MBA Introduction Lecture On Consumer Behavior Text
MBA Introduction Lecture On Consumer Behavior Text
MBA Introduction Lecture On Consumer Behavior Text
Doc. Dr. Ing. Elena Horsk, Department of Marketing FEM SUA in Nitra
The pyramid of consumer behavior theory: Micro consumer behavior (individual focus) Macro consumer behavior (social focus)
Purchase issues
How do situational factors such as time pressure or store displays, affect the consumers pruchase decision?
Post-purchase issues
What determines whether a consumer will be satisfied with a product and whether he/she will buy it again?
Consumer behavior
(where to go, what to buy, how to pay)
Consumer Environment
(social stimuli, culture, Subculture, physical stimuli, ad)
Regional marketplace .... Where is it? Local marketplace .... Differences among people European marketplace .... How is European
consumer?
Adaptation
Adapting the offer to the local requirements and consumer needs:
Product Price Place Promotion
Standardization
Standardizated products for global markets and global customers which are the same in all the world (a world is one global village):
Product Price Place Promotion
G-localization
Combination of standardization and localization in terms:
to behave as the home firm to accept the local patriotism to change the local consumer behaviour continuously, no rapidly consumers to perceive the market changes as the natural development, no aggressive marketing.
European consumer
How should we define an European consumer?
Which approach to use? National? Regional? Global European one? Do we know something about our European neighbours?
According to research associated with VanderMerwe and LHuillier (1989), companies in Europe can compete effectively in Europe by accurately targeting customers close to one another, but not necessary living in the same country.
The six clusters identified by VanderMerwe and LHuillier (1989) are: the UK and Ireland, Central and Northern France, Southern Belgium, Central Germany and Luxembourg, Spain and Portugal, Southern Germany, Northern Italy, Southeastern France and Austria, South Italy and Greece, Northern Germany, the Netherlands, Northern Belgium, Iceland, Norway, Finland and Denmark. These studies did not consider countries of the Central and Eastern Europe. In present time they play an important role in processes of the European economic integration and present challenges for Western companies entering their markets.
Based on the common features of historic background, geographical location, culture and consumer habits we can distinguish between Central European cluster, South East European cluster and Baltic States. Of course, there are still certain internal differences within such roughly defined clusters.
Global approach
Local approach
What is a plan for territorial expansion?
Regional approach