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7 - 1 Chapter 7,8,9 review Attitudes, Attitude Change, and Decision Making By Michael R. Solomon Consumer Behavior Buying, Having, and Being

7 - 1 Chapter 7,8,9 review Attitudes, Attitude Change, and Decision Making By Michael R. Solomon Consumer Behavior Buying, Having, and Being Sixth Edition

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Page 1: 7 - 1 Chapter 7,8,9 review Attitudes, Attitude Change, and Decision Making By Michael R. Solomon Consumer Behavior Buying, Having, and Being Sixth Edition

7 - 1

Chapter 7,8,9 reviewAttitudes, Attitude Change, and

Decision Making

By Michael R. Solomon

Consumer BehaviorBuying, Having, and Being

Sixth Edition

Page 2: 7 - 1 Chapter 7,8,9 review Attitudes, Attitude Change, and Decision Making By Michael R. Solomon Consumer Behavior Buying, Having, and Being Sixth Edition

7 - 2

The Power of Attitudes

• Attitude:– A lasting, general evaluation of people (including

oneself), objects, advertisements, or issues– Anything toward which one has an attitude is

called an object (Ao).

– Attitudes are lasting because they tend to endure over time.

Page 3: 7 - 1 Chapter 7,8,9 review Attitudes, Attitude Change, and Decision Making By Michael R. Solomon Consumer Behavior Buying, Having, and Being Sixth Edition

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The Functions of Attitudes

• Functional Theory of Attitudes:– Attitudes exist because they serve some function

for the person (i.e., they are determined by a person’s motives)

• Katz’s Attitude Functions– Utilitarian function (Drink coke for the taste of it)– Value-expressive function (Nike: Just Do It)– Ego-defensive function (Right Guard Deodorant)– Knowledge function (Advil and Vioxx)

Page 4: 7 - 1 Chapter 7,8,9 review Attitudes, Attitude Change, and Decision Making By Michael R. Solomon Consumer Behavior Buying, Having, and Being Sixth Edition

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Addressing Smoking Attitudes

• This Norwegian ad addresses young people’s smoking attitudes by arousing strong negative feelings. The ad reads (left panel) “Smokers are more sociable than others.” (Right panel): “While it lasts.”

Page 5: 7 - 1 Chapter 7,8,9 review Attitudes, Attitude Change, and Decision Making By Michael R. Solomon Consumer Behavior Buying, Having, and Being Sixth Edition

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The ABC Model of Attitudes

• Affect:– The way a consumer feels about an attitude object

• Behavior:– Involves the person’s intentions to do something

with regard to an attitude object

• Cognition:– The beliefs a consumer has about an attitude object

• Hierarchy of Effects:– A fixed sequence of steps that occur en route to an

attitude

Page 6: 7 - 1 Chapter 7,8,9 review Attitudes, Attitude Change, and Decision Making By Michael R. Solomon Consumer Behavior Buying, Having, and Being Sixth Edition

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Three Hierarchies of Effects

Figure 7.1

Page 7: 7 - 1 Chapter 7,8,9 review Attitudes, Attitude Change, and Decision Making By Michael R. Solomon Consumer Behavior Buying, Having, and Being Sixth Edition

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Attitude Hierarchies

• The Standard Learning Hierarchy:– Consumer approaches a product decision as a

problem-solving process

• The Low-Involvement Hierarchy:– Consumer does not have strong initial preference– Consumer acts on limited knowledge– Consumer forms an evaluation only after product trial

• The Experiential Hierarchy:– Consumers act on the basis of their emotional

reactions

Page 8: 7 - 1 Chapter 7,8,9 review Attitudes, Attitude Change, and Decision Making By Michael R. Solomon Consumer Behavior Buying, Having, and Being Sixth Edition

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Smith and Wollensky

• This ad for New York’s famous Smith & Wollensky restaurant emphasizes that marketers and others associated with a product or service are often more involved with it than are their consumers.

Page 9: 7 - 1 Chapter 7,8,9 review Attitudes, Attitude Change, and Decision Making By Michael R. Solomon Consumer Behavior Buying, Having, and Being Sixth Edition

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Product Attitudes Don’t Tell the Whole Story

• Attitude Toward the Advertisement (Aad):– A predisposition to respond in a favorable or unfavorable

manner to a particular advertising stimulus during a particular exposure occasion

• Ads Have Feelings Too:– Three emotional dimensions:

• Pleasure, arousal, and intimidation

– Specific types of feelings that can be generated by an ad• Upbeat feelings: Amused, delighted, playful

• Warm feelings: Affectionate, contemplative, hopeful

• Negative feelings: Critical, defiant, offended

Page 10: 7 - 1 Chapter 7,8,9 review Attitudes, Attitude Change, and Decision Making By Michael R. Solomon Consumer Behavior Buying, Having, and Being Sixth Edition

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Forming Attitudes

• Not All Attitudes are Created Equal:– Levels of Commitment to an Attitude: The degree of

commitment is related to the level of involvement with an attitude object

• Compliance (Pepsi at the exchange)

• Identification (Clothing, jewelry, shoes, music)

• Internalization (Apple Mac User’s, Newton’s)

– The Consistency Principle:• Principle of Cognitive Consistency: Consumers value

harmony among their thoughts, feelings or behaviors to be consistent with other experiences

Page 11: 7 - 1 Chapter 7,8,9 review Attitudes, Attitude Change, and Decision Making By Michael R. Solomon Consumer Behavior Buying, Having, and Being Sixth Edition

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Levels of Attitudinal Commitment

• By describing Cadillac as “my company,” the woman in this ad exhibits a high level of attitudinal commitment to her employer.

Page 12: 7 - 1 Chapter 7,8,9 review Attitudes, Attitude Change, and Decision Making By Michael R. Solomon Consumer Behavior Buying, Having, and Being Sixth Edition

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Attitudinal Commitment

• This ad for a magazine illustrates that consumers often distort information so that it fits with what they already believe or think they know.

Page 13: 7 - 1 Chapter 7,8,9 review Attitudes, Attitude Change, and Decision Making By Michael R. Solomon Consumer Behavior Buying, Having, and Being Sixth Edition

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Balance Theory

• Triad:– An attitude structure consisting of three elements

• (1) A person and his/her perceptions of

• (2) an attitude object, and

• (3) some other person or object

• Marketing Applications of Balance Theory– Celebrity endorsements

Page 14: 7 - 1 Chapter 7,8,9 review Attitudes, Attitude Change, and Decision Making By Michael R. Solomon Consumer Behavior Buying, Having, and Being Sixth Edition

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Alternative Routes to Restoring Balance in a Triad

Figure 7.2

Page 15: 7 - 1 Chapter 7,8,9 review Attitudes, Attitude Change, and Decision Making By Michael R. Solomon Consumer Behavior Buying, Having, and Being Sixth Edition

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Changing AttitudesThrough Communication

• Persuasion:– An active attempt to change attitudes– Basic psychological principles that influence

people to change their minds or comply with a request:

•Reciprocity

•Scarcity

•Authority

•Consistency

•Liking

•Consensus

Page 16: 7 - 1 Chapter 7,8,9 review Attitudes, Attitude Change, and Decision Making By Michael R. Solomon Consumer Behavior Buying, Having, and Being Sixth Edition

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Decisions, Decisions: Tactical Communications Options

• Who will be the source of the message?– Man, woman, child, celebrity, athlete?

• How should message be constructed?– Emphasize negative consequences?– Direct comparison with competition?– Present a fantasy?

• What media will transmit the message?– Print ad, television, door-to-door, Web site?

• What are the characteristics of the target market?– Young, old, frustrated, status-oriented?

Page 17: 7 - 1 Chapter 7,8,9 review Attitudes, Attitude Change, and Decision Making By Michael R. Solomon Consumer Behavior Buying, Having, and Being Sixth Edition

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The Traditional Communications Model

Figure 8.1

Page 18: 7 - 1 Chapter 7,8,9 review Attitudes, Attitude Change, and Decision Making By Michael R. Solomon Consumer Behavior Buying, Having, and Being Sixth Edition

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An Updated Communications Model

Figure 8.2

Page 19: 7 - 1 Chapter 7,8,9 review Attitudes, Attitude Change, and Decision Making By Michael R. Solomon Consumer Behavior Buying, Having, and Being Sixth Edition

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The Source

• Source effects: A message will have different effects if communicated by a different source.

• Two important source characteristics:– Credibility and Attractiveness

• Source credibility: A source’s perceived expertise, objectivity, or trustworthiness.

Page 20: 7 - 1 Chapter 7,8,9 review Attitudes, Attitude Change, and Decision Making By Michael R. Solomon Consumer Behavior Buying, Having, and Being Sixth Edition

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The Source (cont.)

• Building Credibility: Credibility can be enhanced if the source’s qualifications are relevant to the product.

• Hype versus Buzz: The Corporate Paradox– Corporate Paradox: The more involved a company appears

to be in the dissemination of news about its products, the less credible it becomes.

• Buzz: Word of mouth, viewed as authentic

• Hype: Corporate propaganda, viewed as inauthentic

Page 21: 7 - 1 Chapter 7,8,9 review Attitudes, Attitude Change, and Decision Making By Michael R. Solomon Consumer Behavior Buying, Having, and Being Sixth Edition

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Source Attractiveness in Ads

• To stimulate demand for milk, an industry trade group tapped a huge range of celebrities to show off their milk mustaches.

Page 22: 7 - 1 Chapter 7,8,9 review Attitudes, Attitude Change, and Decision Making By Michael R. Solomon Consumer Behavior Buying, Having, and Being Sixth Edition

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Star Power: Celebrities as Communications Sources

• Cultural meanings:– Symbolizes important categories such as status,

social class, gender, age, and personality type.– Match up hypothesis: The celebrity’s image and

that of the product are similar– Q rating (Q stands for quality) considers two

factors:• Consumers’ level of familiarity with a name• The number of respondents who indicate that a

person, program, or character is a favorite.

Page 23: 7 - 1 Chapter 7,8,9 review Attitudes, Attitude Change, and Decision Making By Michael R. Solomon Consumer Behavior Buying, Having, and Being Sixth Edition

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• Who is the target market for Drew?

Would you buy something from this man?

Page 24: 7 - 1 Chapter 7,8,9 review Attitudes, Attitude Change, and Decision Making By Michael R. Solomon Consumer Behavior Buying, Having, and Being Sixth Edition

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Sending the Message

• Repetition:– Mere Exposure: People tend to like things that are

more familiar to them, even if they are not keen on them initially.

– Habituation: Consumer no longer pays attention to the stimulus because of boredom or fatigue

Page 25: 7 - 1 Chapter 7,8,9 review Attitudes, Attitude Change, and Decision Making By Michael R. Solomon Consumer Behavior Buying, Having, and Being Sixth Edition

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Constructing the Argument

• One- Versus Two-Sided Arguments:– Supportive argument: Presents only positive

arguments – Two-sided message: Presents positive and negative

info

• Comparative Advertising:– A strategy in which a message compares two or

more recognized brands and compares them on the basis of attributes.

Page 26: 7 - 1 Chapter 7,8,9 review Attitudes, Attitude Change, and Decision Making By Michael R. Solomon Consumer Behavior Buying, Having, and Being Sixth Edition

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Types of Message Appeals• Emotional Versus Rational Appeals:

– Choice depends on the nature of the product and the type of relationship that consumers have with it

– Recall of ad content tends to be better for “thinking” rather than “feeling” ads

• Sexual Appeals:– Sex draws attention to the ad but may be counterproductive

unless the product itself is related to sex

• Humorous Appeals:– Distraction: Humorous ads inhibit the consumer from

counterarguing (thinking of reasons not to agree with the message), increasing the likelihood of message acceptance

Page 27: 7 - 1 Chapter 7,8,9 review Attitudes, Attitude Change, and Decision Making By Michael R. Solomon Consumer Behavior Buying, Having, and Being Sixth Edition

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Emotional vs. Rational

• These ads demonstrate rational versus emotional message appeals. At the time of the initial ad campaign for the new Infiniti automobiles, the ads for rival Lexus (top) emphasized design and engineering, while the ads for Infiniti (bottom) did not even show the car.

Page 28: 7 - 1 Chapter 7,8,9 review Attitudes, Attitude Change, and Decision Making By Michael R. Solomon Consumer Behavior Buying, Having, and Being Sixth Edition

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Humor Appeals

• This ad relies upon humor to communicate the message that skiers and snowboarders should wear helmets.

Page 29: 7 - 1 Chapter 7,8,9 review Attitudes, Attitude Change, and Decision Making By Michael R. Solomon Consumer Behavior Buying, Having, and Being Sixth Edition

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Personification

• Many products are personified by make-believe characters.

Page 30: 7 - 1 Chapter 7,8,9 review Attitudes, Attitude Change, and Decision Making By Michael R. Solomon Consumer Behavior Buying, Having, and Being Sixth Edition

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The Source vs. The Message:Sell the Steak or the Sizzle?

• Elaboration Likelihood Model (ELM): – Assumes that once a customer receives a message, he or

she begins to process it.

• The Central Route to Persuasion:– The processing route taken under conditions of high

involvement– Cognitive Responses

• The Peripheral Route to Persuasion– The processing route taken under conditions of low

involvement– Peripheral Cues

Page 31: 7 - 1 Chapter 7,8,9 review Attitudes, Attitude Change, and Decision Making By Michael R. Solomon Consumer Behavior Buying, Having, and Being Sixth Edition

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The ELM Model

Figure 8.5

Page 32: 7 - 1 Chapter 7,8,9 review Attitudes, Attitude Change, and Decision Making By Michael R. Solomon Consumer Behavior Buying, Having, and Being Sixth Edition

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Support for the ELM

• The ELM has received a lot of research support

• Example: Typical ELM Study– Thought listing– Independent variables:

• Message-processing involvement• Argument strength• Source characteristics

– Findings:• High involvement subjects had more cognitions• High involvement subjects swayed by powerful arguments• Low involvement subjects influenced by attractive sources

Page 33: 7 - 1 Chapter 7,8,9 review Attitudes, Attitude Change, and Decision Making By Michael R. Solomon Consumer Behavior Buying, Having, and Being Sixth Edition

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Consumers As Problem Solvers

• A consumer purchase is a response to a problem.

• Steps in the decision process:– (1) Problem recognition– (2) Information search– (3) Evaluation of alternatives– (4) Product choice

• Amount of effort put into a purchase decision differs with each purchase.

Page 34: 7 - 1 Chapter 7,8,9 review Attitudes, Attitude Change, and Decision Making By Michael R. Solomon Consumer Behavior Buying, Having, and Being Sixth Edition

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Stages in Consumer Decision Making

Figure 9.1

Page 35: 7 - 1 Chapter 7,8,9 review Attitudes, Attitude Change, and Decision Making By Michael R. Solomon Consumer Behavior Buying, Having, and Being Sixth Edition

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The 8 Stages of Consumer Information Processing

CPMCPMCPMCPM

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Illustrating the Decision-Making Process

• This ad by the U.S. Postal Service presents a problem, illustrates the decision-making process, and offers a solution.

Page 37: 7 - 1 Chapter 7,8,9 review Attitudes, Attitude Change, and Decision Making By Michael R. Solomon Consumer Behavior Buying, Having, and Being Sixth Edition

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Types of Consumer Decisions

• Extended Problem Solving:– Corresponds to traditional decision-making

perspective

• Limited Problem Solving:– People use simple decision rules to choose among

alternatives

• Habitual Decision Making: – Choices made with little to no conscious effort– Automaticity: Characteristic of choices made with

minimal effort and without conscious control

Page 38: 7 - 1 Chapter 7,8,9 review Attitudes, Attitude Change, and Decision Making By Michael R. Solomon Consumer Behavior Buying, Having, and Being Sixth Edition

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A Continuum ofBuying Decision Behavior

Figure 9.2

Page 39: 7 - 1 Chapter 7,8,9 review Attitudes, Attitude Change, and Decision Making By Michael R. Solomon Consumer Behavior Buying, Having, and Being Sixth Edition

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Problem Recognition

• Problem recognition:– Occurs whenever the consumer sees a significant

difference between his or her current state of affairs and some desired or ideal state

• Need recognition: The quality of the consumer’s actual state moves downward

• Opportunity recognition: The consumer’s ideal state moves upward

– Primary demand: Consumers are encouraged to use a product or service regardless of the brand they choose

– Secondary demand: Consumers are encouraged to use a specific brand – can only occur if primary demand exists

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Information Search• Types of Information Search:

– Prepurchase search: Consumer recognizes a need and then searches the marketplace for specific information

– Ongoing search: Browsing for fun or staying up-to-date on what’s happening in the market

• Internal Versus External Search:– Internal search: Scanning our own memory banks

for information about product alternatives– External search: Obtaining product information

from advertisements, friends, or by observing others

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Do Consumers Always Search Rationally?

• Consumers don’t necessarily engage in a rational search process

• Brand Switching:– Changing brands even if the current brand satisfies

the consumer’s needs

• Sensory-specific satiety:– A cause of variety seeking when there is relatively

little stimulation in the consumer’s environment

Page 42: 7 - 1 Chapter 7,8,9 review Attitudes, Attitude Change, and Decision Making By Michael R. Solomon Consumer Behavior Buying, Having, and Being Sixth Edition

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Rational Consumer?

• This Singaporean beer ad reminds us that not all product decisions are made rationally.

Page 43: 7 - 1 Chapter 7,8,9 review Attitudes, Attitude Change, and Decision Making By Michael R. Solomon Consumer Behavior Buying, Having, and Being Sixth Edition

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Information Searchvs. Product Knowledge

Figure 9.5

Page 44: 7 - 1 Chapter 7,8,9 review Attitudes, Attitude Change, and Decision Making By Michael R. Solomon Consumer Behavior Buying, Having, and Being Sixth Edition

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Perceived Risk in Advertising

• Minolta features a no-risk guarantee as a way to reduce the perceived risk in buying an office copier.

Page 45: 7 - 1 Chapter 7,8,9 review Attitudes, Attitude Change, and Decision Making By Michael R. Solomon Consumer Behavior Buying, Having, and Being Sixth Edition

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Evaluation of Alternatives

• Identifying Alternatives:– Evoked Set: Products already in memory (the

retrieval set) plus those prominent in the retail environment

• Product Categorization:– Categorization: Mentally placing a product with a

set of other comparable products

Page 46: 7 - 1 Chapter 7,8,9 review Attitudes, Attitude Change, and Decision Making By Michael R. Solomon Consumer Behavior Buying, Having, and Being Sixth Edition

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Levels of Abstractionin Dessert Categories

Figure 9.7

Page 47: 7 - 1 Chapter 7,8,9 review Attitudes, Attitude Change, and Decision Making By Michael R. Solomon Consumer Behavior Buying, Having, and Being Sixth Edition

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Strategic Implicationsof Product Categorization

• Product Positioning:– Success of a positioning strategy depends on

convincing the consumer that the product should be considered in the category.

• Identifying Competitors:– Many products compete for membership in a

category

• Exemplar Products:– Products which are a good example of a category

Page 48: 7 - 1 Chapter 7,8,9 review Attitudes, Attitude Change, and Decision Making By Michael R. Solomon Consumer Behavior Buying, Having, and Being Sixth Edition

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Product Positioning

• This ad for Sunkist lemon juice attempts to establish a new category for the product by repositioning it as a salt substitute.

Page 49: 7 - 1 Chapter 7,8,9 review Attitudes, Attitude Change, and Decision Making By Michael R. Solomon Consumer Behavior Buying, Having, and Being Sixth Edition

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Product Choice:Selecting Among Alternatives

• Evaluative Criteria:– Dimensions used to judge the merits of competing options

– Determinant Attributes: Attributes used to differentiate among choices

• To recommend a new decision criteria, a communication should:– Point out that there are significant differences among brands

on the attribute

– Supply the consumer with a decision-making rule

– Convey a rule that can be integrated with how the person has made this decision in the past

Page 50: 7 - 1 Chapter 7,8,9 review Attitudes, Attitude Change, and Decision Making By Michael R. Solomon Consumer Behavior Buying, Having, and Being Sixth Edition

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Choosing the Solution

• Lava soap lays out the options and invites us to choose the solution.

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Heuristics: Mental Shortcuts

• Heuristics:– Mental rules-of-thumb that lead to a speedy decision

• Relying on a Product Signal:– Product signal: Aspect of an item that visibly communicates

some underlying quality

– Covariation: Perceived associations among events that may or may not influence one another

• Market Beliefs: Is It Better if I Pay More For It?– Price-Quality Relationship: Pervasive market belief that

higher price means higher quality

Page 52: 7 - 1 Chapter 7,8,9 review Attitudes, Attitude Change, and Decision Making By Michael R. Solomon Consumer Behavior Buying, Having, and Being Sixth Edition

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Heuristics Simplify Choices

• Consumers often simplify choices by using heuristics such as automatically choosing a favorite color or brand.

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Country of Origin

• A product’s country of origin is an important piece of information in the decision-making process.

• Certain items are strongly associated with specific countries, and products from those countries often attempt to benefit from these linkages.

Page 54: 7 - 1 Chapter 7,8,9 review Attitudes, Attitude Change, and Decision Making By Michael R. Solomon Consumer Behavior Buying, Having, and Being Sixth Edition

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Qibla-Cola

Page 55: 7 - 1 Chapter 7,8,9 review Attitudes, Attitude Change, and Decision Making By Michael R. Solomon Consumer Behavior Buying, Having, and Being Sixth Edition

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Heuristics (conc.)

• Choosing Familiar Brand Names: Loyalty or Habit?– Brand loyalty is prized by marketers

• Inertia: The Lazy Consumer:– Inertia: A brand is bought out of habit because less

effort is required

• Brand Loyalty: A “Friend,” Tried-and-True:– Brand parity: Consumers’ beliefs that there are no

significant differences between brands

Page 56: 7 - 1 Chapter 7,8,9 review Attitudes, Attitude Change, and Decision Making By Michael R. Solomon Consumer Behavior Buying, Having, and Being Sixth Edition

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Decision Rules

• Noncompensatory Decision Rules:– Choice shortcuts where a product with a low

standing on one attribute cannot compensate by being better on another attribute

• The Lexographic Rule• The Elimination by Aspects Rule• The Conjunctive Rule

• Compensatory Decision Rules:– Give a product a chance to make up for its

shortcomings• Simple Additive Rule• Weighted Additive Rule