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Consumer
Psychology (PSY -
514)
VU
Lesson
01
INTRODUCTION
TO CONSUMER PSYCHOLOGY
OBJECTIVES:
Definition
and Scope of Consumer
Psychology
Consumer
Behavior
Development
of Marketing Concept and the fields of
Consumer Psychology and
Consumer Behavior
Production
Concept
Product
Concept
Selling
Concept
Marketing
Concept
Marketing
Concept and the Three Business
Leaders
1.
Definition and Scope of Consumer
Psychology:
Basic
Questions
The
field of Consumer Psychology
seeks to understand that how
individuals make decisions to
spend their
available
resources (time, effort and
money) on consumption related items.
The important questions
facing the
consumer
psychologists include:
What
do consumers buy?
Why
they buy it?
When
the buy it?
Where
they buy it?
How
often they use
it?
How
they evaluate products after
the purchase?
Impact
of such evaluations on future
purchase behavior
How
they dispose off the
products?
Psychology
"Psychology
is the science of behavior and
mental processes"
Consumer
Person
who consumes, especially one
who uses a product
Purchaser
of goods or services
Consumer
Psychology
"Consumer
psychology is the study of how people
relate to the products and
services that they
purchase
or
use".
Consumer
psychologists study virtually
all psychological and behavioral
responses that can occur
within the
context
of a person's role as a consumer.
And consistent with the
goals of psychologists from
other areas, research
carried
out by consumer psychologists is
designed to describe, predict, explain,
and/or influence consumer
responses
to product- and service-related
information and
experiences.
Research
in Consumer Psychology may be used
to:
Provide
information to companies and
consumers on what the public needs or
wants
Help
an organization (either profit or nonprofit)
effectively develop and market
products, services, or
ideas
Guide
the work of government agencies that
are responsible for product
safety, identity of brand
names,
evaluation
of advertising claims, and assessment of
ethical marketing practices
1
Consumer
Psychology (PSY -
514)
VU
Representations
in Consumer Psychology
Consumer
psychology contains a broad range of
theoretical, conceptual, and methodological
perspectives.
However,
currently the strongest representation
comes from researchers in the
areas of cognitive psychology,
social
psychology, marketing, and
advertising.
Social
Psychology
Influence
of social situations on human
mind and thoughts
Cognitive
Psychology:
Study
of mental representations and
information processing
Advertising:
Draw
favorable attention to goods or services
in a public medium to promote
sales
Marketing
2.
Consumer Behavior
Consumer
behavior is the study of the behavior
that consumers display
during the processes of searching
for,
purchasing,
using, evaluating, and disposing of
products and services that
they expect will satisfy
their needs.
Consumer
Behavior describes two kinds of consuming
entities:
The
Personal Consumer
and;
The
Organizational Consumer
Personal
Consumer
Buys
goods for his/her own
use, for the use of household or as
gift for
friends/families
Organizational
Consumer
Includes
profit and not-for-profit
businesses, government agencies and
institutions
3.
Development of Marketing Concept and
the Disciplines of Consumer Psychology
and
Consumer
Behavior
The
fields of Consumer Psychology and
Consumer Behavior are rooted in the
development of Marketing
Concept,
a business Orientation that
evolved in the 1950's through
several alternative approaches toward
doing
business,
referred to, respectively, as the
production
concept, product concept and the
selling concept.
A.
Production Concept:
Focus
Cheap,
efficient production and intensive
distribution
Basic
Assumption
Consumers
are more interested in
obtaining the product than they
are in specific
features
Problem
Ignored
the consumers in terms of required
product features
B.
Product concept:
Focus
The
product
Strive
constantly to improve the quality of
product and add new
features that are technically
feasible
Basic
Assumption
Consumers
will buy products that offer
them the highest quality, best
performance and the most
features
2
Consumer
Psychology (PSY -
514)
VU
Problem
Product
Orientation ignores whether or not the
consumers really want the new
features
C.
Selling concept:
Focus
Needs
of sellers
Sell
the products that a company
makes
Profit
through sales volume
Basic
Assumption
Consumers
are unlikely to buy a
product unless they are
aggressively persuaded
Problem:
Fails
to consider customer satisfaction,
Customers are induced to buy
products; they do not want or
need
D.
Marketing Concept
Focus
Needs
and wants of
customers
Profits
through customer
satisfaction
Basic
Assumption
Determine
needs and wants of specific
target markets and deliver
the desired satisfaction better than
the
competition
4.
Development of Marketing
Concept
Three
Business Leaders
A.
Alfred P. Sloan
Founder
Chairman, General Motors
Company
Strategy:
"A
car for every purse
and purpose"
Product
Innovation:
Cars
for rich people
Cars
for poor people
Innovative
Marketing Concept:
Market
Segmentation
B.
Colonel P. Sanders
Founder,
Kentucky Fried Chicken
(KFC)
Company
Strategy:
Re-engineer
the public perception of a
Motel
Innovation
Marketing Concept:
Franchise
the cooking methods and
chicken recipe
Product
Repositioning
3
Consumer
Psychology (PSY -
514)
VU
C.
Ray Korc
Partner,
McDonald Brothers
Company
Strategy:
Thousands
of McDonald's outlets in the
country
Outlets
close to churches to target
customers
Innovative
Marketing Concept:
Hamburger
University, centralized facility to
train the company's
employees
Market
Targeting
4
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