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Consumer
Psychology (PSY -
514)
VU
Lecture
43
Consumerism
Understanding:
Consumerism
·
Roots
of Consumerism
Nature
of Consumerism
Consumerism
Consumerism
encompasses the evolving set of
activities of government, business and independent
organizations
that
are designed to protect the rights of the
consumers.
Consumerism
is concerned with protecting
consumers from all
organizations with which
there is exchange
relationship.
There are consumer problems
associated with hospitals,
libraries, schools, police forces,
and various
government
agencies, as well as with
business firms
Roots
of Consumerism
Roots
of consumerism may be traced
through the following:
1.
Disillusionment
with the system
2.
The
performance gap
3.
The
consumer information
gap
4.
Antagonism
toward advertising
5.
Impersonal
and unresponsive marketing
institutions
6.
Intrusions
of privacy
7.
Declining
living standards
8.
Special
problems of the disadvantaged
9.
Different
views of the marketplace
Institutions
have been subjected to
increasing public scrutiny, skepticism
and loss of esteem
Many
consumers think that they
get worst deals in the marketplace
than they used to.
Many
consumers express broad dissatisfaction
with the goods they buy.
Their expectations of
product
performance
and reliability have risen
(largely because of advertising touting
the new improvements). Increased
product
complexity brings about new possibilities
for malfunction and a perception by the
consumers that the
promise
performance gap is
increasing.
Amateur
buyers lacking time, interest or capacity
to process information adequately in
order to make optimal
marketplace
decisions face literally
thousands of complex products requiring
evaluations along many
dimensions
relating
to performance, convenience or even
societal concerns.
Large
segments of population are very
skeptical of the usefulness and
truthfulness of the advertising information.
It
is criticized for its intrusiveness
and clutter, irritation
factor, stereotyped role
portrayals, and promotion
of
unrealistic
and unsupportable expectations.
Telemarketing calls are a
related annoyance. Where
there is human or
computerized
voice on the other end, about 70% people
ranked it as a major irritation
There
have been impersonal and
unresponding marketing institutions that
have been causing such
marketing
factors
as:
The
rise of self service
retailing
Reduced
knowledge of sales employees
136
Consumer
Psychology (PSY -
514)
VU
Bureaucratic
structures contribute to feeling that no
marketer is listening
Development
of many consumer-information databases
made possible under our
increasingly computerized
society
has caused concern over the
access to and use of such
data and has led to the
attempts to protect the
consumer's
privacy
Reductions
in consumers real discretionary
income has led to pessimism
and disenchantment with the
economic
system
and attempts to deal with
the situation
The
young, the old and the poor
are even more vulnerable
than most other groups in
the society and face
great
difficulties
coping in the marketplace. Poor people
face great difficulties that
restrict their ability to
function as
consumer
in the marketplace. Poverty restricts
people's ability to function as
ordinary consumers, but the
face
hygienic,
dress and interpersonal
problems.
Business
people and their critics
have radically different
perceptions of the nature of
marketplace
2.
The Nature of Consumerism
The
Nature of Consumerism may be
summarized in the following
points:
Consumer
Safety
Consumer
Information
Consumer
Choice
Environmental
Concerns
Consumer
Privacy
Business
Response to Social and
Ethical Concerns
Consumer's
Responsibilities
Market
Responses to Consumers
1.
Consumer Safety
The
oldest and most controversial of the
consumer's rights, the one which
both business people and
consumerists
agree
upon and support. Consumers regularly
complain about shoddy or defective
merchandise and poor
services.
It
is one thing to be cheated or
deceived. It is quite another to be
physically injured by unsafe
product. Safety
always
is an issue for consumers,
business and government.
2.
Consumer Information
Consumers'
rights with regard to information
relate to the marketer's provision of
adequate information
which
neither
deceives nor misleads. Two
areas are important
here:
a.
Deception
of Consumers:
The
deception of consumers is accomplished by
deceptive advertisement. While
dealing with deception then
it
needs
not to prove that deception
actually occurred in advertisement
but merely that the ad had
the capacity to
deceive.
It is also important for the
advertisers to learn that they
can't escape the liability simply
because they
didn't
know that the ad's claim
was false.
Puffery
in Advertisements
Advertisements
have long been designed on
the basis of accepted approach of
puffery the use of
exaggerated
praise
for an advertised item. The
most difficult point here,
however, is that at which point the
puffery becomes
deception.
On
the basis of definition three
types of deceptive advertising may
exist:
The
outright lie: The
outright lie occurs where a
claim is made that is completely
false, even from an
objective
point of view. That is it is
impossible for consumers to
achieve claimed
benefit.
Claim
fact discrepancy: The
claimed benefit of the advertised
product must be qualified in
some way
for
it to be correctly understood and evaluated
but this I not done in the ad). An
advertisement may
claim
137
Consumer
Psychology (PSY -
514)
VU
that
60% doctors recommend "X" if consumers
knew what types of doctors, how
many were surveyed,
what
questions were asked.
Claim
fact interaction: The
advertisement claim (while being
neither explicitly or implicitly
deceptive)
interacts
with the accumulated belief
and attitudes held by consumers in
such a way that they are
misled or
deceived
by it. An actor who played
the role of a doctor in a popular
play/movie recommends in an
advertisement
a certain product, people may
think of him as an expert, if consumers
are not told that he
is
in
fact an actor
b.
Misleading the
consumers:
Misleading
statements about the rivals' products are
also grounds for a
suit
3.
Consumer Choice
Some
consumer activists argue
that consumers have less
choice than might be
desirable and possible.
Other
consumer
activists support reduced
choice by arguing that
consumers should be given not simply what they
want,
but
what is the best for them.
They support that buyers
are not able to adequately
determine for themselves
that
what
is best in their interest
and must be provided with
right products.
4.
Environmental Concerns
The
right to clean environment
assures that the environment in
which the consumers live is free
from pollution.
Large
scale pollution seems to be a
by-product of an economically developed
society, but it is also an
area of great
concern
for many consumers
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