Lecture 8 - Decision Making-Student
Lecture 8 - Decision Making-Student
Lecture 8 - Decision Making-Student
N MAKING
By Dr. Dongmei Li
THE WHEEL OF CONSUMER BEHAVIOR
2
OPENING QUESTIONS
3
TYPES OF CONSUMER DECISIONS
Habitual Limited Extensive
decision problem problem
making solving solving
- Collect little or - Collect some - Collect a lot of
no information information information
- Requires - Consider a few - Consider a lot of
minimal effort alternatives different
- Known as - Evaluate the alternatives
routine response alternatives using - Evaluate the each
behavior simple decision alternative
rules carefully using
complex decision
rules
TYPES OF CONSUMER DECISIONS
Habitual Limited Extensive
decision problem problem
making solving solving
Situational Factors:
Cheap Expensive
Frequent Infrequent
purchasing purchasing
Low involvement High involvement
Familiar products Unfamiliar products
5
CONSUMER DECISION PROCESS
Problem recognition
Post-purchase evaluation
Information search
Evaluation of alternatives
Product choice
Outcomes
EXAMPLE OF DECISION PROCESS
Problem Recognition Tom realizes hes fed up with a black-and-
white TV that has bad sound reproduction
PROBLEM RECOGNITION
Problem recognition occurs when consumer sees
a significant difference between his current
state of affairs (actual state) and some desired
state of affairs (ideal state)
9
PROBLEM RECOGNITION
Primary demand:
Consumers are encouraged
to use a product or service
regardless of the brand they
choose.
13
HOW MUCH INFORMATION TO SEARCH?
Expertise is a belief of ones
knowledge in an subject area.
Importance is a belief that the
product/decision is of superior worth or
may resulting in great consequence.
Search
of Search
Functional risk
Physical risk
Social risk
Psychological risk
STAGE 3:
EVALUATION OF ALTERNATIVES
EVALUATION OF ALTERNATIVES
Identifying the alternatives, evaluation in terms of
evaluating whether an option should be considered
at all.
Beer Example:
Chineseand American considers 3 brands of beers.
Canadian considers 7 brands of beers.
Norwegian considers only 2 brands.
EVALUATION OF ALTERNATIVES
Consideration set is a set of alternative actively con
sidered during a consumers choice process.
+
Brands recalled from your Brands prominent in
memory the retail environments
(Evoked Set)
LEVELS OF ABSTRACTION
STAGE 4:
PRODUCT CHOICE
Once we assemble and evaluate the relevant options, we have to
choose one based on some rules and criteria.
Evaluation Criteria
Evaluation Criteria are the
dimensions we use to judge the
merits of competing
products/brands. These
dimensions are usually the
attributes of a product/brand.
The attributes actually used to
differentiate among choices are
determinant attributes.
Price 10 7 2 9
Convenience 8 7 9 5
Comfortable 5 4 8 4
Speed 2 4 7 6
Overall Score
Exercise: Apply each of the four rules in this decision to see
which mode of transportation is selected.
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HEURISTICS
In general, consumers use mental shortcuts (or heuristics) to mak
e decisions, for many reasons.
Lets face it, we are a lazy species, we leave the optimization mo
dels to the robots. Put it in another way, we optimize our thinkin
g effort by not thinking too much, sometime (actually most of th
e time).
Recalling habitual decision making, limited problem solving, and
extensive problem solving
We infer hidden dimensions of products from observable attribute
s. The observable element is a product signal that communicates s
ome underlying dimensions of the product (i.e., quality). These ob
servable attributes act as mental shortcuts to speed up the deci
sion process
SPECIFIC HEURISTICS (QUALITY)
Example 1: Market Beliefs
Some generalizations about companies, products, and st
ores.
Example 2: Country of Origin
Someproducts are associated with (and are perceived to
be better if they are produced in) some countries.
Example 3: Ethnocentrism
Tendency to prefer products or people of ones own cult
ure
HEURISTICS & BRANDING
Branding is a marketing strategy that often functio
ns as a heuristic.
A brand is success if consumers use the brand name as th
e determining attributes and choose the marketers bran
d.
MENTAL ACCOUNTING
Coined by Richard Thaler,mental accountingdescribes
the process whereby people code, categorize and
evaluateeconomic outcomes.
It explains biases in decision-making (based on
psychology, but not in economics)
In theory, extraneous (i.e., unrelated) variable should
NOT influence decision; however, Thaler found that
people are willing to pay a premium to buy beer from
hotel than when buying from a grocery store to drink on
the beach!
Related to loss aversion
PROSPECT THEORY
Proposed by Daniel Kahneman
and Amos Tversky,prospect
theoryexplains how people
make choices where utility is a
function of gains and losses.
The central concept of prospect
is losses loom larger than gains.
Implication: separate gains,
combines losses
Note that Daniel Kahneman won
a Nobel Memorial Prize in
Economics for his work
developing prospect theory
29
IMAGINE 2 SCENARIOS
Situation A:
You gain $50 from a poker ga
me
Situation B:
You gain $100 from a poker g
ame, and loss $50 when play
ing roulette later
Which situation do
you think you will
feel better?
Or no different?
CHAPTER SUMMARY
Decision making is a central part of consumer
behavior and decisions are made in stages
Decision making is not always rational
We use rules of thumb and decision rules to
make decisions more efficiently