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Samenvatting Consumer Behaviour & RM Methods MCB30306

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Dit document bevat een complete samenvatting van alle colleges van het vak Consumer Behaviour & Research Methods (MCB30306). Let op: er is ook een bundel van mij waar je voor dezelfde prijs gratis een beknopte samenvatting erbij krijgt. Deze kan je goed gebruiken om op de dag zelf de belangrijkste en lastigste concepten nogmaals door te nemen!

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Lecture 1: Introduction to Consumer Behaviour

Selling concept: Any product can be sold through aggressive and effective selling techniques
Marketing concept: Delivering the desired satisfaction more effectively & efficiently than competitors
• Marketing management: the process of planning and executing the conception, pricing,
promotion and distribution of ideas, goods, and services to create exchanges that satisfy
individual and organizational objectives: meeting customer needs profitably
Production concept: mass production & economies of scale

Marketing mix (4 p’s):
• Product: which benefits do I offer the consumer
• Price: at what cost
• Promotion: by what info / persuasion
• Place: at which place and time

Quality attributes can be delivered through:
• Intrinsic cues: product characteristics that are intrinsic to the product and cannot be
changed without altering the product (flavour and aroma cues for beer)
• Extrinsic cues: other marketing efforts (price and brand
name cues for beer)

Consumer behaviour: the study of the processes involved when
individuals / groups select, purchase, use or dispose of products,
services, ideas or experiences to satisfy their needs and desires.

Consumer decision making:
• Need recognition: utilitarian & hedonic motivations
o Hedonic consumption: food consumption as a goal on itself
o Utilitarian consumption: food consumption as an instrumental mean to achieve
some further goal
• Search behaviour: internal & external research
o Leads to perception about marketing stimuli / information
o Includes cognitive (knowledge) and affective factors (feelings/emotions)
o Interpretation IS NOT intention
• Evaluation of alternatives: alternatives are evaluated on a limited number of choice criteria
o Each of the criteria has a weight attached to it reflecting its importance
• Choice & Evaluation
o Purchase intention & unanticipated circumstances (out of stock)
▪ Satisfaction = reinforcement of choice
▪ Dissatisfaction = changes in the decision process

Elaboration Likelihood Model (ELM):
• High involvement situation: info is processed through central route
o Content of message is evaluated extensively
• Low involvement situations: info is processed through peripheral route
o Attitudes are formed on basis of simple cues in message / context

3 determinants of consumer behaviour: consumer, product & situation characteristics

,Lecture 2: Quality Perception

Why study perception?
• Consumers act on what they perceive not on what is reality
o Reality: scientific objectivity (product characteristics, based on facts)
o Perception: human subjectivity (consumer perception of the cues in the environment)
▪ Perception is the process by which stimuli from the environment are
selected, organized and interpreted.
▪ Perception involves (1) external stimuli, (2) sensory receptors, (3) mental
processes, and (4) reactions to stimuli
▪ Valid perception requires observational reliability. But observational
reliability is no guarantee for valid perception.
• Inter-observer reliability: between people
• Intra-observer reliability: over time

Brunswik’s Lens Model
• Ecological validity: cue predictive value - ambiguity
o Relationship between distal variable and
proximal cues
▪ What is → what can be observed
o Proximal cues are indicators of distal
phenomena (the object)
o Some proximal cues are ‘better’ indicators
than others (higher ecological validity)
o Cue ambiguity reduces ecological validity
▪ Cue ambiguity: search < experience < credence attributes
• Credence attributes are extremely ambiguous, so they need extrinsic
cues (You don’t know it’s Fair Trade without an label)
o Cues can be highly valid predictors, meaningless and ambiguous
• Cue utilisation: cue confidence value – combination of cues
o Relationship between proximal cues and perceptual response
▪ What can be observed → what is observed
o Pragmatic perception follows a probabilistic strategy (cues are imperfect)
▪ Making the most likely inference about the object
▪ Using some weighting according to assumed
cue validity
▪ Being flexible to update the inference to
changes
▪ Mostly ‘recognition-based’ selection of cue
o We use these cues to inferred ‘true state’
o The ‘hypothesised reality’ is tested against further cues
o What you perceive depends on the cues that are selected
• Functional validity
o Relationship between distal variable and perceptual response
▪ What is → what is observed
o To what degree does the perceptual response match the distal variable

, Steenkamp Paper (1990)
• Value based quality consists of:
o Evaluative judgement (1)
▪ Quality cues
• Can be determined prior to consumption
• Informational stimuli / search attributes
• Intrinsic: physical, inseparable part of the product (colour, size)
• Extrinsic: related, attached to the product (price, brand, label)
• Based on these cues: quality beliefs
▪ Quality attribute (taste)
• Cannot be determined prior to consumption
• Experience or credence attributes
• What the consumer wants to obtain
• Intrinsic: inherent to the product (organic production)
• Extrinsic: attached to the product (Fair Trade)
o On subject – object interaction (3)
▪ Comparative to other products (if other products are very good, this one is
perceived worse)
▪ Personal (differs among subjects)
▪ Situational (depends on context)
o In a consumption context (3)
▪ Fit to provide the desired consumption experience
• Anticipated fitness for consumption
• Formation of (quality) attribute beliefs can be based on:
o Descriptive belief formation
▪ Based on cues: search attributes, experience attributes
▪ Mostly trial and error based: few inferences
o Informational belief formation
▪ Classic communication & persuasion model
▪ Source / receiver / message effect (noise)
o Inferential belief formation
▪ Previous experiences
People use more informational & inferential belief formation. Based on experience &
credence quality cues & based on intrinsic & extrinsic quality cues
• Quality perception seen as a three step procedure
o Cue acquisition & categorisation
o (Inferential) attribute belief formation
o Integration of beliefs into overall quality judgement

Search attributes: can be determined before purchase (colour, weight, brand)
Experience attributes: can be discerned only after purchase (vacations, taste)
Credence attributes: hard to evaluate even after purchase & consumption (medical diagnosis, auto
repair)

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Subido en
15 de diciembre de 2022
Número de páginas
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Escrito en
2021/2022
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