Group 3 - Consumer PPT Final PDF
Group 3 - Consumer PPT Final PDF
Group 3 - Consumer PPT Final PDF
PRESENTATION
TEAM MEMBERS:-
Consumer Information
Processing: Attention and
Perception
CONSUMER INFORMATION
PROCESSING
Process through which consumers are:
1 2 3
Attend to the Coprehend the
Exposed to Information Information
Information
4 5
Place it in memory Retrieve it for later use
STAGES OF CONSUMER
INFORMATION PROCESSING
Comprehend the
Information Attend the Info
Info
Exposure: Attention: Comprehension:
Consumers receive Consumers allocate Consumers interpret
information processing capacity the information to
through their to a stimulus obtain meaning
senses Comprehension from it
EXPOSURE STAGE
Process through which consumer’s sensory organs are activated by
stimulus:
Selective Exposure Sensation
Involuntary
Voluntary Selective
attention
attention attention
Consumers actively Consumers Consumer is exposed
search out selectively focus to something
information that has attention on surprising, novel,
personal relevance relevant information threatening, or
unexpected
COMPREHENSION STAGE
The process through which individuals organize and
interpret information
Perceptual Organization Gestalt Psychology
The way people perceive shapes, Attempts to understand how people
forms, figures, and lines in their perceive patterns in the world
visual world
People draw upon their experience, Prior beliefs about what should happen
memory and expectations to attach in a given situation can influence the
meaning to a stimulus interpretation of information
ATTENTION
Attention involves the Consumers are Companies have the
amount of mental bombarded with formidable task of
processing that is product breaking through the
devoted to a particular information and clutter to attract
stimulus. It aims to advertisements consumer’s attention
engage and acquire each day and
new customers connect with
through different consumer’s needs &
techniques expectation
Target Ads
Johnson & Johnson is the perfect example for
targeting and grabbing the attention of a new
mother/Parent.
How well the consumer pays attention will depend on the stimulus, and
also the consumer's interest and need for that product. The consumer
interprets the information in two ways: 1) the literal meaning or the
semantic meaning and 2) the psychological meaning. Hence we are guided
by our learning as well as the semantic meaning of a word. A consumer
also interprets the symbols and other physical features of the product on
the basis of his experience and cultural beliefs. This is called semiotics.
-Supriya Purohit
Memory
Memory refers to a consumer's ability to understand the marketing messages and assign them value and
meaning.
The value and meaning assigned is largely determined by internal factors, (thoughts, feelings, emotion,
attitude, perception, motivation, personality, lifestyle) which are different for each consumer.
Theories of learning range from those that focus on simple stimulus-response connections (behavioral theories)
to perspectives that regard consumers as solvers of complex problems who learn abstract rules and
concepts as they observe others (cognitive theories).
Basic learning principles are at the heart of many advertising efforts.
Learning refers to the process by which consumers change their behaviour 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. 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.
Behavioral Learning Theories
These assume that learning takes place as the result of responses to external events. For example, if
a song we remember fondly from high school gets repeatedly paired
with a brand name, over time our warm memories about the tune
will rub off onto the advertised product.
According to this perspective, the feedback we receive as we go through life shapes our experiences.
Similarly, we respond to brand names, scents, “jingles” (a short song used in advertisements), and
other marketing stimuli because of the learned connections we form over time. People also learn
that actions they take result in rewards and punishments;
this feedback influences the way they will respond in similar situations in the future.
Consumers who receive compliments on a product choice will be more likely to buy that brand again,
but those who get food poisoning at a new restaurant are not likely to return to it in the future.
Classical Conditioning and Consumer
Classical conditioning has long been, and continues to be, an effective tool in marketing and advertising
(Hawkins, Best, & Coney, 1998). The general idea is to create an advertisement that has positive features such
that the ad creates enjoyment in the person exposed to it.
The enjoyable ad serves as the unconditioned stimulus (US), and the enjoyment is the unconditioned response
(UR). Because the product being advertised is mentioned in the ad, it becomes associated with the US, and
then becomes the conditioned stimulus (CS). In the end, if everything has gone well, seeing the product online
or in the store will then create a positive response in the buyer, leading them to be more likely to purchase the
product.
A similar strategy is used by corporations that sponsor teams or events. For instance, if people enjoy watching
a university basketball team playing basketball, and if that team is sponsored by a product, such as Red Bull,
then people may end up experiencing positive feelings when they view a can of Red Bull.
Of course, the sponsor wants to sponsor only good teams and good athletes because these create more
pleasurable responses. Advertisers use a variety of techniques to create positive advertisements, including
enjoyable music, cute babies, attractive models, and funny spokespeople.
Stimulus
Generalization
Pavlov also experimented with presenting new stimuli that
were similar, but not identical, to the original conditioned
stimulus. For instance, if the dog had been conditioned to
being scratched before the food arrived, the stimulus would
be changed to being rubbed rather than scratched. He
found that the dogs also salivated upon experiencing the
similar stimulus, a process known as (stimulus)
generalization. refers to the tendency to respond to stimuli
that resemble the original conditioned stimulus. The ability
to generalize has important evolutionary significance. If we
eat some red berries and they make us sick, it would be a
good idea to think twice before we eat some purple berries.
Although the berries are not the same, they nevertheless
are similar and may have the same negative properties.
Lewicki (1985) conducted research that demonstrated the influence of stimulus
generalization and how quickly and easily it can happen. In his experiment, high
school students first had a brief interaction with a female experimenter who had
short hair and glasses.
The study was set up so that the students had to ask the experimenter a question,
and (according to random assignment) the experimenter responded either in a
negative way or a neutral way toward the students. Then the students were told to
go into a second room in which two experimenters were present and to approach
either one of them. However, the researchers arranged it so that one of the two
experimenters looked a lot like the original experimenter, while the other one did
not (she had longer hair and no glasses).
The students were significantly more likely to avoid the experimenter who looked
like the earlier experimenter when that experimenter had been negative to them
than when she had treated them more neutrally.
The participants showed stimulus generalization such that the new, similar-looking
experimenter created the same negative response in the participants as had the
experimenter in the prior session.
Creating Loyal Customers
through Operant Conditioning
Operant conditioning studies how the effects of a behaviour influence the probability that it will occur
again. For example, the effects of the rat’s lever-pressing behaviour (i.e., receiving a food pellet)
influences the probability that it will keep pressing the lever. For, according to Thorndike’s law of
effect, when a behaviour has a positive (satisfying) effect or consequence, it is likely to be repeated in
the future. However, when a behaviour has a negative (painful/annoying) consequence, it is less likely
to be repeated in the future (). Effects that increase behaviours are referred to as reinforcers, and
effects that decrease them are referred to as punishers.
Marketers have developed several sales and marketing techniques based on the principles
of instrumental conditioning and specifically positive reinforcement. Each of these commonly known
tactics encourages consumers to be loyal, frequent, and high-spending shoppers:
• Discounts
• Rewards Programs
• Frequency Marketing Programs
• Gifts & Giveaways
Cognitive
Interpretation
Every consumer reacts depending on the stimulation intensity
(satisfaction or dissatisfaction from the purchased product or
service), in correlation with the mental mechanisms, i.e. processes.
Cognitive learning is a complex mental process of inclusion of all
consumer mental activities in resolving the problem of purchasing
certain products or services and resolution of the situation
occurred. It involves learning of ideas, concepts, attitudes and
reasoning abilities. Cognitive learning allows consumers to utilize
the stored information (memory) for building new knowledge used
for the current behaviour, or it stores it in the memory as
additional information for future use. The impact of cognitive
learning is directly connected with decision making, while the
probability that the brand has been remembered may
considerably increase the chances of that brand being bought.
The purchased product or service which the individual remembers
directly determines individual’s future selection.
In situations where consumers do not consider alternatives which are physically present and which are
being offered to them, their assessment and decisions my completely depend on the previously
remembered knowledge and experience.
Cognitive learning means storing short-term memory into a long-term memory. These two memory forms
are the result of cognitive learning, thus the key factors for their establishment are repetition and
elaboration.
Repetition involves mental recycling (processing) of information through the short-term memory which is
identified with the process of thinking.
Elaboration determines the degree of integration between the current knowledge and the already existing
knowledge. The quantity of elaboration depends on consumers’ motivation and their learning ability.
Elaboration allows acquiring and integrating of information into a stable, stored, knowledge within the
frames of the long-term memory.
The consumer reaction depends on several factors, one of which is cognitive learning, which is considered
as a key factor. It would be very beneficial for the companies to have available certain indicators for the
possible expected (unexpected) consumer reaction (both active and potential).
Examples and
Cases
Presented by: Harshita Kapoor
The Power of Managing Value