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3. Buyer Behaviour Why study customers? Effective marketing must begin with “a thorough understanding of how and why customers behave as they do” (Merenski, 1998). Specifically, in order to tailor solutions to customers’ particular needs and desires, the marketer requires a grounded knowledge of buyer motivations and decision-making processes, together with all those environmental factors which may exert influence upon them. Put another way, the marketer is seeking to address three basic questions: Why does the customer want to buy a particular product or service? How will he or she decide which option to purchase? What factors may influence this decision? Buyer behaviour is a huge subject and it is only possible in this course to provide a brief introduction to the key issues. For the purposes of this session, we’ll therefore concentrate primarily upon consumer behaviour, then conclude by highlighting some of the similarities and differences between this and organisational buyer behaviour (or business-to-business purchasing). To illustrate our discussion, we’ll look at a subject which (love it or hate it!) we can all relate to, namely shopping. Consumer Motivation The study of consumer motivation essentially addresses the question: “Why do people shop?” The answer, really, is that people shop for a variety of reasons and it is very difficult to make generalisations. Shopping for food can, on one level, be seen as satisfying some basic survival need. The problem with that, however, is that most of us buy far more food than we would actually need for basic subsistence and many of the items we purchase in a supermarket are “luxuries” (relatively speaking). One of the most influential studies of consumer motivation is that conducted by Tauber (1972). According to Tauber, there are two main categories of motivation for shopping: Personal Motives: Role Playing – some shopping activities are associated with a particular role in society (housewife, mother, student, etc). Diversion – shopping can be a form or recreation, or an escape from daily routine. Self-Gratification – shopping can be mood-related, for instance where people engage in “retail therapy” to cheer themselves up or alleviate depression. Learning – shopping is an ideal way to learn about new fashions and trends. Physical Activity – for some people, a stroll around the mall can be their main form of exercise. Sensory Stimulation – shoppers often report that they enjoy handling merchandise, the sounds of background music, the scents of perfume counters, etc, and visit stores or malls to indulge in this. Social Motives: Social Interaction – people enjoy the opportunities for social interaction with friends, strangers, sales staff, etc. Peer Affiliation – certain shops allow customers mix with key reference groups; e.g. people with shared interests, members of a social category they either belong to or aspire to, etc. Status & Authority – shopping experiences are sometimes seen as ways of commanding respect and attention; e.g. during encounters with sales staff. Pleasure of Bargaining – some shoppers love to “haggle”, a way of obtaining goods at a better price or of priding oneself on the ability to make “wise” purchases. The above categories are by no means mutually exclusive. Some 70% of the population visit a shopping mall at least once per week and they are liable to do so for a variety of reasons at any one time. Shopping is certainly far more than merely going to a store to buy a product one needs or wants – people often go to the mall with no intentions of spending any money at all! Pause for thought….. What was the last item you purchased in a store? Did you go shopping specifically to look for it? Why did you buy it? Who was involved in you purchasing decision? Were you happy with the decision you made? Exercise: Make a list of all the things you noticed last time you went shopping. Include anything at all that crosses your mind, from things you actually saw or did to things you felt. Save the list for later! Consumer Decision-Making Since the 1960s, the study of consumer behaviour has focused largely upon consumer decision-making processes. Influenced by cognitive psychology, a number of so-called modal models (or “box-and-arrow” models) have been proposed, presenting the various stages the consumer goes through when choosing a product to buy or store to shop in, presented in a flow-chart format (e.g. Nicosia, 1966; Engel et al., 1995). A rather stylised summary of these modal models might look something like this:- Identification of Need / Want Task Orientation Information Search Environmental Factors Evaluation of Options Purchase Decision Post-Purchase Evaluation In the left-hand column above, we can see that the decision process begins with the consumer recognising that he or she needs or wants to buy an item. Attention is then devoted to the task in hand and information gathered. The consumer evaluates the options available, makes his or her choice and purchases the product. At any stage in the process, events encountered at one stage may cause the consumer to revert to a previous stage; for example, during evaluation, none of the options available may prove satisfactory and the consumer may therefore decide to reassess the initial need and begin the process again for a completely different alternative solution. Conversely, with very common or repeat purchases, particular stages (e.g. information search) may be passed through without conscious attention being applied (i.e. may be automatised) because the information required is already available in memory. Finally, note how the decision process doesn’t end with purchase – the extent to which a purchase is deemed successful or unsuccessful will feed back to influence future purchase decisions. To the right of the diagram, we see environmental factors which may influence the decision-making process at any stage. This category would include a whole array of variables, ranging from exposure to advertising and promotional materials through to store atmosphere, crowding and the opinions of significant others. The diagram is a summary of the models available which, however complex they may appear, all hypothesise the same linear decision-making process. There is no one single universally accepted model, each having its own particular strengths and weaknesses. In a way, this is probably a reflection of the many different consumer motivations highlighted above – particular models being stronger than others for specific types of shopping. There are two main problems with modal models such as this when it comes to their usefulness to the marketer. Firstly, the “box-and-arrow” approach is rather descriptive. It tells us the decision-making stages the customer negotiates, but tells us very little about how the marketer can actually influence these stages to make his or her product/service the preferred option.The second weakness of this approach is closely related to the first. Note how the environment is merely “lumped together” to the right of the diagram. When we consider all of the factors this encompasses (store location, layout, advertising, prevailing socio-economic conditions, etc.), this seems woefully inadequate. Moreover, the location of the environment box separate to the decision-making process gives the impression of the environment as simply being something “out there”, divorced from the individual shopper. The reality, of course, is that consumers are a part of the environment, interacting with environmental factors and influencing each other. A more accurate model of consumer decision-making would probably locate the environment “box” as follows:- Identification of Need / Want Task Orientation Information Search Environment Evaluation of Options Purchase Decision Post-Purchase Evaluation As you can see, this revised model locates the decision-making process within the environment box, recognising that the individual is part of the environment. Environmental Psychology Since the mid-1970s, marketers have expressed increasing interest in environmental psychology, an area of applied psychology which deals with “the transactions between the individual and the socio-physical environment” (Stokols, 1981). Environmental psychology (EP) hypothesises a bi-directional relationship between the individual and the environment, rather than a simple uni-directional stimulus-response model. To illustrate this, imagine a shopper in a fashion store looking for a new coat. The traditional psychology model would have the shopper examining coats available in the store (stimuli), selecting one and buying it (the response). In practice, of course, consumers both influence and are influenced by the retail environment. If a particular coat is a big seller, the retailer may stock more units, increase the range of sizes/colours available, and so on. Alternatively, if the coat is a very poor seller, the retailer may discontinue the line all together. Either way, the stimuli in the environment will have changed as a result of consumer behaviour. So, the relationship between consumers and the retail environment is a two-way process with, if you like, marketing serving as the communication channel between the two. The main attraction EP holds for marketers is that it provides a conceptual framework with which to identify and classify all those environmental factors which may influence the customer – many of which will be under the marketer’s direct control. An EP analysis of shopping (or any behaviour, for that matter) begins with selection of an appropriate unit of analysis. If you think about it, the word “environment” could mean the room you are currently in, the city, the country, the entire planet, or whatever. Such disparate units are very difficult to manage, so the environmental psychologist always begins by selecting a segment of the environment to investigate; i.e. a sub-unit of the environment in which to explore all those variables effecting the individual. Put another way, the psychologist is interested in the effective context of the behaviour which, in the case of retail buyer behaviour, may be the retail store in which the consumer is shopping. One way of looking at the store is in terms of a setting in which shopping behaviour occurs. Barker (1968) first introduced the term behaviour setting into EP to denote “an environmental context in which certain behaviours may be expected to occur, irrespective of the individual actors present”. Take the example of a supermarket. When visiting the supermarket, we probably all behave in pretty much the same way. We enter the store, we select a trolley or basket, we navigate the aisles selecting products, we stand in line at the check-out, we unload the goods, we pay for them, we pack our bags, etc., etc. In other words, as supermarket shoppers, we follow set behavioural programmes, often with little thought to what we are “supposed to do”. The idea of the behaviour setting is very influential in retailing. Having studied how shoppers follow certain behavioural programmes, for instance, architects can design stores so as to better facilitate customer flow via changes in layout, aisle width, shelving, check-out location, etc. Indeed, many store designers now refer to themselves as “architectural psychologists”, drawing on techniques from two seemingly separate disciplines in quite interesting and novel ways. From a marketing point of view, however, the behaviour setting concept is of only limited value. Not all attempts to influence consumer behaviour can rely merely on changes in store design. We therefore need a slightly different unit of analysis in order to better understand consumer behaviour, a unit which focuses less on the aggregate behaviour of many shoppers in a store and more upon the individuals who are actually following the behavioural programmes observed. Retail Shopping Situations One particularly important unit of analysis in EP is the situation, a time-delimited subunit of Barker’s behaviour setting. Seen from the perspective of the consumer, a shopping situation is a particular act of buying behaviour occurring at a specific point in space and time (Hackett & Foxall, 1993). A fashion store, open to customers from 9am to 5pm, is simply a behaviour setting. Within this behaviour setting, however, “Consumer A, shopping in Store B, at day and Time C, looking for an outfit to wear at Person D’s wedding” would constitute a specific shopping situation. Thus, on the one hand, a behaviour setting may contain a great many unrelated situations. To Consumer A, on the other hand, this is a unique act of shopping, or at least a historically and spatially specific one, defined by a particular matrix of situational influences. Seen from this perspective, then, the situation serves as an interface between the person (e.g. fashion consumer) and the stimulus-object (garment purchased), all those factors defining that interface constituting situational variables. Over the years, several attempts have been made to develop appropriate typologies with which to codify these situational variables, ranging from those which focus mainly upon the situation as perceived by the individual (e.g. Kakkar & Lutz, 1981) to Magnusson's (1981) distinction between the actual-objective characteristics of the situation and person-bound properties. In terms of consumer research application, however, perhaps the most influential taxonomic structure has been that proposed by Belk (1975) which continues to generate empirical work (e.g. Stoltman et al. 1999; Roslow et al. 2000; Nicholson et al., 2001). According to Belk, situational variables are “all those factors particular to a time and place of observation which do not follow from a knowledge of personal (intraindividual) and stimulus (choice alternative) attributes” (Belk, 1974). Such attributes range from store location and layout, to time of day and presence (or absence) of others, classifiable according to five distinct dimensions of situational influence: physical setting, social setting, temporal perspective, task definition and antecedent states. It is a robust typology of variables which, on the whole, appear relatively comprehensive and cross-cultural. The physical setting begins with the geographical and institutional location of the retail store (Bucklin, 1967), but might equally be seen in terms of the environment in which the consumer reads a catalogue, or accesses a Web site, together with any complicating factors arising from the intervening technologies. It also subsumes: influences on behaviour resulting from environmental conditions, such as weather or climate; visible configurations of merchandise and information provision in a store, catalogue or Web site; and all those variables Kotler (1973) classified as “store atmospherics”, such as the effects of background music or colour scheme. In respect of these latter influences in particular, there are obvious parallels in catalogue shopping, such as illustrations accompanying products designed to invoke the consumer’s imagination, and there may well be equivalents in virtual shopping environments also. The social setting focuses on the presence or absence of others, together with their social roles, role attributes and opportunities for interaction. It is therefore a dimension which encapsulates everything from awareness of security staff in the mall and opportunities for interaction with in-store sales staff, through to the presence of those accompanying the consumer on the shopping trip and even proximity to total strangers. This can easily be extended to analysis of remote shopping situations; e.g. the often solitary nature of catalogue shopping, interactions with telesales staff, online consumer “communities”, etc. Given that a situation is a time-delimited context, a temporal perspective is crucial to its description and all of the variables codified under this category are applicable to shopping in multiple forms. Time of day and constraints upon time available for shopping are variables with very obvious effects on buyer behaviour, for instance, as are factors such as seasonal variations in the available product range – a particularly important situational variable within the context of fashion shopping. Belk argues that event proximity must also be considered; e.g. date relative to ‘pay day’, time since last meal, etc. Belk’s concept of task definition is more person-bound and encompasses cognitive and motivational elements of the shopping situation, effectively capturing situational influences on the task definition, orientation, search and evaluation stages depicted in traditional cognitive consumer decision-making models. For example, differences in information-processing behaviour have been observed where consumers are shopping for practical or hedonic products, products for themselves versus gift purchases for others, etc. Again, although such variables are normally explored empirically within the context of store or mall behaviour, there seems no reason to suppose that these issues are not equally applicable in catalogue and Internet shopping situations also. Antecedent states represent temporary conditions which the consumer either brings to a situation or, alternatively, which may change significantly as a result of that situation. An obvious example here is mood-related effects upon behaviour, such as anxiety, pleasure or depression, which, when not chronic or enduring trait conditions, can be regarded as situational; for instance, where a consumer’s mood state results in negative expectations of a store, or serves as an initial motivation for going shopping as a form of “retail therapy”. On a more general level, Belk argues that factors such as fatigue, cash-in-hand and temporary illness symptoms can also be located within this category. Taken in sum, Belk’s taxonomic structure seems to accommodate the vast majority of situational variables typically explored within a consumer research context. Moreover, there is no reason to presuppose that the five dimensions hypothesised are only applicable to the in-store shopping situations normally subjected to a Belkian analysis. Indeed, many of the variables highlighted by researchers adopting a Belkian perspective, such as ambience of surroundings and time of day, appear equally characteristic of remote shopping situations also – whether physical or electronic/’virtual’. Most importantly of all, perhaps, the taxonomy is highlighting variables which, in the main, are often under the marketer’s control to some degree, making it a useful tool to with which to analyse the effectiveness of the retail or service provision in influencing consumer decision-making. Pause for thought (2) Exercise: Go back to the list you made earlier of things you noticed last time you went shopping. Now, try to classify them according to Belk’s five categories of situational influence. Which category seems the most important in explaining influences on your own shopping behaviour? Which category has least influence? What does this tell you about the way you shopped on that occasion? Consumer Behaviour vs Organisational Buying In contrast to consumers, organisational buyers represent those “buying goods and services on behalf of an organisation for the purpose of the furtherance of organisational objectives” (Lancaster, 1999). Before highlighting some of the differences between the two, however, it is important to caution against over stressing the differences. For instance, some authors argue that buying goods on behalf of one’s employers makes buyers more caution and rational than when purchasing consumer goods privately. Closer examination of the evidence, however, suggests the differences are almost exclusively related to price and very small anyway. So, be aware that there can be differences, but they are by no means always universal – a single employee feeling poorly motivated towards his/her job on one day, for example, may well be far less cautious than on other days when all is well in the workplace! The most obvious difference between consumer and organisational buying is that the underlying motivation is different; i.e. personal consumption versus business usage. There are other contrasts, however:Setting for Buying: For consumers, the buying unit is within the whereas for the organisational buyer, the setting is within the firm. This the industrial marketer targeting the organisational buyer must take factors such as buying procedures, levels of authority, and so on, relevant in consumer marketing. household, means that account of factors not Technical/Commercial Knowledge: Usually, the organisational purchaser will be a trained professional, more knowledgeable than the average consumer purchaser. This can often necessitate a completely different sales approach. Contact with Buyers/Distribution Channels: Organisational markets are usually more geographically concentrated than consumer markets. Factors such as proximity to available labour, raw materials, and transportation facilities often dictate an industry’s location. In addition, compared to consumer markets, there can be far fewer potential customers. Taken together, these variables mean that the industrial marketer must normally maintain far more direct and personal contact with his or her potential clients. Number of Decision-Makers: In consumer purchasing, the number of people involved in the decision-making process can be very small; i.e. an individual, a couple, a family, etc. In organisational buying, however, a great many people can be involved in the purchasing process. This can mean differences in both the number of people marketing communications must attempt to convince and that quite different decisions might emerge as a result of group dynamics than might initially be anticipated on the basis of individual discussions. Derived Demand: Organisational buyers often continually adjust their buying decisions on the basis of projected sales figures, buying more units when forecast sales are higher. The result can be a sort of “pendulum effect”, with a knock-on effect throughout the buying chain as each chain member adjusts it’s buying patterns accordingly. Reciprocal Demand: Sometimes, a buyer can also be a seller at the same time. A software company producing a package for an insurance company, for instance, might also purchase its insurance services from what is effectively one of its own customers. Both companies want to sell to each other, affecting each other’s eventual buying decisions to a varying degree. As we can see, there are subtle differences between consumer and organisational forms of buying. The article by Wilson (1996) in the Course Reader develops these themes further – be familiar with the key concepts she raises before the exam!