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Summary Chapter 8-14 Consumer Behavior 13th edition, ISBN: 9780135225691 Consumer and Marketing (323626-B-6) $5.99   Add to cart

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Summary Chapter 8-14 Consumer Behavior 13th edition, ISBN: 9780135225691 Consumer and Marketing (323626-B-6)

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This document contains all the concepts and theories you need to know for the reproduction midterm + screenshots from the book + own additions to other books/lecture slides. With this document, you have an overview of everything right away, which is super nice. Good luck!

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Chapter 8: Attitudes and persuasive communications

The power of attitudes:
- Attitude: a lasting, general evaluation of people (including oneself), objects, advertisements, or
issues
 anything towards which we can have an attitude: attitude object
 attitude is lasting because it tends to endure over time
 It is general because it applies to more than a momentary event, such as hearing a loud noise,
though you might, over time, develop a negative attitude toward all loud noises
 example: attitude towards how often someone should brush their teeth, or how high the tip for
the waiter should be
 Attitudes help to determine whom you choose to date, what music you listen to, whether you will
recycle aluminum cans, or whether you choose to become a consumer researcher for a living

Functional theory of attitudes: explains how attitudes facilitate social behavior (attitudes exist
because they serve some function for the person

Different attitude functions:

 Utilitarian function: relates to the basic principles of reward and punishment we learned about
in Chapter 4
 we create attitude towards something/someone because it provides pleasure or pain
 Value-expressive function: relates to the consumer’s self-concept or central values
 people form attitudes because it says something about him or her as a person
 highly relevant for psychographic analysis
 Ego-defensive function: Attitudes we form to protect ourselves either from external threats or
internal feelings (example: deodorant that protects us against underarm odor in public)
 Knowledge function: we form attitudes because we need order, structure or meaning
 applies when a person is in an ambiguous situation (“it’s okay to wear casual pants to work,
but only on Friday”) or when he/she confronts a new product

The ABC model of attitudes:
- the heart, head and wallet!
 heart: love owners share / head: ads / wallet: how to pay for the product
- Attitude has three component:
 Affect: describes how a person feels towards an object
 Behavior: The actions he/she takes towards the object (or the intentions)
 Cognition: what he or she believes to be true about the attitude object
- ABC model emphasizes the interrelationships among knowing, feeling, and doing
 We can’t determine consumers’ attitudes toward a product if we just identify their cognitions
(beliefs) about it

Hierarchy of Effects:
Which comes first: knowing, feeling, or doing? It turns out that each element may lead things off,
depending on the situation
 Hierarchy of effects: explain the relative impact of the three components

 High-involvement hierarchy: think feel do
a person approaches a product decision as a problem-solving process: person is highly involved
 very motivated to seek out information and carefully weigh alternatives

, Low-involvement hierarchy: Think do feel
assumes that the consumer initially doesn’t have
a strong preference for one brand over another;
instead, he or she acts on the basis of limited
knowledge and forms an evaluation only after he
or she has bought the product
 The attitude is likely to come about through
behavioral learning, as good or bad experiences
reinforce his or her initial choice
 not much effort in comparing the potential
purchases

 Experiential hierarchy:
Act on the basis of our emotional reactions: highlights the idea that intangible products
attributes (e.g. advertising, brand name, etc.) can help shape our attitudes toward a brand
 we may base these reactions on hedonic motivations
- emotional contagion: messages that happy people deliver enhance our attitude toward the
product

How do we form attitudes:
- we simply may form an attitude toward a brand as a result of classical conditioning: A marketer
repeatedly pairs an attitude object such as the Pepsi name with a catchy jingle
- we can form an attitude because of instrumental conditioning (marketer reinforces us when we
consume the attitude object
- we can form an attitude through a cognitive process (example: model the behavior of friends or
celebs)

All attitudes are not created equal:
Consumers vary in their commitment to an attitude; the degree of commitment relates to their level
of involvement with the attitude object:

 Compliance: the lowest level of involvement: we form an attitude because it helps us to gain
rewards or avoid punishment
 This attitude is superficial; it is likely to change when others no longer monitor our behavior or
when another option becomes available
 Identification: occurs when we form an attitude to conform to another person’s or group’s
expectations
 Internalization: high level of involvement: deep-seated attitudes become part of our value
system  these attitudes are difficult to change for us because they are so important!

The consistency principle: we value harmony among our thoughts, feelings, behaviors, and a need to
maintain uniformity among these elements to motivate us
 This desire means that, if necessary, we change our thoughts, feelings, or behaviors to make them
consistent with other experiences
 Principle reminds us of the fact that we don’t form attitudes in a vacuum
 discounts are more effective for hedonic purchases than for utilitarian purchases

Principle is related to cognitive dissonance theory (see chapter 5)
 when a person is confronted with inconsistencies among attitudes or behaviors, he or she will
take some action to resolve this “dissonance”

, According to the theory, our motivation to reduce the negative feelings of dissonance makes us
find a way for our beliefs and feelings to fit together
 theory focusses on situations when 2 cognitive elements clash (“I love to smoke” and “smoking
causes cancer”)
 creates discomfort for this person this psychological inconsistency
 we are more likely to observe dissonance in high-involvement situations where there is more
pressure to reduce inconsistencies

 We reduce dissonance when we eliminate, add, or change elements
 Dissonance theory can help to explain why evaluations of a product tend to increase after we buy
the product (post purchase dissonance)
- implication for this phenomenon: consumers actively seek support for their decisions so they
can justify them

Self-perception theory: provides alternative explanations of dissonance effects
 It assumes that we observe our own behavior to determine just what our attitudes are, much as
we assume that we know what another person’s attitude is when we watch what he does
 we maintain consistency as we infer that we must have a positive attitude toward an object if
we have bought or consumed it!
 this theory helps to explain foot-in-the-door-technique: : They know that consumers are more
likely to comply with a big request if they agree to a smaller one first (sales people put their foot
between the door so that the door doesn’t get slammed in their face)

Balance theory: considers how people perceive relations among different attitude objects, and how
they alter their attitudes so that these remain consistent (or “balanced”)
 involves relations among three elements, so we call the resulting attitude structure triads
 Each triad contains (1) a person and his or her perceptions of (2) an attitude object and (3) some
other person or object
 we want relations among elements in a triad to be harmonious: if they are unbalanced, it creates
tension that we want to restore to get balance again
 we link elements in two ways:

 Unit relation: we think that a person is somehow connected to an attitude object (something like
a belief)  example: getting married/divorced gives a positive/negative unit relation
 Sentiment relation: a person expresses liking or disliking for an attitude object  example: a
dating couple has a positive sentiment relation
 Example: A woman who dislikes men in earrings has to resolve a state of imbalance if she wants
to date a guy who wears one




Balance theory reminds
us that when we have balanced perceptions, our attitudes also are likely to be stable. However, when
we experience inconsistencies, we also are more likely to change our attitudes. Balance theory helps
explain why consumers like to be linked to positively valued objects

,  This “balancing act” is at the heart of Celebrity endorsements, in which marketers hope that the
star’s popularity will transfer to the product or when a non-profit organization recruits a celeb to
discourage harmful activities
 Remember: creating a unit relation between a product and a star can backfire if the public’s
opinion of the celebrity endorser shifts from positive to negative

Attitude Models: Specify the different elements that might work together to influence people’s
evaluations of attitude objects

 Multi-attribute attitude models: consumers’ attitude toward an attitude object (Ao) depends on
the beliefs they have about several of its attributes
- Our beliefs (accurate or not) about a product often are key to how we evaluate it
 basic multi-attribute models contain three elements:
- Attributes are characteristics of the Ao
- Beliefs are cognitions about Ao
- Importance weights reflect the relative priority of an attribute to the consumer

Most influential multi-attribute model: Fishbein model
 measures three components of attitudes:




 When we combine these three elements, we
compute a consumer’s overall attitude toward
an object
 We obtain the overall attitude score (A) when
we multiply consumers’ rating of each
attribute for all the brands they considered by
the importance rating for that attribute

Marketing applications of the multi attribute model (to improve your image)

 Capitalize on relative advantage
 Strengthen perceived product/attribute linkages
 Add a new attribute
 Influence competitor’s ratings

Do attitudes predict behavior:
 in many cases: NO!
 to improve its predictive ability: theory of reasoned action (newer version of Fishbein model)

Intentions versus behavior:
It is helpful to distinguish between attitudes we hold firmly and those that are more superficial,
especially because a person who holds an attitude with greater conviction is more likely to act on it
 additions to Fishbein model:
- Normative influence can result in a contradiction between what we say we will do and what we
actually do when the moment of truth arrives
- Subjective norm: the effects of what we believe other people think we should do
 two factors used to measure SN: (1) the intensity of a normative belief (NB) that others believe

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