100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached 4.2 TrustPilot
logo-home
Summary

Summary - Consumer Marketing (E_MKT_CM)

Rating
-
Sold
2
Pages
55
Uploaded on
10-09-2025
Written in
2024/2025

This comprehensive summary of Consumer Marketing covers key concepts, theories, and case studies essential for understanding consumer behavior and marketing strategy. It explains frameworks like Jobs-to-be-Done, the AIDA funnel, attention and perception in advertising, decision-making, pricing psychology, persuasion, customer loyalty, and consumer happiness. The notes also highlight managerial implications, ethical dilemmas, and practical applications, helping students connect theory to real-world marketing practice. Structured around lectures and tutorials, the document provides exam-focused insights, conceptual models, and clear explanations of core research findings, making it an effective study aid for mastering consumer marketing.

Show more Read less
Institution
Course











Whoops! We can’t load your doc right now. Try again or contact support.

Written for

Institution
Study
Course

Document information

Uploaded on
September 10, 2025
Number of pages
55
Written in
2024/2025
Type
Summary

Subjects

Content preview

Consumer marketing Lecture notes
Lecture 1: Introduction to Consumer Marketing
Potential reasons for demand decline (milkshake example):

- Competitor alternatives
- Customer satisfaction
- Seasonality
- Previous communications
- Product availability/distribution
- Product versatility
- Product quality decline
- Branding

We need to understand the customer deeply. Why do people use or want to use a
product? → think about the jobs that need to be done!

75-85% of all new products fail. → often, they fail because they don’t do a job that
customers want to get done.

Jobs to be done (of a product) (JTBD). What an individual wants to accomplish.

It focuses on the idea that customers "hire" products or services to accomplish specific
"jobs" in their lives, rather than just buying them for their features or attributes. This
perspective shifts the focus from what a product is to what a product does for the
customer.

Customers may Hire a product to get a job done (solution-oriented way of thinking), and
when finished they may discard it. Solutions are always temporary. We can see
products as things we hire to accomplish solutions.

Purchase decisions determined: needs that consumers are aware of and mention when
asked but rather latent… → What do customers hire a product for?

Various needs can explain the job of a product:

(Axe Body wash, compare it to perfume instead of just body wash)

Functional needs

Emotional needs

Social needs

Advantage of JTBD logic for customer needs explanation

- It shifts the perspective of the consumer
- It frees the view of your real competitors

, - It has predictive power as it is solution-free



What are the questions to understand latent needs?

- When do you use it?
- In what setting do you use it?
- What progress are you aiming to fulfill? (emotional, social, functional)
- What are the circumstances of struggle?
- What obstacles are in the way?
- What does quality mean to you?

Key takeaways:

- Jobs to be done is a simple framework that emphasizes the why behind what a
customer is doing. It focuses on identifying enduring consumer needs to
develop products that have a lasting impact.
- It gives a unit of focus, on the job the customer is looking to do. To build
measurable ways of looking at success that do not change over time. The
products need to meet the metrics important to the customers.
- You are not trying to just solve a consumer problem. You are first trying to figure
out what the right problem is.
- Good products do not sell themselves.



How and what to study for the exam

- The lectures focus on how to read and understand the articles, all details are in
the articles
o Aim and goal of a specific article (not expected to know every detail)
o Conceptual model
▪ Concepts used
▪ Theoretical reasoning
o Results of the study
▪ Main findings
▪ No specific numbers
▪ No reproductions of full studies
▪ Be able to interpret the results
▪ Understand why each study has been conducted, and how it helps
us to
o TEST the effects and underlying mechanisms
o Managerial implications
o Limitations of the study

,How and what to study for the exam: content discussed in lectures

- Additional articles:

- Concepts used

- Main findings and explanations

- Managerial implications

- No need to learn author names by heart

- Broader perspective of the research area:

- Main issues in the area (e.g. measurement of loyalty)

- Structure in which articles are embedded (e.g. drivers of sustainable behavior)

See slides for more extensive explanations and tips.



Lecture 2: Understanding Consumers
2A

Exercise 1 about decision-making a 10-euro product.

DMU: Decision Making Unit

DMP: Decision Making Process

Exercise 1: toilet paper

- Place/location matters
- The quality variance is low (products are similar); we buy it regularly, therefore
paying much hurts → price matters more

AIDA Funnel: Attention, Interest,
Desire, Action.

The AIDA Model identifies
cognitive stages an individual
goes through during the buying
process for a product or service.



Straight funnels can be possible,
Awareness creates always
purchases. This can be in
monopoly settings.

, It can also be that stages are skipped, customers might skip the feeling phase and go
from know to do.

If you have a very wide opening and narrow action part, you can state that you are losing
a lot of clients. So you can have a look at where in the funnel you are losing customers
(Interest or desire).



Exercise 2: about the decision-making of 100+ euro products

DMU: Niche Perfume

DMP:

- There is more of a social and emotional need
- Customers know and feel their needs → People may spend extra because of
their social needs and the experience they get.
- Scarcity matters



Cross Model

High vs low involvement/use: utilitarian vs social/emotional needs

Not only for usage but also for search of a product.

How often you buy a product determines where you are in the cross. First, you do more
research (higher involvement) later you do less.

How you structure the cross, links to what type of marketing you do. → WOM is more
related to high involvement and emotional products.

Emotional you use more affective cues in your marketing. For utilitarian you should
more focus on functionality.

Find your opportunity/segment → match your marketing towards your customer.



2B

Knowing your customer, and where they are in the funnel and cross-model dictates how
you want to communicate with your customers.

Often there are many needs in product purchases, we need to understand what needs
drive action (most). That’s what you need to find out as a marketeer.

Tutorials: Philips Avent
$6.67
Get access to the full document:

100% satisfaction guarantee
Immediately available after payment
Both online and in PDF
No strings attached

Get to know the seller
Seller avatar
jorisdeklerk

Get to know the seller

Seller avatar
jorisdeklerk Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
Follow You need to be logged in order to follow users or courses
Sold
2
Member since
3 months
Number of followers
0
Documents
4
Last sold
3 months ago

0.0

0 reviews

5
0
4
0
3
0
2
0
1
0

Recently viewed by you

Why students choose Stuvia

Created by fellow students, verified by reviews

Quality you can trust: written by students who passed their tests and reviewed by others who've used these notes.

Didn't get what you expected? Choose another document

No worries! You can instantly pick a different document that better fits what you're looking for.

Pay as you like, start learning right away

No subscription, no commitments. Pay the way you're used to via credit card and download your PDF document instantly.

Student with book image

“Bought, downloaded, and aced it. It really can be that simple.”

Alisha Student

Frequently asked questions