Module - 6 Consumer Behavior: Npiel Consumer Behavior Vinod Gupta School of Management
Module - 6 Consumer Behavior: Npiel Consumer Behavior Vinod Gupta School of Management
Module - 6 Consumer Behavior: Npiel Consumer Behavior Vinod Gupta School of Management
Consumer Behavior
Vinod Gupta School of Management
Module - 6
CONSUMER BEHAVIOR
Sangeeta Sahney
Assistant Professor,
Vinod Gupta School of Management
Indian Institute of Technology
Kharagpur, India
Email. sahney@vgsom.iitkgp.emit.in
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Consumer Behavior
Vinod Gupta School of Management
MODULE 6:
PSYCHOLOGICAL INFLUENCES ON CONSUMER DECISION MAKING
6.2
Consumer Learning
6.3
6.4
6.5
6.6
Consumer Communication
Introduction:
While making decisions related to purchase activity, consumers vary amongst each other.
They also differ within themselves across buying situations.
dynamics that operate while consumer decision making are significantly different. The
consumer decision making process is impacted by (i) individual determinants that are
specific to an individual and his self; these primarily take the form of psychological
influences; and, (ii) group influences that are general across a class(es) of customers and
take the form of sociological influences. This module deals with the psychological
influences on consumer decision making. Such psychological influences include the
forces that impact consumer decision making; these are (i) Consumers Needs &
Motivation, Emotions and Mood, Consumer Involvement; (ii) Consumer Learning; (iii)
Personality, Self-concept and Self-image; (iv) Consumer Perception, Risk and Imagery;
(v) Consumer Attitude; and (vi) Consumer Communication.
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Consumer Behavior
Vinod Gupta School of Management
MODULE 6.1:
CONSUMERS NEEDS & MOTIVATION, EMOTIONS AND MOOD,
CONSUMER INVOLVEMENT (5hours)
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Consumer Behavior
Vinod Gupta School of Management
LESSON 13
CONSUMER NEEDS AND MOTIVATION I
Instructional Objectives:
After completion of this lesson, the student shall know about:
6.1.1 DEFINITION
AND
MEANING
OF
CONSUMER
NEEDS
AND
MOTIVATION:
At the heart of marketing, lies what is referred to as a consumer need. Consumer needs
are the quintessence of the marketing concept. Psychologists and consumer researchers
agree that human beings have the same needs; however, these needs gets translated
differently into different wants, resulting in varied motives. With consumers being
different and unique to each other, it is important that the marketers understand the
various needs, and provide relevant product and service offerings that blend with the
consumer(s) segment(s) and their wants. An understanding of human needs and motives
would also help marketers understand and to predict consumption behavior.
The two terms need and want often used interchangeably hold two different
meanings. A need is a state of felt deprivation while a want is a desire for a specific
satisfier.
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Consumer Behavior
Vinod Gupta School of Management
Example: People have always sweated, perspired and smelt of body odour. People did
not become conscious of the social embarrassment till companies introduced deo sprays
and sticks, eg. Rexona, Ponds etc, and began to play advertisements that depicted social
appeals like embarrassment amongst friends and relatives at parties and social gatherings.
Also most of the times, human needs are dormant and lie at a latent state. They
get aroused suddenly by (i) stimuli internal to the individual and his physiology;
Example: a person feels hungry and moves towards a restaurant to buy some food (ii)
stimuli in the external environment; Example: a person smells the aroma of freshly baked
cakes and enters the bakery to buy some cakes. The marketer could also formulate
strategies that help trigger such needs. Example: A banner or a hoarding informing
people of a food festival at attractive prices can trigger off a desire amongst people to try
out newer dishes and cuisine, Or the display of a newly launched car, can encourage
customer trail and subsequent purchase.
As consumers begin to identify and feel that a need exists, there occurs an inner
urge or a drive towards taking an action so as fulfill the need. This inner urge and the
impelling action to put in efforts to attain a goal and fulfill the need and thereby attempt
at satisfaction is referred to as motivation. The term motivation has been derived from
the Latin word movere which means to move. In terms of consumer behavior, when
a consumer realizes that there exists a state of felt deficiency (need), it gets translated into
a variety of options (wants) from which a consumer may chose. The need/want lead to a
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Consumer Behavior
Vinod Gupta School of Management
state of tension in the mind of the consumer and an urge/drive to act (buy/consume), so as
to fulfill the need or want. This manifests itself into a goal, which is actually the behavior
(act to purchase or consume), which puts an end to the urge to act. The entire action may
ultimately lead to feelings of satisfaction, neutrality or dissatisfaction. Thus, the study of
consumption behavior begins with when an individual recognizes a need and begins to
take action to satisfy it. What he desires is an ultimate goal i.e. satisfaction of a
need/want.
Consumer motivation is the urge or drive to satisfy needs through product
purchase and its consumption. The needs, wants, drives, and desires of an individual that
lead him or her toward the purchase of products or ideas. The motivations may be
physiologically, psychologically, or environmentally driven. (Source: American
Marketing Association).
The entire need want goal action satisfaction chain comprises the
cognition, affect and behavior components within an individual; however, the process
gets started with cognition, and therefore marketers need to inform and educate the
consumers about their product/service offerings and the marketing mix.
6.1. 2 NATURE AND DIVERSITY OF CONSUMER NEEDS, GOALS AND
MOTIVATION:
6.1.2.1 Needs are primarily of two types, viz., physiological needs and psychological
needs. People possess and experience a variety of such needs simultaneously.
a) Physiological needs: As the name suggests, these needs arise out of our
physiology and are also called as primary or biological or biogenic needs; eg. Need for
food, water, sleep, air, shelter etc. We are born with such needs and these are innate in
nature. In order to survive, these needs must be fulfilled. As human beings are all similar,
thus, we are also similar in so far as these needs are concerned.
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Consumer Behavior
Vinod Gupta School of Management
b) Psychological needs: These needs arise out of our sociology and psychology and
as such they are also called secondary or psychogenic needs; eg. Need for affiliation,
power, recognition, esteem and status, etc. During the period of socialization, we acquire
such needs; and human beings differ amongst each other in so far as these needs are
concerned.
6.1.2.2
Goals: The goal is manifested after the need and want are identified. In fact
our actions to purchase/ consume are all goal directed. A goal is the ideal state that a
person desires as he thinks that it would help him satisfy a need. A product/service
offering and the value proposition is a means to provide such benefits that the consumer
utilizes to achieve his goals.
Goals are of two types, generic goals and product-specific goals.
a) Generic goals: Generic goals can be defined as the general category of goals that
consumers see as a means to satisfy their needs and wants. For example, a consumer may
want to buy a cell phone.
b) Product-specific goals: These are specifically branded products or services that the
consumers select to fulfill the generic goal. For example, the consumer would want to
buy a Nokia or a Samsung.
attainment of various goals. For example, thirst may be quenched with water, a fruit
juice, a cola; and even within fruit juice, the choice could vary amongst many like orange
juice, lime juice, or mixed fruit juice.
A consumer is thus exposed to a multiciplicity of goals that could all be equally
appropriate and attractive. However, the awareness about such multiple goals would vary
from person to person based on learning and experience. Even the selection of a goal out
of the many would vary across people as it would depend on factors like his purchasing
power, personal preferences and choices, experience of self as well as social influences,
lifestyle and values, and socio-cultural norms and practices.
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Consumer Behavior
Vinod Gupta School of Management
b)
Conflicting needs and goals: A consumer may often find himself amidst
conflicting needs and goals at the same time or at various times, and this leads to what is
referred to as an intra individual conflict, something that the person feels within himself.
Conflicting goals could lead to three types of intra individual conflict:
i)
consumer finds himself in a situation where he has to make a choice between two
desirable alternatives each of which are equally attractive. However, due to constraints,
he cannot choose both the options. Example: A person wants to buy fulfill his esteem
need. He can either buy a Merc or a BMW, but cannot buy both because of his limited
resources. Another example could be that a person is hungry and is tempted to have both
a pizza and a burger.
ii)
has both a positive and a negative to it, i.e., the goal presents something attractive, yet
something unattractive to it. Thus the person is both attracted towards a goal as well as
repelled by it. For example, a person wants to buy a new television set with the best of
features and quality sound. He is presented with various alternative brands. He is tempted
to buy a Sony Bravia but he also knows that it would cost a premium and would be more
expensive than other brands. While Sony as a brand depicts high quality, it also costs
more. The situation would further get complicated if the dealer informs him of a scheme
that if he leaves Sony and buys a Samsung TV, he gets a free DVD player. This is called
a double approach-avoidance conflict. Another example is that a lady wants to have an
ice-cream but is also concerned about the fact that it would mean adding to calories and
weight.
iii)
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Consumer Behavior
Vinod Gupta School of Management
6.1.2.3
Negative
motivation:
Here,
the
person
is
driven
away
from
an
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Consumer Behavior
Vinod Gupta School of Management
Note:
-
A person may experience many needs and wants simultaneously and one may be
sacrificed at the cost of the other.
Needs/wants are never fully satisfied. Wants are satisfied temporarily but needs
are never satisfied. They keep on emerging. As one need is satisfied, another
emerges and so forth, and as they emerge, they trigger off desire and motives.
Needs and wants may also lie dormant. They may suddenly trigger owing to
physiological factors, social factors, and/or external environmental factors.
Success and failure to fulfill needs and wants also affect the future choice of
goals.
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Consumer Behavior
Vinod Gupta School of Management
Loudon, D.L. and Bitta A.J. Della, Consumer Behavior, Fourth Edition, 2002,
Tata McGraw-Hill, New Delhi.
2.
Lindquist, J.D. and Sirgy, J.M., Shopper, Buyer and Consumer Behavior, Theory
and Marketing Applications, Second Edition, 2003, Biztantra.
3.
Peter, P.J. and Olson, J.C., Consumer Behavior and Marketing Strategy, Seventh
Edition, 2005, McGraw-Hill Higher Education.
4.
Schiffman, L.G. and Kanuk, L.L., Consumer Behavior, Eight Edition, 2004,
Prentice Hall, India.
5.
Wells W.D. and Prensky, D., Consumer Behavior, 1996, John Wiley & sons, Inc.
Ans 1 The two terms need and want often used interchangeably hold two different
meanings. A need is a state of felt deprivation while a want is a desire for a specific
satisfier.
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Consumer Behavior
Vinod Gupta School of Management
Ques 2
urge or a drive towards taking an action so as fulfil the need. This inner urge and the
impelling action to put in efforts to fulfill the need and attempt at satisfaction is referred
to as motivation. In terms of consumer behavior, when a consumer realizes that there
exists a state of felt deficiency (need), it gets translated into a variety of options (wants)
from which a consumer may chose. The need/want lead to a state of tension in the mind
of the consumer and an urge to act (buy/consume), so as to fulfill the need or want. This
manifests itself into a goal, which is actually the behavior (act to purchase or consume),
which puts an end to the urge to act. The entire action may ultimately lead to feelings of
satisfaction, neutrality or dissatisfaction. Thus, the study of consumption behavior begins
with when an individual recognizes a need and begins to take action to satisfy it. What he
desires is an ultimate goal i.e. satisfaction of a need/want.
Ques 3
Ans 3
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Consumer Behavior
Vinod Gupta School of Management
-Needs and wants may also lie dormant. They may suddenly trigger owing to
physiological factors, social factors, and/or external environmental factors.
-Success and failure to fulfill needs and wants also affect the future choice of goals.
True/false:
1.
2.
3.
Psychologists and consumer researchers agree that human beings have the same
needs; however, these needs gets translated differently into different wants,
resulting in varied motives.
Section B
and
consumption
of
product/service
offering
is
called
________________.
3. The __________________ conflict is a situation where you choose between the
devil and the deep sea.
Section C
1.
The entire need want goal action satisfaction chain comprises which
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Consumer Behavior
Vinod Gupta School of Management
2.
a)
b)
c)
d)
Section D
Short answers:
KEY
Section A
True/false:
1. False
Section B
1. Need
Section C
2.
3.
True
3. Avoidance-avoidance
1. d
Section D
False
2.
Short Answers:
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