Social class refers to the division of members in a society into a hierarchy based on factors like status, prestige, occupation, possessions, interactions, class consciousness, and values. A number of variables are used to stratify societies into social classes, including prestige from one's occupation, the possessions one has, who they interact with, their awareness of class differences, and shared values. Marketers must understand social classes to develop products for different classes based on factors like occupation, education, possessions, and lifestyle preferences.
Social class refers to the division of members in a society into a hierarchy based on factors like status, prestige, occupation, possessions, interactions, class consciousness, and values. A number of variables are used to stratify societies into social classes, including prestige from one's occupation, the possessions one has, who they interact with, their awareness of class differences, and shared values. Marketers must understand social classes to develop products for different classes based on factors like occupation, education, possessions, and lifestyle preferences.
Social class refers to the division of members in a society into a hierarchy based on factors like status, prestige, occupation, possessions, interactions, class consciousness, and values. A number of variables are used to stratify societies into social classes, including prestige from one's occupation, the possessions one has, who they interact with, their awareness of class differences, and shared values. Marketers must understand social classes to develop products for different classes based on factors like occupation, education, possessions, and lifestyle preferences.
Social class refers to the division of members in a society into a hierarchy based on factors like status, prestige, occupation, possessions, interactions, class consciousness, and values. A number of variables are used to stratify societies into social classes, including prestige from one's occupation, the possessions one has, who they interact with, their awareness of class differences, and shared values. Marketers must understand social classes to develop products for different classes based on factors like occupation, education, possessions, and lifestyle preferences.
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online from Scribd
Download as pptx, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1of 16
SOCIAL CLASS
People may be placed on different positions on a continuum or a range; the
range, in fact is divided into specific social classes, or strata. Thus, people in a society may be placed in different strata based on their status; each of these strata may be referred to as social class. Schiffman defines social class as “the division of /members of a society into a hierarchy of distinct status classes, so that members of each class have relatively the same status and members of all other classes have either more or less status”. According to this scheme, a society may be stratified using six variables. They are: (1) prestige; (2) occupation, (3) possessions, (4) interaction, (5) class consciousness, and (6) value orientation. Prestige: Not everyone in the society command same level of prestige. We hold different attitudes to individuals having different levels of prestige. In a particular society, some are found to command relatively more prestige than others, and depending on that they are parts of different social strata. Occupation: Individuals' occupations vary as their prestige vary. Occupation may be considered the single best predictor of social strata that exist in a particular society. The job you do greatly affects your lifestyle, and is the single most important basis for according honor, prestige, and respect. Doctors in our country, for example, are accorded more respect and usually high financial reward. Possessions: The material goods that people possess may be used as a variable in social stratification. According to the types and nature of people's material possession, a society may be classified into hierarchy of social strata. Interaction: The kind of people with whom individuals meet and relate also is a variable using which a particular society may be stratified into different groups. Though it is one of the most important variables of stratifying societies, but it is very difficult to measure an individual's social interaction. Class Consciousness: "Class consciousness refers to the level at which people are aware of themselves as belonging to a distinctive social grouping". Everyone in a particular society is not equally conscious of class differences. Those who are relatively conscious of class differences are more likely to fit in the upper strata of the society. Value Orientation: Values are our ideas about what is correct and what is not by which we conduct ourselves. These are basically shared beliefs about how people should behave. "When a group of people share a common set of abstract convictions that organize and relate a large number of specific attitudes, it is possible to categorize an individual in the group by the degree to which he or she possesses these values." Social class and its attendant components (Such as education, occupation, and income) have been useful for decades in gauging the kind of information and meanings that are relevant to people in different social classes. People rank others into higher and lower social positions of respect within all societies. The results of this ranking is social classes. Social classes are groups whose members share similar values as well as social status. It is made up of people who share similar opportunities economic positions, lifestyles, attitudes, and behaviors. Classifying people by class occurs in all industrial societies. This classification of people is done as they are viewed by others A marketer must know how to measure the social classes of people living in a particular country. There are quite a few techniques of measuring social classes. Marketer should also know the types of social classes that exist around the globe, as well as their features. It will help him to develop right product for the right class of people. rs in the society. A number of factors determine who belongs to what class in the social system. The basic factors determining an individual’s class membership are: (1) occupation, (2) personal performance, (3) possessions/artifacts, (4) interactions/associations, (5) education, and (6) influence. Occupation: Analysts of consumer behavior consider occupation the best single indicator of social class. Generally, prestige ratings of occupations coincide with assumptions about salary, or other monetary rewards, level of education, and social or political power. In our society, we usually rank secretaries, generals, successful businessmen into higher class, where, university teachers are considered as members of middle class Personal Performance Personal performance and achievements of an individual may also indicate where he fits in the social ranking. Majority of lawyers in out country preoccupy the middle class. Possessions / Artifacts: What material items an individual possesses indicate his class membership. It is obvious that clothing, furnishing, type of house, and appliances owned and used by people of middle and upper class will vary. Thus, an individual’s class membership may be determined by the type of house where he lives, clothing he wears, automobile he drives, and household appliances he use. Interactions / Associations: We feel comfortable when we mix up and are with the people of similar values and behavior. Interaction or association may be considered as an important determinant of an individual’s social class. It is found that friendship, date, and marriages take place within people of the same class Education: Higher or more education generally means higher social class. People holding Ph.D degree do not abound in the lower classes. A bachelor degree, on the other hand, is almost a prerequisite for placement in the contemporary middle class. Influence: Everyone in the society does not hold and use same degree of influence. In a complex society, individuals having and exercising more power are considered to be the members of higher social class. Usually, individuals performing coordinating functions, such as ministers, generals, secretaries, are treated as members of upper classes Lifestyle Preferences Lifestyles of the Upper-Uppers: They are international in residence, relationships, and friendships. They live graciously, uphold family tradition and reputation, care for the community, contribute heavily in charity, belong to and lead prominent socio- cultural organizations, and reflect through their behaviors that they are blue-bloods. Lifestyles of the Lower-Uppers: People of this class display a lifestyle that is a blend of the upper-uppers’ pursuit of virtuous living and the upper-middles’ success drive. They conspicuously use their newly earned wealth. They display their status through many material symbols. They also like to give others, the idea that, ‘they are innovators’, by buying and using late model products. Lifestyles of the Upper-Middles: People of this class are highly achievement motivated, and career oriented. They display it by achieving rapid success in their careers. Their achievement motivation is also displayed by their heavy participation in civic and cultural activities. They are also found to be heavy socializers. People of this class have keen interest in obtaining better things in life. They display their lifestyles through the houses where they live and by making conspicuous purchases. Lifestyles of the Lower-Middles: People of this class desire to life in well-maintained houses. They furnish and decorate their houses neatly. They usually prefer to life in road-side houses. They always try to perform their jobs better both at homes and at works. As this group’s main focus is their homes, they spend much time in home centered activities such as keeping homes clean and tidy. They always want their children to be well-behaved. They are found to practice religion heavily. They are not found to be innovative in their lifestyles. Lifestyles of the Upper-Lowers: They are oriented toward living well. They enjoy life from day to day basis. People of this class are preoccupied with stable human relationships in their day to day lives. They look horizontally for their norms and standards of behavior. Women of this class give enough time to their families and family related activities. Their social, psychological, and geographical horizons are found to be restricted and do not accept changes easily. They are more likely to seek security and protection of what they already have. They exhibit a routine life and live in dull areas of the city in small houses. Lifestyles of the Lower-Lowers: They view the environment as the controlling force and themselves as pawns acted on by the environment. They often reject middle class morality in their lifestyles. Most members of this class are found to purchase on credit. They treat their children poorly and often live on a day to day basis. They are fatalistic in their outlook and behavior Social mobility is the ability of a person or a category of people to move from one level to another within the system. In India, for example, Hindu society maintains a closed system of castes. Individuals born into a caste are expected to stay in it all their lives. On the other hand, the US is a more open society. An individual there is born into the strata that his parents occupy. But, he can move from one social strata to another either through his own efforts or chance circumstances. Engel, Blackwell, and Miniard identified three major forms of social stratification. They are ‘castes’, ‘estates’, and “social class.”