Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the work of artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the work of artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Chapter 9 In div id u a l De c is io n M a k i n g by Michael R. Solomon Consumers as Problem Solvers • Steps for a Purchase Decision – Problem Recognition – Information Search – Evaluation of Alternatives – Product Choice Consumers as Problem Solvers • Perspectives on Decision Making – Rational Perspective • Constructive Processing – Behavioral Influence Perspective – Experiential Perspective Consumers as Problem Solvers • Types of Consumer Decisions – Extended Problem Solving • Internal Search • External Search – Limited Problem Solving • Decision Rules – Habitual Decision Making Problem Recognition • Problem Recognition – Standard of Comparison – Actual State – Need Recognition – Ideal State – Opportunity Recognition – Primary Demand – Secondary Demand Information Search • Types of Information Search • Prepurchase Search • Ongoing Search – Internal Versus External Search – Deliberate Versus “Accidental” Search • Directed Learning • Incidental Learning The Economics of Information • Utility • Do Consumers Always Search Rationality? – – – Brand Switching Variety Seeking Sensory-Specific Satiety • Biases in the Decision-Making Process – – – – – Mental Accounting Framing Sunk-Cost Fallacy Loss Aversion Prospect Theory The Economics of Information • How Much Search Occurs? – The Consumer’s Prior Expertise • Moderately Knowledgeable Figure 9-5: The Relationship Between Amount of Information Search and Product Knowledge Information Search • Type • Selective Search – Perceived Risk Figure 9-6: Five Types of Perceived Risk Evaluation of Alternatives • Identifying Alternatives – Evoked Set • Retrieval Set – Inept Set – Inert Set Figure 9-7: Identifying Alternatives: Getting in the Game Evaluation of Alternatives • Product Categorization – Categorization • Cognitive Structure – Levels of Categorization • Basic Level Category • Superordinate Category Figure 9-8: Levels of Abstraction in Dessert Categories Evaluation of Alternatives • Protypical – Strategic Implications of Product Categorization • Product Positioning – Positioning Strategy • Identifying Competitors • Exemplar Products • Locating Products Product Choice: Selecting Among Alternatives • Evaluative Criteria – Evaluative Criteria • Determinant Attributes • Procedural Learning Product Choice: Selecting Among Alternatives • Cybermediaries – Cybermediary • • • • • Directories and Portals Website Evaluators Forums, Fan Clubs, and User Groups Financial Intermediaries Intelligent Agents – Collaborative Filtering Product Choice: Selecting Among Alternatives • Heuristics: Mental Shortcuts – Relying on a Product Signal • Covariation – Market Beliefs: Is It Better If I Pay More for It? • Price-quality Relationship – Country-of-Origin As a Product Signal • Stereotype Product Choice: Selecting Among Alternatives • Ethnocentrism – Choosing Familiar Brand Names: Loyalty or Habit? – Inertia: The Lazy Customer – Brand Loyalty: A “Friend” Tried-and-True • Brand Parity Product Choice: Selecting Among Alternatives • Decision Rules – Compensatory versus Non-compensatory – Noncompensatory Decision Rules • The Lexicographic Rule • The Elimination-by-Aspects Rules • The Conjunctive Rule – Compensatory Decision Rules • Simple Additive Rule • Weighted Additive Rule