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summary Consumer Behaviour

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everything you need to know to complete the quizzes

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Escuela, estudio y materia

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Subido en
14 de febrero de 2023
Número de páginas
44
Escrito en
2022/2023
Tipo
Resumen

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LES 1 CONSUMER BEHAVIOUR

WHY STUDY CONSUMERS?

What is marketing ?

= Marketing is the activity, set of institutions, and processes for creating, communicating, delivering and
exchanging offerings that have value for customers, clients, partners, and society at large.

 “Build a better mousetrap, and the world will beat a path to your door.”
 “If a man has good corn or wood, or boards, or pigs, to sell, or can make better chairs or knives,
crucibles or church organs, than anybody else, you will find a broad hard-beaten road to his
house, though it be in the woods.”
 4P’s !!
 Offerings that have value = f(product & quality)
 Question: “Is it true that products with a good value will get to the top?”
 Personal story about car seat
 Decision 2003: brand name, price, salesperson
 Decision now: reviews on amazon (4.5/ 5)  one of the most important sources of
product quality information
 more people would buy it
BUT why?? -> personal, emotional, concrete text, ostensibly objective, widely available
BUT scientificly there is not enough data  be carefull trusting individual opinions
 consumer report (testaankoop) said totally other car seat was better
 Correlation (rating amazon, performance test consumer report)= 0.15
 the average star rating has surprisingly low correspondence to established quality
metrics
 enkel in 57% van de gevallen geeft consumer report een hogere score als amazon star
rating hogere score krijgt (flipping a coin)
 Correlation (price, qualtity product)= 0.3
 Have the one with higher rating also higher quality said by consumer report??
!! not always if people like it, that consumer report likes it.. other things play a role in
consumer reviews: price
Bv. Wine example  things extrinsic to the product plays a role
 Liking without price (zonder dat ze de prijs weten vinden ze de goedkopere
wijnen beter)
 Liking with price (more expensive wines are said to be better)
 holding quality constant, more expensive products and brands with
better reputations gets better ratings.
 Problems with user ratings:
 Statistical: reviews from subset of product users VS all product users
! based on insufficient sample sizes
 Sampling issues: only the ones with extreme opinion are posting a review
 Evaluation issues: objectively evaluating requires a scientific approach.. ->
heavily biased

,  Example about songs
 Created 48 new songs (nobody ever heard them)  make them available in different
markets
o Independent market A: 1000 consumers who can listen  CANNOT INTERACT
o Independent market B: andere 1000 en die kunnen ook luisteren  CANNOT
INTERACT
o Social market A: 1000 consumer BUT the can like the songs  INTERACTION (I
see that you liked it)
o Social market B: 1000 consumers en also interact with each other 
INTERACTION




 correlation rank of songs in independent market A and rank of songs in independent
market B
 correlation rank of songs in social market A and rank of songs in social market B
  In which market will the correlation be higher? (“will demand be more predictable in
independent markets or in social markets?”)
!! independent market: popularity can only be a function of intrinsic aspect of the song
(not influenced by other people)
!! in social markets: intrinsic aspects of the song + influence from other people
 popular in social market A can be diff in market B (bv. Different song first? -> path
dependence)
 value of a product not only defined by intrinsic things of the product (bv. Also what
other people thing)
DUSSSS uiteindelijk antwoord: correlation higher in independent markets !!! (demand is
less predictable when there is social influence)
  waar zal de meest popu song het meest popu zijn?  social: creates larger block
buster hits




What is a good customer?

,  cheap to acquire, loyal (customer retention), spends money (customer marging)
 two sides of customer value




 Marketing actions: promotion, price, place, promotion  to care for acquisition, retention and
customer margin (!! you need behavioural science for this)




WHAT IS THE SECRET TO SUCCES?

 What is the modern marketer’s most important ability?
 Intellectual curiosity  motivated to challenge and revise your opinions and to learn new
things
BUT barrier: you think you already know (illusion of kwowledge)
 Overconfidence effect (we tend to believe that we know more then we do) -> illusion of
knowledge (is a real enemy of knowledge)
I have no clue: trust it
I am sure: don’t trust it
“It ain’t what you don’t know that gets you into trouble. It’s what you know for sure that just ain’t so.”
 “Education is the path from cocky ignorance to miserable uncertainty.”
 We love precision
Bv. trumps twitter : he uses precision to persuade
Bv. Round price VS precise price  less sells for round price
Bv. seller on ebay : round price -> low offer VS precise price -> more offer

Wrap up

 “Value” depends not only on the intrisic ingredients of a product. It is multiply determined, also
by extrinsic marketing actions, such as price, promotion, place, packaging. “Value” is not
objective, but subjective. It depends on how consumers interpretet marketing actions.

,  “Value provided to consumers” is only one part of the equation. Firms ultimately care about
“value captured from consumers.” Creating value for customers is a means to creating value for
firms.
 Consumers and markets are messy. The world desperately needs people with an ability to
cleverly combine insights and methods from the behavioural sciences to solve business and
societal problems.
 The fuel to your success is intellectual curiosity.


LES 2 CONSUMER BEHAVIOUR

HOW MUCH ARE BRAND WORTH?

 Value of a brand: how much do they want to pay if they know which brand it is
Bv. Apple, amazon, Microsoft
! als je zoekt vindt je verschillende rankings  hangt af naar welke elementen je kijkt
! GREAT EQUATION: different formulas + we don’t can’t really approcimate how big “B” is..
 How do you know what the value of a brand is?


WHY DO BRANDS HAVE VALUE?

In stead of putting number on brand value  asks ourselfes why they do have value

Positive brand equity= if consumers react more favorably to the product, price, promotion, or
distribution of the brand than they do to the same marketing mix element when it is attributed to a
fictitiously named or unnamed version of the product or service

 Bv. sweater and sweater with brand on it  how much are consumers prepared to pay more
 Bv. coca cola and fake coca cola: same prices  more chance to buy the real coca cola


associative memory

 Information nodes are stored in memory and connected by links
 Activation spreads through the network based on the strength of links
 Information nodes with highest activation are most likely to influence behavior

Bv. Colgate brand extension

 extend with frozen meals  unsuccesfull?
! when you think of thootpaste -> you get taste in your mind -> you don’t want to eat
frozen meals because activation of brain is not with food association
BUT genious: wouldn’t it be great if people got colgate in more rooms of the house
bv. I eat this meal of colgate -> I want to brush my thoot
 extend with dental floss  better than frozen meals
BUTadditional finger/ fantom hand  attention is limited (dental floss  you look at the
mouth)
 SO difficult for brands to build associations in people that have those limited attention
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