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NZDB541 – Fundamentals of Marketing Students will understand factors affecting buyer behaviour. The consumer market consists of all the individuals and households who buy or acquire goods and services for personal consumption. Consumers vary tremendously in age, income, education level, and tastes. And they buy an incredible variety of goods and services. How consumers make their choices among these products takes us into a fascinating field comprised of personal, cultural, and social influences. Consumers make buying decisions every day. And they make many different types of purchases. Most marketers undertake consumer research to try to learn more about: what consumers buy, who buys, how they buy, when they buy, where they buy and, most importantly, why they buy. The central question is: How do consumers respond to the various marketing stimuli the marketing organisation might use? Internal: Psychological External: Social Behavioural Characteristics External: Cultural Internal: Personal 1. Complex Behaviour 2. Dissonance Reducing Behaviour 3. Habitual Behaviour 4. Variety Seeking Behaviour Need Recognition Information Search Evaluation of Alternative Purchase Decision Post Purchase Behaviour Cognitive Dissonance Satisfaction or Dissatisfaction A complex array of “unknowables” which can only be inferred from visible behaviour: Attitude Motivation Personality Learning Memory Information Processing Involvement Sigmund Freud assumes that people are largely unconscious about the real psychological forces shaping their behaviour. He sees the person as growing up and repressing many urges. Abraham Maslow sought to explain why people are driven by particular needs at particular times. Why does one person spend much time and energy on personal safety and another on gaining the esteem of others? Maslow's answer is that human needs are arranged in a hierarchy, from the most pressing to the least pressing. When consumers express interest in buying a product there are a number of questions we might ask. Why? What is the person really seeking? What needs is he or she trying to satisfy? What is the person trying to achieve? A person has many needs at any given time. A motivated person is ready to act. How the person acts is influenced by his or her perception of the situation. Two people with similar motivation and in the same situation might act quite differently because they perceive the situation differently. Perceptual Processes: Selective Exposure. Selective Distortion. Selective Retention. When people act, they learn. Learning describes changes in an individual's behaviour arising from experience. Learning occurs through the interplay of drives, stimuli, cues, responses and reinforcement. The significance of learning theory to marketers is that they can build demand for a product by associating it with strong drives, using motivating cues and providing positive reinforcement. People acquire their beliefs and attitudes through acting and learning. A belief is a descriptive thought or conviction that a person holds about something, and involves holding an opinion. Incorrect beliefs about product features or brand image can block sales. A buyer's decisions are also influenced by personal characteristics such as: ◦ ◦ ◦ ◦ ◦ ◦ Age and life‐cycle stage Occupation Education Economic situation Personality & Self‐Concept Consumer lifestyle Cultural factors exert the broadest and deepest influence on consumer behaviour. Marketers need to understand the role played by: ◦ Culture. ◦ Cultural Diversity. ◦ Social Class. A consumer's behaviour is also influenced by social factors, such as the consumer's household type and reference groups, as well as social roles and status. These social factors can strongly affect consumer responses, companies must take them into account when designing their marketing strategies. Household types: changing lifestyles and buying roles affect marketing decisions. Groups ◦ Membership groups. ◦ Reference groups. ◦ Opinion leaders Roles and Status Those people with whom we would like to compare ourselves to. ◦ Examples popular sports personalities as David Beckham and inspirational leaders like Barak Obama. There is little chance of membership, but nevertheless a strong affiliation with the group’s norms and behaviours. Comparative relevant! Those people who more realistically represent our current equals or near equals. Examples include our friends, neighbours and co-workers. Parents, teachers and peers provide us with norms, attitudes and values through direct interaction. These are called normative referents, in comparison to comparative referents that provide us with standards of achievement to which we aspire e.g. sports heroes Those people that we would not like to be like. Examples include famous celebrities having a bad public image i.e. Tiger Woods having an affair. Initiator User Influencer Buying Decision Buyer Decider Awareness: the consumer is aware of the new product, but lacks information about it. Interest: the consumer seeks information about the new product. Evaluation: the consumer considers whether trying the new product makes sense. Trial: the consumer tries the new product on a small scale to improve their estimate of its value. Adoption: the consumer decides to make full and regular use of the new product. Innovators Early Adopters Early Majority Late Majority Laggards Consumers in different countries may have some things in common but their values, attitudes and behaviours may vary a lot. Marketers often adjust their products and communications to reflect the differences. Differences are often subtle and may result from physical differences in consumers and their environment. Other differences may include gestures, body posture and manners. Business markets Business buyer behaviour Institutional and Government markets Business markets are all the organisations that buy goods and services to use in the production of other products and services or for the purpose of renting them to others at a profit. Business products may be described in three broad groups: 1. Materials and parts: raw materials and manufactured materials and parts, e.g. gold, car parts. 2. Capital items: items used in the production or operations processes of firms consist of installations and accessory equipment, e.g. buildings, plant, computers and software. 3. Consumables: supplies required by organisations for their day to day operations. Market structure and demand is characterised by factors such as: ◦ ◦ ◦ ◦ ◦ ◦ ◦ Fewer buyers Larger buyers Close supplier‐customer relationships Geographically concentrated buyers Derived demand Inelastic demand Fluctuating demand More complex and formalised decisions – many more things to consider and chains of authority involved. ◦ Direct purchasing – buying from the original source and not a reseller. ◦ Reciprocity – you buy from me and I’ll buy from you. ◦ Leasing – for financial and operation reasons Of course marketers use the 7 P’s to create stimuli. However there is also other stimuli include major forces in the environment: ◦ ◦ ◦ ◦ ◦ Economic Technological Political Cultural Competitive Straight rebuy: where the buyer reorders items without any modifications. It is usually handled on a routine basis by procurement officers. Modified rebuy: where the buyer wants to modify product specifications, prices, terms or suppliers. It usually involves more decision participants than the straight rebuy. New task situation: where a buyer purchases a product or service for the first time. Systems buying: buying a packaged solution to a problem, thus avoiding all the separate decisions involved in buying each item or service separately. A Key Turn solution. Users are members of the organisation who will use the product or service. Influencers affect the buying decision. They often help to define specifications and also provide information for evaluating alternatives. Buyers have formal authority to select the supplier and arrange terms of purchase. Deciders have formal or informal power to select or approve the final suppliers. Gatekeepers control the flow of information to others. Environmental Level of Primary Demand Organisational Objectives Economic Outlook Policies Supply Conditions Organisational Rates of Technological change Political and Regulatory developments Competitive developments Structure Systems Interpersonal Authority Status Empathy Persuasiveness Individual Age Education Job Position Personality Risk Attitudes Buyers 1. Problem Recognition: The first stage, the consumer recognises a problem or need. 2. General Need Description: Describes the characteristics and quantity of the needed item. 3. Product Specification: The decision and specification around the best technical product characteristics for a needed item. 4. Supplier Search: The search to find the best vendors. 5. Proposal Solicitation: The stage of the industrial buying process in which the p buyer invites qualified suppliers to submit proposals. 6. Supplier Selection: The review of proposals and selection of a supplier/s 7. Order‐Routine Specification: The buyer writes the final order with the chosen suppliers. 8. Performance Review: Satisfaction rating. Note: E‐procurement, online purchasing, buying via the internet is becoming the norm. Institutional markets consist of institutions that provide goods and services to people in their care, e.g. schools, TAFE colleges, polytechnics, universities, hospitals, nursing homes, prisons etc The government market offers large opportunities for many companies. Government contain many separate buying units, e.g. National and local government, and different departments. Government makes use of e‐procurement to gain efficiencies. Government buyers are also affected by environmental, organisational, interpersonal and individual factors. Government is watched by outside publics that are interested in how government spends tax payers’ money. Governments usually require suppliers to submit bids or tenders which are evaluated. Governments tend to favour domestic suppliers. Government buying decisions seem complex to suppliers but government is generally helpful in providing information about its buying needs and procedures.