
been undertaken by government agencies non profit
organisations, and other private groups. The term
"demarketing" refers to all such efforts to encourage
consumers to reduce their consumption of a particular
product or services.
Scope of Consumer Behaviour
• 5) Consumer behaviour and consumer education:
Consumer also stands to benefit directly from orderly
investigations of their own behaviour. This can occur on an
individual basis or as part of more formal educational
programs. For example, when consumers learn that a large
proportion of the billions spend annually on grocery
products is used for impulse purchases and not spend
according to pre planned shopping list, consumers may be
more willing to plan effort to save money. In general, as
marketers that can influence consumers' purchases,
consumers have the opportunity to understand better how
they affect their own behaviour.
Importance of consumer behaviour:
• 1) production policies
• 2) Price policies
• 3) Decision regarding channels of distribution
• 4) Decision regarding sales promotion
• 5) Exploiting marketing opportunities
• 6) Consumer do not always act or react predictably
• 7) Highly diversified consumer preferences
• 8) Rapid introduction of new products
• 9) Implementing the "Marketing concept":
Applications of consumer behaviour
• 1) Analysing market opportunity: Consumer
behaviour study help in identifying the
unfulfilled needs and wants of consumers.
This requires examining the friends and
conditions operating in the Marketplace,
consumers lifestyle, income levels and
energy influences. This may reveal
unsatisfied needs and wants. Mosquito
repellents have been marketed in response
to a genuine and unfulfilled consumer need.
Applications of consumer behaviour
• 2) Selecting target market: Review of market
opportunities often helps in identifying district
consumer segments with very distinct and unique
wants and needs. Identifying these groups, behave
and how they make purchase decisions enable the
marketer to design and market products or services
particularly suited to their wants and needs. For
example, please sleep revealed that many existing
and potential shampoo users did not want to buy
shampoo fax price at rate 60 for more and would
rather prefer a low price package containing enough
quantity for one or two washers. This finding LED
companies to introduce the shampoos sachet, which
become a good seller.
Applications of consumer behaviour
3) Marketing-mix decisions: Once unsatisfied needs
and wants are identified, the marketer has to
determine the right mix of product, price,
distribution and promotion. Where too, consumer
behaviour study is very helpful in finding answers to
many perplexing questions.
The factors of marketing mix decisions are:
i) product ii) price iii) promotion iv) distribution
Applications of consumer behaviour
• 4) Use in social and non profits
marketing: Consumer behaviour
studies are useful to design marketing
strategies by social, governmental and
not for profit organisations to make
their programmes more effective such
as family planning, awareness about
AIDS.
•
Can Marketing be standardised?
• No.
Because
cross - cultural
styles,
habits,
tastes,
prevents such standardisation
sanjeev sahani
Factors affecting Consumer
Behavior
• The behaviour of buyers is the product of
two broad categories of influence; these
are endogenous factors (i.e. those internal
to the individual) and exogenous factors
(i.e. those external to the individual)
Whilst these are variables that are largely outside the direct
control of marketing
managers, an understanding of them can be harnessed to
great effect.
sanjeev sahani
Buyer Behaviour
4Ps Marketing
Environment
Buyer
Characteristics
Buyer
DecisionProcess
Buyer
Decision
Consumer
sanjeev sahani
Marketing Stimuli
Product Price Place Promotion
4 Ps
sanjeev sahani
Other Stimuli
Economic Technological Political Cultural
Marketing
Environment
sanjeev sahani
Buyer characteristics
• Cultural
• Social
• Personal
• Psychological
sanjeev sahani
Exogenous (External )influences
on buyer behaviour
• Factors which are external to the individual
but have a substantial impact upon his/her
behaviour are social and cultural in nature.
• These include culture, social class or
status, reference groups and family
membership.
• Culture
• Culture is perhaps the most fundamental
and most pervasive external influence on
an individual's behaviour, including his/her
buying behaviour. Culture has been
defined as:
• “…the complex of values, ideas, attitudes
and other meaningful symbols created by
people to shape human behaviour and the
artifacts of that behaviour as they are
transmitted from one generation to the
next.”
sanjeev sahani
• Three key aspects of culture are brought out by
this definition.
• First, culture is created by people. The
behavioural patterns, ideas, economic and
social activities and artifacts of a people's
forebears shapes the culture of today.
• Second, culture is enduring. It evolves over time
but is stable in the short to medium term and is
in fact passed, largely intact, from generation to
generation. In particular, the values of the
society tend to be enduring.
• Third, cultural influences have both tangible and
intangible results. For instance, language and
patterns of speech are products of culture and
are observable. Basic beliefs and values are
also the outcome of the cultural environment
within which a person lives but these mental
phenomena are intangible outcomes.
sanjeev sahani
Social status
• Social class or social status is a powerful tool for
segmenting markets.
• Empirical research suggests that people from the same
social group tend to have similar opportunities, live in
similar types of housing, in the same areas, by similar
products from the same types of outlets and generally
conform to similar styles of living.
• At the same time, whilst people within the same social
category exhibit close similarities to one another, there
are usually considerable differences in consumption
behaviour between social groups.
• The variables used to stratify a population into social
classes or groups normally include income, occupation,
education and lifestyle.
sanjeev sahani
Reference groups
• People are social animals who tend to live in groups.
The group(s) to which a person belongs exerts an
influence upon the behaviour, beliefs and attitudes of its
members by communicating norms and expectations
about the roles they are to assume.
• Thus, an individual will refer to others with respect to:
‘correct’ modes of dress and speech; the legitimacy of
values, beliefs and attitudes; the appropriateness of
certain forms of behaviour, and also on the social
acceptability of the consumption of given products and
services.
• These “others' constitute reference groups. Reference
groups provide a standard of comparison against which
an individual can judge his/her own attitudes, beliefs and
behaviour.
sanjeev sahani
Three reference Groups
• a group to which an individual belongs
(also known as a peer group)
• a group to which an individual aspires, and
• a group whose perspective has been
adopted by the individual
sanjeev sahani
Reference groups have only the weakest
influence on buying behaviour. The key
difference appears to be the extent to
which a product is used or consumed
publicly. That is, if the product or brand is
evident to those within the reference group
then that group's influence is likely to
stronger with regard to purchasing
behaviour.
sanjeev sahani
Endogenous(Internal) influences
on buyer behaviour
• Endogenous influences are those which
are internal to the individual. These are
psychological in nature and include needs
and motives, perceptions, learning
processes, attitudes, personality type and
self-image.
sanjeev sahani
Needs and motives
• When an individual recognises that he/she has a
need, this acts to trigger a motivated state. Need
recognition occurs when the individual becomes
aware of a discrepancy between his/her actual
state and some perceived desired state. Once
the need is recognised then the individual
concerned will form a motive. A motive may be
defined as an impulse to act in such a way as to
bring about the meeting of a specific need.
sanjeev sahani
Perceptions
• Whereas motivation is a stimulus to action, how an
individual perceives situations, products, promotional
messages, and even the source of such messages,
largely determines how an individual acts. A basic
definition of perception would be ‘how people see
things’. Berelson and Steiner5 have defined perception
more formally as:
• “…the process by which an individual selects, organizes,
and interprets information inputs to create a meaningful
picture of the world.”
• Individuals can have vastly differing interpretations of the
same situation. Whilst all human beings receive
information through the same five senses-vision,
hearing, smell, taste and touch the extent to which they
attend to a piece of information, how they organise that
information and how information is interpreted tends to
differ.
sanjeev sahani
Age and life-cycle stage
• Consumer purchases are influenced by
age and by the stage in the family life-
cycle. Thus, a two-year old will have
different requirements from a middle-aged
person, and a 24-year-old person, married
with young children, will buy with a
different set of priorities when compared
with a 24-year-old single person.
In different countries the age composition
varies..
sanjeev sahani
Gender
The roles and status associated with men
and women vary within most cultures and
between cultures. You need to be aware
of these differences and of the way in
which changes are occurring.
sanjeev sahani
Selective attention:
• All people are daily bombarded by stimuli, both
commercial and non-commercial. People simply
cannot pay attention to all these messages and
therefore they develop mechanisms to reduce
the amount of information that they actually
process.
• People pay attention to stimuli which meet an
immediate need. Thus a farmer within whose
district poultry have been reported as suffering
from Newcastle disease will be especially
attentive to messages relating to the prevention
of this affliction in his/her ostrich flock.
sanjeev sahani
Learning
• Much of human behaviour is learned. The
evidence of learning is a change in a person's
behaviour as a result of experience. Theory
suggests that learning is the product of
interactions between drives, stimuli, cues,
responses and reinforcement. For instance, a
farmer may have a strong drive towards
increasing his/her productivity.
sanjeev sahani
• A farmer may see the adoption of a newly
available two-wheeled tractor as a way of
increasing his/her productivity to the extent
required. The encouragement of the farmer's
neighbours, and perhaps his/her village
headman, seeing the same type of tractor
operating successfully on a neighbouring farm,
receiving visits from salesmen and reading
promotion literature are all cues that can
impinge upon the farmer's impulse to invest in a
two-wheeled tractor.
sanjeev sahani
Attitudes
four fundamental characteristics of attitudes
1) First thing is that attitudes are enduring. They
may change over time but they tend to be
reasonably stable in the short to medium term.
2) Stresses that attitudes are learned from the
individual's own experience and/or from what
they read or hear from others.
3) Third, that attitudes precede and impact upon
behaviour. Attitudes reflect an individual's
characters towards another person, an event,
product or other object. A person may be either
favourably or unfavourably predisposed
towards an object;
sanjeev sahani
• . A consumer may be unfavourably
predisposed towards locally manufactured
dairy products because of dissatisfaction
in the past with the quality of a specific
type of cheese and with the shelf-life of
fresh milk from the country's Dairy
Produce Board. The negative experience
of the consumer, which relates to very
specific products, is readily transferred to
all other dairy products marketed by the
Board and the consumer exhibits a
preference for imported dairy products.
sanjeev sahani
Personality and self-concept
• Individuals tend to perceive other human beings
as ‘types of persons’. There are, for example,
people perceived to be nervous types, ambitious
types, self-confident types, introverts, extroverts,
the timid, the bold, the self-deprecating, and so
on. These are personality traits. Like attitudes,
personality traits serve to bring about a
consistency in the behaviour of an individual
with respect to his/her environment.
sanjeev sahani
• . An individual's self-image is how he/she
sees him/herself. Self-image is a fusion of
how a person would ideally like to be, the
way a person believes others see him/her
and how a person actually is.
• For the marketer the importance of self-
images rests in the opportunities to relate
product characteristics to these images.
• The promotional campaign would focus
on the congruence between the self-image
and the product image, i.e. a
sophisticated, more refined product for a
sophisticated, more refined consumer.
sanjeev sahani
sanjeev sahani
Buyer’s Decision Process
• Problem Recognition
• Information Search
• Evaluation of Alternatives
• Purchase Decision
• Consumption
• Postpurchase behaviour
sanjeev sahani
A five-stage model of the buying
process
sanjeev sahani
Problem recognition
• The buying process begins with a recognition on the part
of an individual or organisation that they have a problem
or need. The farmer recognises that he/she is
approaching a new cultivation season and requires seed;
a grain trading company realises that stocks are
depleted but demand is rising and therefore wheat, rice
and maize must be procured; a rural family is expecting
an important guest who must be honoured by the
slaughter and preparation of a goat for a feast.
• Problems and needs can be triggered by either internal
or external stimuli. A poor peasant family may purchase
a goat, which they can ill-afford, either because they
have an innate sense of hospitality (internal stimulus) or
because social convention dictates that a goat be
procured and prepared for special visitors (external
stimulus).
sanjeev sahani
• Marketing research needs to identify the
stimuli that trigger the recognition of
particular problems and needs .
• The Prosess that occurs whenever the
customer sees a significance between
his/her deisred state of affaires and some
desired ideal state.
sanjeev sahani
Information search
• : Information gathering may be passive or active.
Passive information gathering occurs when an individual
or group simply becomes more attentive to a recognised
solution to a given need. That is, he/she exhibits
heightened attention.
• The potential buyer becomes more aware of
advertisements or other messages concerning the
product in question.
• In other circumstances the individual is proactive rather
than reactive with respect to information. A trader who
sees potential in a new vegetable which is being
imported into the country will actively search out
information about the product, sources of supply, prices
and import regulations.
• He/she is likely to converse with other traders, request
literature from potential suppliers, etc.
sanjeev sahani
information sources used will fall
into Three categories
• personal sources (family, friends, work
colleagues, neighbours, acquaintances)
• commercial sources (promotional
materials, press releases, technical
journals or consumer magazines,
distributors, packaging)
• public sources (mass media)
sanjeev sahani
Evaluation of alternatives
• : The process of evaluating alternatives not only
differs from customer to customer prospective
customer but the individual will also adopt
different processes in accordance with the
situation. It is likely that when making judgments
customers will focus on those product attributes
and features that are most relevant to their
needs at a given point in time. Here, the
marketer can differentiate between those
characteristics which a product must have
before it is allowed to enter the customer's mind
set.
sanjeev sahani
• A quite different set of criteria might be
used in deciding between alternative
products and suppliers within the evoked
set e.g. the period of credit given by the
supplier, the ability of the supplier to
deliver the total order in periodic batches
and the reliability of the supplier in the
past.
sanjeev sahani
Purchase decision
• At the evaluation stage the prospective customer
will have arrived at a judgment about his/her
preference among the evoked set and have
formed a purchase intention.
• However, two factors can intervene between the
intention and the purchase decision: the attitude
of others and unanticipated events.
• If the attitude of other individuals or
organizations who influence the prospective
customer is strongly negative then the intention
may not be converted to a firm commitment or
decision.
sanjeev sahani
• Unanticipated events can also intervene
between intention and action. Whenever human
beings form judgments or seek to make
decisions they invariably make assumptions.
These assumptions are often implicit rather than
explicit.
• A farmer may state an intention to purchase a
mechanical thresher within the next twelve
months but when his/her implicit assumption of
‘a good harvest’ is not realised, due to drought,
the purchase of the machine is postponed.
sanjeev sahani
sanjeev sahani
Postpurchase behaviour:
• The process of marketing is not concluded
when a sale is made. Marketing continues
into the post purchase period. The aim of
marketing is not to make a sale but to
create a long term relationship with a
customer. Organizations maintain
profitability and growth through repeat
purchases of their products and services
by loyal customers.
sanjeev sahani
• Having procured the product the customer will
experience either satisfaction or dissatisfaction
with his/her purchase.
• The level of satisfaction or dissatisfaction is
largely a function of the congruence between the
buyer's expectations of the product and the
product's perceived performance.
• Buyer expectations of a product are usually
based upon promotional messages from the
product's supplier, family, friends, work
colleagues and, perhaps, professional advisors.
In addition, the buyer's own perceptual
processes influence expectations.
• If the product's perceived performance either
matches or exceeds its expected performance
then the buyer is likely to feel highly satisfied.
sanjeev sahani
• Another aspect of postpurchase behaviour that is of
interest to marketers is how the buyer actually uses the
product.
• It is common to find buyers using a product in a different
way from that for which it was either designed or
intended.
• Such deviations can present problems or opportunities to
the product supplier.
• For instance, whilst maize meal is chiefly used as a
foodstuff, consumers discovered that it makes an
excellent cleansing agent for shoes and other items of
clothing when these have become badly stained.
• This new use for the product could represent a
marketing opportunity for a repackaged and repositioned
product.
sanjeev sahani
Industrial buyer characteristics
• Individuals who purchase products on behalf of an
enterprise they either own or are employed by have two
distinct sets of goals that they pursue: their own and
those of the organisation.
• As an individual, the industrial buyer enjoys exercising
authority, seeks job satisfaction, the approval and
respect of both peers and superiors and other personal
goals and avoids unnecessarily risky decisions.
• Industrial buyers are also motivated by the desire to
achieve organisational goals such as cost control,
improved efficiency of operations, reliable supplies of
essential inputs, improved product performance and so
on.
sanjeev sahani
• An appropriate marketing campaign would
attend to both the buyer's personal and
organisational goals .
• The key elements in this process are as follows.
• (a) Decision-making unit (DMU)
Various people are involved in the buying
process within an organisation. Collectively they
constitute the DMU or buying centre.
• (b) Interaction between buyer and seller
It is quite usual in business-to-business buying
for buyers and sellers to negotiate and influence
each other in determining the form of the final
transaction and other aspects of the interaction.
sanjeev sahani
• (c) Major types of buying situation
The numerous types of buying situation
have been grouped into three buy-classes
by a number of writers on business
markets. The three buy-classes are:
• Straight rebuy;
• Modified rebuy;
• New task.
sanjeev sahani
GOVERNMENT BUYER
BEHAVIOUR
•
Governments and other governmental
institutions, such as local authorities and
nationalised industries, are important
buyers in most national markets.
• (a) Buying will be a bureaucratic process
• (b) A tender system is usually used
• (c) Political influence
• (e) Types of business and government
buying
sanjeev sahani
Motivations of organisational
buyers
sanjeev sahani
Buyer’s Decision
• Product Choice
• Brand Choice
• Dealer Choice
• Purchase Timing
• Purchase Amount
sanjeev sahani
Cultural factors
• Culture
• Sub - culture
• Social Class
sanjeev sahani
Social factors
• Reference Groups
• Family
• Roles and Statuses
sanjeev sahani
Personal Factors
• Family Life Cycle
• Occupation and Economic circumstances
• Lifestyle
• Personality and self - concept
sanjeev sahani
Psychological Factors
• Motivation
• Perception
• Learning
• Beliefs and Attitudes
sanjeev sahani
Buying Roles
• Initiator
• Influencer
• Decider
• Buyer
• User
sanjeev sahani
Buying Behaviour
• Complex
• Dissonance (Difference Of Opinion)-
Reducing
• Habitual
• Variety seeking
sanjeev sahani
Post - Purchase Behaviour
• Satisfaction
• Actions
• Use and Disposal
sanjeev sahani

Weitere ähnliche Inhalte

Ähnlich wie presentation_consumer_behaviour 35th batch.ppt

Unit IV AMM- Consumer Behaviour Analysis
Unit IV AMM- Consumer Behaviour AnalysisUnit IV AMM- Consumer Behaviour Analysis
Unit IV AMM- Consumer Behaviour Analysis
Dayanand Huded
 
Marketing-Management-Unit-2-Dr-Neha-Vashistha.pptx
Marketing-Management-Unit-2-Dr-Neha-Vashistha.pptxMarketing-Management-Unit-2-Dr-Neha-Vashistha.pptx
Marketing-Management-Unit-2-Dr-Neha-Vashistha.pptx
saeedahmed433704
 
Marketing Strategy and Consumer Behaviour.pdf
Marketing Strategy and Consumer Behaviour.pdfMarketing Strategy and Consumer Behaviour.pdf
Marketing Strategy and Consumer Behaviour.pdf
Abo Bakr El Omda
 

Ähnlich wie presentation_consumer_behaviour 35th batch.ppt (20)

Cb1
Cb1Cb1
Cb1
 
4. consumer behaviour
4. consumer behaviour4. consumer behaviour
4. consumer behaviour
 
Marketing
MarketingMarketing
Marketing
 
Consumer behavior.pptx
 Consumer behavior.pptx Consumer behavior.pptx
Consumer behavior.pptx
 
Unit IV AMM- Consumer Behaviour Analysis
Unit IV AMM- Consumer Behaviour AnalysisUnit IV AMM- Consumer Behaviour Analysis
Unit IV AMM- Consumer Behaviour Analysis
 
Consumer Behaviour.ppt
Consumer Behaviour.pptConsumer Behaviour.ppt
Consumer Behaviour.ppt
 
An PPT on Consumer Behaviour and Market Segmentation
An PPT on Consumer Behaviour and Market SegmentationAn PPT on Consumer Behaviour and Market Segmentation
An PPT on Consumer Behaviour and Market Segmentation
 
Consumer behavior and advertising research
Consumer behavior and advertising researchConsumer behavior and advertising research
Consumer behavior and advertising research
 
Marketing-Management-Unit-2-Dr-Neha-Vashistha.pptx
Marketing-Management-Unit-2-Dr-Neha-Vashistha.pptxMarketing-Management-Unit-2-Dr-Neha-Vashistha.pptx
Marketing-Management-Unit-2-Dr-Neha-Vashistha.pptx
 
Marketing Management module 3 uma k
Marketing Management module 3 uma kMarketing Management module 3 uma k
Marketing Management module 3 uma k
 
Marketing Strategy and Consumer Behaviour.pdf
Marketing Strategy and Consumer Behaviour.pdfMarketing Strategy and Consumer Behaviour.pdf
Marketing Strategy and Consumer Behaviour.pdf
 
Unit 1
Unit 1Unit 1
Unit 1
 
Consumer Behavior unit one.pptx
Consumer Behavior unit one.pptxConsumer Behavior unit one.pptx
Consumer Behavior unit one.pptx
 
Introduction to Buyer Behaviour
Introduction to Buyer BehaviourIntroduction to Buyer Behaviour
Introduction to Buyer Behaviour
 
Ss consumer behavior
Ss consumer behaviorSs consumer behavior
Ss consumer behavior
 
Consumer Behaviour-Unit-1.ppt
Consumer Behaviour-Unit-1.pptConsumer Behaviour-Unit-1.ppt
Consumer Behaviour-Unit-1.ppt
 
Consumer Behavior: The Psychology of Consumption
Consumer Behavior: The Psychology of ConsumptionConsumer Behavior: The Psychology of Consumption
Consumer Behavior: The Psychology of Consumption
 
Cb
CbCb
Cb
 
Consumer behaviour
Consumer behaviourConsumer behaviour
Consumer behaviour
 
20220307044228CONSUMER BEHAVIOR.pdf
20220307044228CONSUMER BEHAVIOR.pdf20220307044228CONSUMER BEHAVIOR.pdf
20220307044228CONSUMER BEHAVIOR.pdf
 

Kürzlich hochgeladen

Chintamani Call Girls: 🍓 7737669865 🍓 High Profile Model Escorts | Bangalore ...
Chintamani Call Girls: 🍓 7737669865 🍓 High Profile Model Escorts | Bangalore ...Chintamani Call Girls: 🍓 7737669865 🍓 High Profile Model Escorts | Bangalore ...
Chintamani Call Girls: 🍓 7737669865 🍓 High Profile Model Escorts | Bangalore ...
amitlee9823
 
Call Girls In Bellandur ☎ 7737669865 🥵 Book Your One night Stand
Call Girls In Bellandur ☎ 7737669865 🥵 Book Your One night StandCall Girls In Bellandur ☎ 7737669865 🥵 Book Your One night Stand
Call Girls In Bellandur ☎ 7737669865 🥵 Book Your One night Stand
amitlee9823
 
Probability Grade 10 Third Quarter Lessons
Probability Grade 10 Third Quarter LessonsProbability Grade 10 Third Quarter Lessons
Probability Grade 10 Third Quarter Lessons
JoseMangaJr1
 
Escorts Service Kumaraswamy Layout ☎ 7737669865☎ Book Your One night Stand (B...
Escorts Service Kumaraswamy Layout ☎ 7737669865☎ Book Your One night Stand (B...Escorts Service Kumaraswamy Layout ☎ 7737669865☎ Book Your One night Stand (B...
Escorts Service Kumaraswamy Layout ☎ 7737669865☎ Book Your One night Stand (B...
amitlee9823
 
Call Girls Bommasandra Just Call 👗 7737669865 👗 Top Class Call Girl Service B...
Call Girls Bommasandra Just Call 👗 7737669865 👗 Top Class Call Girl Service B...Call Girls Bommasandra Just Call 👗 7737669865 👗 Top Class Call Girl Service B...
Call Girls Bommasandra Just Call 👗 7737669865 👗 Top Class Call Girl Service B...
amitlee9823
 
Call Girls In Hsr Layout ☎ 7737669865 🥵 Book Your One night Stand
Call Girls In Hsr Layout ☎ 7737669865 🥵 Book Your One night StandCall Girls In Hsr Layout ☎ 7737669865 🥵 Book Your One night Stand
Call Girls In Hsr Layout ☎ 7737669865 🥵 Book Your One night Stand
amitlee9823
 
Jual Obat Aborsi Surabaya ( Asli No.1 ) 085657271886 Obat Penggugur Kandungan...
Jual Obat Aborsi Surabaya ( Asli No.1 ) 085657271886 Obat Penggugur Kandungan...Jual Obat Aborsi Surabaya ( Asli No.1 ) 085657271886 Obat Penggugur Kandungan...
Jual Obat Aborsi Surabaya ( Asli No.1 ) 085657271886 Obat Penggugur Kandungan...
ZurliaSoop
 
FESE Capital Markets Fact Sheet 2024 Q1.pdf
FESE Capital Markets Fact Sheet 2024 Q1.pdfFESE Capital Markets Fact Sheet 2024 Q1.pdf
FESE Capital Markets Fact Sheet 2024 Q1.pdf
MarinCaroMartnezBerg
 
Vip Mumbai Call Girls Thane West Call On 9920725232 With Body to body massage...
Vip Mumbai Call Girls Thane West Call On 9920725232 With Body to body massage...Vip Mumbai Call Girls Thane West Call On 9920725232 With Body to body massage...
Vip Mumbai Call Girls Thane West Call On 9920725232 With Body to body massage...
amitlee9823
 
Call Girls Bannerghatta Road Just Call 👗 7737669865 👗 Top Class Call Girl Ser...
Call Girls Bannerghatta Road Just Call 👗 7737669865 👗 Top Class Call Girl Ser...Call Girls Bannerghatta Road Just Call 👗 7737669865 👗 Top Class Call Girl Ser...
Call Girls Bannerghatta Road Just Call 👗 7737669865 👗 Top Class Call Girl Ser...
amitlee9823
 
Call Girls Indiranagar Just Call 👗 7737669865 👗 Top Class Call Girl Service B...
Call Girls Indiranagar Just Call 👗 7737669865 👗 Top Class Call Girl Service B...Call Girls Indiranagar Just Call 👗 7737669865 👗 Top Class Call Girl Service B...
Call Girls Indiranagar Just Call 👗 7737669865 👗 Top Class Call Girl Service B...
amitlee9823
 

Kürzlich hochgeladen (20)

BDSM⚡Call Girls in Mandawali Delhi >༒8448380779 Escort Service
BDSM⚡Call Girls in Mandawali Delhi >༒8448380779 Escort ServiceBDSM⚡Call Girls in Mandawali Delhi >༒8448380779 Escort Service
BDSM⚡Call Girls in Mandawali Delhi >༒8448380779 Escort Service
 
Chintamani Call Girls: 🍓 7737669865 🍓 High Profile Model Escorts | Bangalore ...
Chintamani Call Girls: 🍓 7737669865 🍓 High Profile Model Escorts | Bangalore ...Chintamani Call Girls: 🍓 7737669865 🍓 High Profile Model Escorts | Bangalore ...
Chintamani Call Girls: 🍓 7737669865 🍓 High Profile Model Escorts | Bangalore ...
 
Call Girls In Bellandur ☎ 7737669865 🥵 Book Your One night Stand
Call Girls In Bellandur ☎ 7737669865 🥵 Book Your One night StandCall Girls In Bellandur ☎ 7737669865 🥵 Book Your One night Stand
Call Girls In Bellandur ☎ 7737669865 🥵 Book Your One night Stand
 
Probability Grade 10 Third Quarter Lessons
Probability Grade 10 Third Quarter LessonsProbability Grade 10 Third Quarter Lessons
Probability Grade 10 Third Quarter Lessons
 
Escorts Service Kumaraswamy Layout ☎ 7737669865☎ Book Your One night Stand (B...
Escorts Service Kumaraswamy Layout ☎ 7737669865☎ Book Your One night Stand (B...Escorts Service Kumaraswamy Layout ☎ 7737669865☎ Book Your One night Stand (B...
Escorts Service Kumaraswamy Layout ☎ 7737669865☎ Book Your One night Stand (B...
 
Call Girls Bommasandra Just Call 👗 7737669865 👗 Top Class Call Girl Service B...
Call Girls Bommasandra Just Call 👗 7737669865 👗 Top Class Call Girl Service B...Call Girls Bommasandra Just Call 👗 7737669865 👗 Top Class Call Girl Service B...
Call Girls Bommasandra Just Call 👗 7737669865 👗 Top Class Call Girl Service B...
 
Call Girls In Hsr Layout ☎ 7737669865 🥵 Book Your One night Stand
Call Girls In Hsr Layout ☎ 7737669865 🥵 Book Your One night StandCall Girls In Hsr Layout ☎ 7737669865 🥵 Book Your One night Stand
Call Girls In Hsr Layout ☎ 7737669865 🥵 Book Your One night Stand
 
Call me @ 9892124323 Cheap Rate Call Girls in Vashi with Real Photo 100% Secure
Call me @ 9892124323  Cheap Rate Call Girls in Vashi with Real Photo 100% SecureCall me @ 9892124323  Cheap Rate Call Girls in Vashi with Real Photo 100% Secure
Call me @ 9892124323 Cheap Rate Call Girls in Vashi with Real Photo 100% Secure
 
Jual Obat Aborsi Surabaya ( Asli No.1 ) 085657271886 Obat Penggugur Kandungan...
Jual Obat Aborsi Surabaya ( Asli No.1 ) 085657271886 Obat Penggugur Kandungan...Jual Obat Aborsi Surabaya ( Asli No.1 ) 085657271886 Obat Penggugur Kandungan...
Jual Obat Aborsi Surabaya ( Asli No.1 ) 085657271886 Obat Penggugur Kandungan...
 
Mature dropshipping via API with DroFx.pptx
Mature dropshipping via API with DroFx.pptxMature dropshipping via API with DroFx.pptx
Mature dropshipping via API with DroFx.pptx
 
FESE Capital Markets Fact Sheet 2024 Q1.pdf
FESE Capital Markets Fact Sheet 2024 Q1.pdfFESE Capital Markets Fact Sheet 2024 Q1.pdf
FESE Capital Markets Fact Sheet 2024 Q1.pdf
 
Vip Mumbai Call Girls Thane West Call On 9920725232 With Body to body massage...
Vip Mumbai Call Girls Thane West Call On 9920725232 With Body to body massage...Vip Mumbai Call Girls Thane West Call On 9920725232 With Body to body massage...
Vip Mumbai Call Girls Thane West Call On 9920725232 With Body to body massage...
 
Cheap Rate Call girls Sarita Vihar Delhi 9205541914 shot 1500 night
Cheap Rate Call girls Sarita Vihar Delhi 9205541914 shot 1500 nightCheap Rate Call girls Sarita Vihar Delhi 9205541914 shot 1500 night
Cheap Rate Call girls Sarita Vihar Delhi 9205541914 shot 1500 night
 
Week-01-2.ppt BBB human Computer interaction
Week-01-2.ppt BBB human Computer interactionWeek-01-2.ppt BBB human Computer interaction
Week-01-2.ppt BBB human Computer interaction
 
Call Girls Bannerghatta Road Just Call 👗 7737669865 👗 Top Class Call Girl Ser...
Call Girls Bannerghatta Road Just Call 👗 7737669865 👗 Top Class Call Girl Ser...Call Girls Bannerghatta Road Just Call 👗 7737669865 👗 Top Class Call Girl Ser...
Call Girls Bannerghatta Road Just Call 👗 7737669865 👗 Top Class Call Girl Ser...
 
BigBuy dropshipping via API with DroFx.pptx
BigBuy dropshipping via API with DroFx.pptxBigBuy dropshipping via API with DroFx.pptx
BigBuy dropshipping via API with DroFx.pptx
 
VIP Model Call Girls Hinjewadi ( Pune ) Call ON 8005736733 Starting From 5K t...
VIP Model Call Girls Hinjewadi ( Pune ) Call ON 8005736733 Starting From 5K t...VIP Model Call Girls Hinjewadi ( Pune ) Call ON 8005736733 Starting From 5K t...
VIP Model Call Girls Hinjewadi ( Pune ) Call ON 8005736733 Starting From 5K t...
 
Call Girls Indiranagar Just Call 👗 7737669865 👗 Top Class Call Girl Service B...
Call Girls Indiranagar Just Call 👗 7737669865 👗 Top Class Call Girl Service B...Call Girls Indiranagar Just Call 👗 7737669865 👗 Top Class Call Girl Service B...
Call Girls Indiranagar Just Call 👗 7737669865 👗 Top Class Call Girl Service B...
 
Call Girls in Sarai Kale Khan Delhi 💯 Call Us 🔝9205541914 🔝( Delhi) Escorts S...
Call Girls in Sarai Kale Khan Delhi 💯 Call Us 🔝9205541914 🔝( Delhi) Escorts S...Call Girls in Sarai Kale Khan Delhi 💯 Call Us 🔝9205541914 🔝( Delhi) Escorts S...
Call Girls in Sarai Kale Khan Delhi 💯 Call Us 🔝9205541914 🔝( Delhi) Escorts S...
 
Discover Why Less is More in B2B Research
Discover Why Less is More in B2B ResearchDiscover Why Less is More in B2B Research
Discover Why Less is More in B2B Research
 

presentation_consumer_behaviour 35th batch.ppt

  • 2. Objectives • Developing an understanding of the internal and external influences which shape the behaviour of both consumer and organisational buyers • Identifying the discrete stages of the buying process undertaken by consumers and organisational buyers • Appreciating how an understanding of buyer behaviour can be used in market segmentation and target marketing and
  • 3. Why do we need to study Consumer Behaviour •Because no longer can we take the customer/consumer for granted. sanjeev sahani
  • 4. • All managers must become astute (intelligent/smart) analysts of consumer motivation and behaviour sanjeev sahani
  • 5. DEFINITION • Consumer Behaviour may be defined as the decision process and physical activity individuals engage in when evaluating , acquiring, using or disposing of goods and services. • According to Belch and Belch "consumer behaviour is the process and activities people engage in when searching for, selecting,purchasing, using, evaluating and disposing of products and services so as to satisfy their needs and desires".
  • 6. Nature of Consumer Behaviour • Systematic process : Consumer behaviour is a systematic process relating to buying decisions of the customers. The buying process consists of the following steps : • Need identification to buy the product • Information search relating to the product • Listing and evaluating the alternatives • Purchase decision • Post purchase evaluation by the marketer sanjeev sahani
  • 7. Nature of Consumer Behaviour • Influenced by various factors: Consumer behaviour is influenced by a number of factors the factors that influence consumers include marketing, personal, psychological, situational, social and cultural etc. • Different for different customers : All consumers do not behave in the same manner. Different consumers behave differently. The different in consumer behaviour is due to individual factors such as nature of the consumer's lifestyle, culture etc.
  • 8. Nature of Consumer Behaviour • Different for different products : Consumer behaviour is different for different products there are some consumers who may buy more quantity of certain items and very low quantity of some other items. • Vary across regions : The consumer behaviour vary across States, regions and countries. For instance, the behaviour of urban consumers is different from that of rural consumers. normally rural consumers are conservative (traditional) in their buying behaviour
  • 9. Nature of Consumer Behaviour • Vital for marketers : Marketers need to have a good knowledge of consumer behaviour they need to study the various factors that influence consumer behaviour of the target customers. The knowledge of consumer behaviour enables marketers to take appropriate marketing decisions. • Reflect status : Consumer buying behaviour is not only influenced by status of a consumer coma but it also reflect it. Those consumers who owned luxury cars, watches and other items are considered by others as persons of higher status.
  • 10. Nature of Consumer Behaviour • Result in spread effect : Consumer behaviour as a spread effect. The buying behaviour of one person may influence the buying behaviour of another person. For instance, a customer may always prefer to buy premium brands of clothing, watches and other items etc. This may influence some of his friends, neighbours and colleagues. This is one of the reasons why marketers use celebrities like Shahrukh Khan, sachin to endorse their brands.
  • 11. Nature of Consumer Behaviour • Undergoes a change : The consumer behaviour undergoes a change over a period of time depending upon changes in age , education and income level etc, for example, kids may prefer colourful dresses but as they grow up as teenagers and young adults, they may prefer trendy clothes. sanjeev sahani
  • 12. Nature of Consumer Behaviour • Information search : Search for information is a common consumer behaviour. Consumers cannot purchase goods and services if they are unaware that a good or service exists. When a consumer decides to buy a certain item, his decision must be based on the information he has gathered about what products our services are available to fulfill his needs. There might be a product available that would be better suited to the consumers needs, but if he is unaware of product, he will not buy it.
  • 13. Nature of Consumer Behaviour • Brand loyalty : Brand loyalty is another characteristic of consumer behaviour. Brand loyalty is the tendency of a consumer to buy product products or services from a certain company that one likes or equates with having high quality goods and services. For example, if Naina's first car was a Honda as a teenager and the car lasted 200,000 miles, she might have a tendency to buy hondas again in the future due to her previous positive experience. This brand loyalty may be so strong that she forgoes the information search all together when considering for next vehicle. •
  • 14. Scope of Consumer Behaviour 1) Consumer behaviour and marketing management 2) Consumer behaviour and non profit and social marketing 3) Consumer behaviour and government decision making i) Government services ii) consumer protection 4) Consumer behaviour and demarketing 5) Consumer behaviour and consumer education
  • 15. Scope of Consumer Behaviour • 1) Consumer behaviour and marketing management : Effective business managers realise the importance of marketing to the success of their firm. A sound understanding of consumer behaviour is essential to the long run success of any marketing program. In fact, it is seen as a corner stone of the Marketing concept, an important orientation of philosophy of many marketing managers. The essence of the Marketing concept is captured in three interrelated orientations consumers needs and wants, company integrated strategy.
  • 16. Scope of Consumer Behaviour • Consumer behaviour and non profit and social marketing : In today's world even the non-profit organisations like government agencies, religious sects, universities and charitable institutions have to market their services for ideas to the "target group of consumers or institution." At other times these groups are required to appeal to the general public for support of certain causes or ideas. Also they make their contribution towards eradication of the problems of the society. Thus a clear understanding of the consumer behaviour and decision making process will assist these efforts.
  • 17. Scope of Consumer Behaviour • 3) Consumer behaviour and government decision making : In recent years the relevance of consumer behaviour principles to government decision making. Two major areas of activities have been affected: • i) Government services: It is increasingly and that government provision of public services can benefit significantly from an understanding of the consumers, or users, of these services. • ii) consumer protection: Many Agencies at all levels of government are involved with regulating business practices for the purpose of protecting consumers welfare.
  • 18. Scope of Consumer Behaviour • Consumer behaviour and demarketing: It has become increasingly clear that consumers are entering an era of scarcity in terms of some natural gas and water. These scarcities have led to promotions stressing conservation rather than consumption. In other circumstances, consumers have been encouraged to decrease or stop their use of particular goods believed to have harmful effects. Programs designed to reduce drug abuse, gambling, and similar types of conception examples. These actions have been undertaken by government agencies non profit organisations, and other private groups. The term "demarketing" refers to all such efforts to encourage consumers to reduce their consumption of a particular product or services.
  • 19. Scope of Consumer Behaviour • 5) Consumer behaviour and consumer education: Consumer also stands to benefit directly from orderly investigations of their own behaviour. This can occur on an individual basis or as part of more formal educational programs. For example, when consumers learn that a large proportion of the billions spend annually on grocery products is used for impulse purchases and not spend according to pre planned shopping list, consumers may be more willing to plan effort to save money. In general, as marketers that can influence consumers' purchases, consumers have the opportunity to understand better how they affect their own behaviour.
  • 20. Importance of consumer behaviour: • 1) production policies • 2) Price policies • 3) Decision regarding channels of distribution • 4) Decision regarding sales promotion • 5) Exploiting marketing opportunities • 6) Consumer do not always act or react predictably • 7) Highly diversified consumer preferences • 8) Rapid introduction of new products • 9) Implementing the "Marketing concept":
  • 21. Applications of consumer behaviour • 1) Analysing market opportunity: Consumer behaviour study help in identifying the unfulfilled needs and wants of consumers. This requires examining the friends and conditions operating in the Marketplace, consumers lifestyle, income levels and energy influences. This may reveal unsatisfied needs and wants. Mosquito repellents have been marketed in response to a genuine and unfulfilled consumer need.
  • 22. Applications of consumer behaviour • 2) Selecting target market: Review of market opportunities often helps in identifying district consumer segments with very distinct and unique wants and needs. Identifying these groups, behave and how they make purchase decisions enable the marketer to design and market products or services particularly suited to their wants and needs. For example, please sleep revealed that many existing and potential shampoo users did not want to buy shampoo fax price at rate 60 for more and would rather prefer a low price package containing enough quantity for one or two washers. This finding LED companies to introduce the shampoos sachet, which become a good seller.
  • 23. Applications of consumer behaviour 3) Marketing-mix decisions: Once unsatisfied needs and wants are identified, the marketer has to determine the right mix of product, price, distribution and promotion. Where too, consumer behaviour study is very helpful in finding answers to many perplexing questions. The factors of marketing mix decisions are: i) product ii) price iii) promotion iv) distribution
  • 24. Applications of consumer behaviour • 4) Use in social and non profits marketing: Consumer behaviour studies are useful to design marketing strategies by social, governmental and not for profit organisations to make their programmes more effective such as family planning, awareness about AIDS. •
  • 25. Can Marketing be standardised? • No. Because cross - cultural styles, habits, tastes, prevents such standardisation sanjeev sahani
  • 26. Factors affecting Consumer Behavior • The behaviour of buyers is the product of two broad categories of influence; these are endogenous factors (i.e. those internal to the individual) and exogenous factors (i.e. those external to the individual) Whilst these are variables that are largely outside the direct control of marketing managers, an understanding of them can be harnessed to great effect. sanjeev sahani
  • 28. Marketing Stimuli Product Price Place Promotion 4 Ps sanjeev sahani
  • 29. Other Stimuli Economic Technological Political Cultural Marketing Environment sanjeev sahani
  • 30. Buyer characteristics • Cultural • Social • Personal • Psychological sanjeev sahani
  • 31. Exogenous (External )influences on buyer behaviour • Factors which are external to the individual but have a substantial impact upon his/her behaviour are social and cultural in nature. • These include culture, social class or status, reference groups and family membership.
  • 32. • Culture • Culture is perhaps the most fundamental and most pervasive external influence on an individual's behaviour, including his/her buying behaviour. Culture has been defined as: • “…the complex of values, ideas, attitudes and other meaningful symbols created by people to shape human behaviour and the artifacts of that behaviour as they are transmitted from one generation to the next.” sanjeev sahani
  • 33. • Three key aspects of culture are brought out by this definition. • First, culture is created by people. The behavioural patterns, ideas, economic and social activities and artifacts of a people's forebears shapes the culture of today. • Second, culture is enduring. It evolves over time but is stable in the short to medium term and is in fact passed, largely intact, from generation to generation. In particular, the values of the society tend to be enduring. • Third, cultural influences have both tangible and intangible results. For instance, language and patterns of speech are products of culture and are observable. Basic beliefs and values are also the outcome of the cultural environment within which a person lives but these mental phenomena are intangible outcomes. sanjeev sahani
  • 34. Social status • Social class or social status is a powerful tool for segmenting markets. • Empirical research suggests that people from the same social group tend to have similar opportunities, live in similar types of housing, in the same areas, by similar products from the same types of outlets and generally conform to similar styles of living. • At the same time, whilst people within the same social category exhibit close similarities to one another, there are usually considerable differences in consumption behaviour between social groups. • The variables used to stratify a population into social classes or groups normally include income, occupation, education and lifestyle. sanjeev sahani
  • 35. Reference groups • People are social animals who tend to live in groups. The group(s) to which a person belongs exerts an influence upon the behaviour, beliefs and attitudes of its members by communicating norms and expectations about the roles they are to assume. • Thus, an individual will refer to others with respect to: ‘correct’ modes of dress and speech; the legitimacy of values, beliefs and attitudes; the appropriateness of certain forms of behaviour, and also on the social acceptability of the consumption of given products and services. • These “others' constitute reference groups. Reference groups provide a standard of comparison against which an individual can judge his/her own attitudes, beliefs and behaviour. sanjeev sahani
  • 36. Three reference Groups • a group to which an individual belongs (also known as a peer group) • a group to which an individual aspires, and • a group whose perspective has been adopted by the individual sanjeev sahani
  • 37. Reference groups have only the weakest influence on buying behaviour. The key difference appears to be the extent to which a product is used or consumed publicly. That is, if the product or brand is evident to those within the reference group then that group's influence is likely to stronger with regard to purchasing behaviour. sanjeev sahani
  • 38. Endogenous(Internal) influences on buyer behaviour • Endogenous influences are those which are internal to the individual. These are psychological in nature and include needs and motives, perceptions, learning processes, attitudes, personality type and self-image. sanjeev sahani
  • 39. Needs and motives • When an individual recognises that he/she has a need, this acts to trigger a motivated state. Need recognition occurs when the individual becomes aware of a discrepancy between his/her actual state and some perceived desired state. Once the need is recognised then the individual concerned will form a motive. A motive may be defined as an impulse to act in such a way as to bring about the meeting of a specific need. sanjeev sahani
  • 40. Perceptions • Whereas motivation is a stimulus to action, how an individual perceives situations, products, promotional messages, and even the source of such messages, largely determines how an individual acts. A basic definition of perception would be ‘how people see things’. Berelson and Steiner5 have defined perception more formally as: • “…the process by which an individual selects, organizes, and interprets information inputs to create a meaningful picture of the world.” • Individuals can have vastly differing interpretations of the same situation. Whilst all human beings receive information through the same five senses-vision, hearing, smell, taste and touch the extent to which they attend to a piece of information, how they organise that information and how information is interpreted tends to differ. sanjeev sahani
  • 41. Age and life-cycle stage • Consumer purchases are influenced by age and by the stage in the family life- cycle. Thus, a two-year old will have different requirements from a middle-aged person, and a 24-year-old person, married with young children, will buy with a different set of priorities when compared with a 24-year-old single person. In different countries the age composition varies.. sanjeev sahani
  • 42. Gender The roles and status associated with men and women vary within most cultures and between cultures. You need to be aware of these differences and of the way in which changes are occurring. sanjeev sahani
  • 43. Selective attention: • All people are daily bombarded by stimuli, both commercial and non-commercial. People simply cannot pay attention to all these messages and therefore they develop mechanisms to reduce the amount of information that they actually process. • People pay attention to stimuli which meet an immediate need. Thus a farmer within whose district poultry have been reported as suffering from Newcastle disease will be especially attentive to messages relating to the prevention of this affliction in his/her ostrich flock. sanjeev sahani
  • 44. Learning • Much of human behaviour is learned. The evidence of learning is a change in a person's behaviour as a result of experience. Theory suggests that learning is the product of interactions between drives, stimuli, cues, responses and reinforcement. For instance, a farmer may have a strong drive towards increasing his/her productivity. sanjeev sahani
  • 45. • A farmer may see the adoption of a newly available two-wheeled tractor as a way of increasing his/her productivity to the extent required. The encouragement of the farmer's neighbours, and perhaps his/her village headman, seeing the same type of tractor operating successfully on a neighbouring farm, receiving visits from salesmen and reading promotion literature are all cues that can impinge upon the farmer's impulse to invest in a two-wheeled tractor. sanjeev sahani
  • 46. Attitudes four fundamental characteristics of attitudes 1) First thing is that attitudes are enduring. They may change over time but they tend to be reasonably stable in the short to medium term. 2) Stresses that attitudes are learned from the individual's own experience and/or from what they read or hear from others. 3) Third, that attitudes precede and impact upon behaviour. Attitudes reflect an individual's characters towards another person, an event, product or other object. A person may be either favourably or unfavourably predisposed towards an object; sanjeev sahani
  • 47. • . A consumer may be unfavourably predisposed towards locally manufactured dairy products because of dissatisfaction in the past with the quality of a specific type of cheese and with the shelf-life of fresh milk from the country's Dairy Produce Board. The negative experience of the consumer, which relates to very specific products, is readily transferred to all other dairy products marketed by the Board and the consumer exhibits a preference for imported dairy products. sanjeev sahani
  • 48. Personality and self-concept • Individuals tend to perceive other human beings as ‘types of persons’. There are, for example, people perceived to be nervous types, ambitious types, self-confident types, introverts, extroverts, the timid, the bold, the self-deprecating, and so on. These are personality traits. Like attitudes, personality traits serve to bring about a consistency in the behaviour of an individual with respect to his/her environment. sanjeev sahani
  • 49. • . An individual's self-image is how he/she sees him/herself. Self-image is a fusion of how a person would ideally like to be, the way a person believes others see him/her and how a person actually is. • For the marketer the importance of self- images rests in the opportunities to relate product characteristics to these images. • The promotional campaign would focus on the congruence between the self-image and the product image, i.e. a sophisticated, more refined product for a sophisticated, more refined consumer. sanjeev sahani
  • 51. Buyer’s Decision Process • Problem Recognition • Information Search • Evaluation of Alternatives • Purchase Decision • Consumption • Postpurchase behaviour sanjeev sahani
  • 52. A five-stage model of the buying process sanjeev sahani
  • 53. Problem recognition • The buying process begins with a recognition on the part of an individual or organisation that they have a problem or need. The farmer recognises that he/she is approaching a new cultivation season and requires seed; a grain trading company realises that stocks are depleted but demand is rising and therefore wheat, rice and maize must be procured; a rural family is expecting an important guest who must be honoured by the slaughter and preparation of a goat for a feast. • Problems and needs can be triggered by either internal or external stimuli. A poor peasant family may purchase a goat, which they can ill-afford, either because they have an innate sense of hospitality (internal stimulus) or because social convention dictates that a goat be procured and prepared for special visitors (external stimulus). sanjeev sahani
  • 54. • Marketing research needs to identify the stimuli that trigger the recognition of particular problems and needs . • The Prosess that occurs whenever the customer sees a significance between his/her deisred state of affaires and some desired ideal state. sanjeev sahani
  • 55. Information search • : Information gathering may be passive or active. Passive information gathering occurs when an individual or group simply becomes more attentive to a recognised solution to a given need. That is, he/she exhibits heightened attention. • The potential buyer becomes more aware of advertisements or other messages concerning the product in question. • In other circumstances the individual is proactive rather than reactive with respect to information. A trader who sees potential in a new vegetable which is being imported into the country will actively search out information about the product, sources of supply, prices and import regulations. • He/she is likely to converse with other traders, request literature from potential suppliers, etc. sanjeev sahani
  • 56. information sources used will fall into Three categories • personal sources (family, friends, work colleagues, neighbours, acquaintances) • commercial sources (promotional materials, press releases, technical journals or consumer magazines, distributors, packaging) • public sources (mass media) sanjeev sahani
  • 57. Evaluation of alternatives • : The process of evaluating alternatives not only differs from customer to customer prospective customer but the individual will also adopt different processes in accordance with the situation. It is likely that when making judgments customers will focus on those product attributes and features that are most relevant to their needs at a given point in time. Here, the marketer can differentiate between those characteristics which a product must have before it is allowed to enter the customer's mind set. sanjeev sahani
  • 58. • A quite different set of criteria might be used in deciding between alternative products and suppliers within the evoked set e.g. the period of credit given by the supplier, the ability of the supplier to deliver the total order in periodic batches and the reliability of the supplier in the past. sanjeev sahani
  • 59. Purchase decision • At the evaluation stage the prospective customer will have arrived at a judgment about his/her preference among the evoked set and have formed a purchase intention. • However, two factors can intervene between the intention and the purchase decision: the attitude of others and unanticipated events. • If the attitude of other individuals or organizations who influence the prospective customer is strongly negative then the intention may not be converted to a firm commitment or decision. sanjeev sahani
  • 60. • Unanticipated events can also intervene between intention and action. Whenever human beings form judgments or seek to make decisions they invariably make assumptions. These assumptions are often implicit rather than explicit. • A farmer may state an intention to purchase a mechanical thresher within the next twelve months but when his/her implicit assumption of ‘a good harvest’ is not realised, due to drought, the purchase of the machine is postponed. sanjeev sahani
  • 62. Postpurchase behaviour: • The process of marketing is not concluded when a sale is made. Marketing continues into the post purchase period. The aim of marketing is not to make a sale but to create a long term relationship with a customer. Organizations maintain profitability and growth through repeat purchases of their products and services by loyal customers. sanjeev sahani
  • 63. • Having procured the product the customer will experience either satisfaction or dissatisfaction with his/her purchase. • The level of satisfaction or dissatisfaction is largely a function of the congruence between the buyer's expectations of the product and the product's perceived performance. • Buyer expectations of a product are usually based upon promotional messages from the product's supplier, family, friends, work colleagues and, perhaps, professional advisors. In addition, the buyer's own perceptual processes influence expectations. • If the product's perceived performance either matches or exceeds its expected performance then the buyer is likely to feel highly satisfied. sanjeev sahani
  • 64. • Another aspect of postpurchase behaviour that is of interest to marketers is how the buyer actually uses the product. • It is common to find buyers using a product in a different way from that for which it was either designed or intended. • Such deviations can present problems or opportunities to the product supplier. • For instance, whilst maize meal is chiefly used as a foodstuff, consumers discovered that it makes an excellent cleansing agent for shoes and other items of clothing when these have become badly stained. • This new use for the product could represent a marketing opportunity for a repackaged and repositioned product. sanjeev sahani
  • 65. Industrial buyer characteristics • Individuals who purchase products on behalf of an enterprise they either own or are employed by have two distinct sets of goals that they pursue: their own and those of the organisation. • As an individual, the industrial buyer enjoys exercising authority, seeks job satisfaction, the approval and respect of both peers and superiors and other personal goals and avoids unnecessarily risky decisions. • Industrial buyers are also motivated by the desire to achieve organisational goals such as cost control, improved efficiency of operations, reliable supplies of essential inputs, improved product performance and so on. sanjeev sahani
  • 66. • An appropriate marketing campaign would attend to both the buyer's personal and organisational goals . • The key elements in this process are as follows. • (a) Decision-making unit (DMU) Various people are involved in the buying process within an organisation. Collectively they constitute the DMU or buying centre. • (b) Interaction between buyer and seller It is quite usual in business-to-business buying for buyers and sellers to negotiate and influence each other in determining the form of the final transaction and other aspects of the interaction. sanjeev sahani
  • 67. • (c) Major types of buying situation The numerous types of buying situation have been grouped into three buy-classes by a number of writers on business markets. The three buy-classes are: • Straight rebuy; • Modified rebuy; • New task. sanjeev sahani
  • 68. GOVERNMENT BUYER BEHAVIOUR • Governments and other governmental institutions, such as local authorities and nationalised industries, are important buyers in most national markets. • (a) Buying will be a bureaucratic process • (b) A tender system is usually used • (c) Political influence • (e) Types of business and government buying sanjeev sahani
  • 70. Buyer’s Decision • Product Choice • Brand Choice • Dealer Choice • Purchase Timing • Purchase Amount sanjeev sahani
  • 71. Cultural factors • Culture • Sub - culture • Social Class sanjeev sahani
  • 72. Social factors • Reference Groups • Family • Roles and Statuses sanjeev sahani
  • 73. Personal Factors • Family Life Cycle • Occupation and Economic circumstances • Lifestyle • Personality and self - concept sanjeev sahani
  • 74. Psychological Factors • Motivation • Perception • Learning • Beliefs and Attitudes sanjeev sahani
  • 75. Buying Roles • Initiator • Influencer • Decider • Buyer • User sanjeev sahani
  • 76. Buying Behaviour • Complex • Dissonance (Difference Of Opinion)- Reducing • Habitual • Variety seeking sanjeev sahani
  • 77. Post - Purchase Behaviour • Satisfaction • Actions • Use and Disposal sanjeev sahani