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CONSUMER BEHAVIOR & MARKET SEGMENTATION PATRICIA CARSON, PRASHANT MISRA, LARA MURGALE, ROBERT MULLENBERG, CAROLE WHITE DR. CLAYSON: MARKETING MANAGEMENT DECEMBER 2, 2013

CONSUMER BEHAVIOR & MARKET SEGMENTATION

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CONSUMER BEHAVIOR & MARKET SEGMENTATION. Patricia Carson, Prashant misra, Lara Murgale, Robert Mullenberg, Carole White Dr. Clayson: Marketing Management December 2, 2013. “Attitude is the link between perception and behavior”. Behavior. Perception. Attitude. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: CONSUMER BEHAVIOR & MARKET SEGMENTATION

CONSUMER BEHAVIOR & MARKET SEGMENTATION

PATRICIA CARSON, PRASHANT MISRA, LARA MURGALE, ROBERT MULLENBERG, CAROLE WHITEDR. CLAYSON: MARKETING MANAGEMENT

DECEMBER 2, 2013

Page 2: CONSUMER BEHAVIOR & MARKET SEGMENTATION

“Attitude is the link between perception and behavior”

AttitudePerception Behavior

Page 3: CONSUMER BEHAVIOR & MARKET SEGMENTATION

Consumer Behavior in a Nutshell

Actions

Social Processes

Mental Proces

ses

InfluencesPerception/SensationCognitionAffectBeliefsSocial

Reference LevelsCulturalSocialPersonalPsychologicalBuyer

Page 4: CONSUMER BEHAVIOR & MARKET SEGMENTATION

The Purchase Decision

Page 5: CONSUMER BEHAVIOR & MARKET SEGMENTATION

Other Factors

Risk: Performance, Financial, Physical, Social & Ego

Behavioral Learning: Repeat Pleasure; Environment & Experience Rule

Cognitive Learning: Sensory, Short-term & Long-term Memory

Attitudes: Learned predispositions Social Groups: Which ones really matter for

which products? Personality: What is it?

Page 6: CONSUMER BEHAVIOR & MARKET SEGMENTATION

Market Segmentation in a Nutshell

What is Segmentation? Why Segment? Types of Segmentation

Geographic Demographic Psychographic Behavioral

Segments must be Large enough Identifiable Reachable

Page 7: CONSUMER BEHAVIOR & MARKET SEGMENTATION

France – Consumer Behavior & Market Segmentation

Population - Age & birth rate

Ethnicity – Immigration & Religion

Education

Households

Lifestyle and Health – Work & Habits

Page 8: CONSUMER BEHAVIOR & MARKET SEGMENTATION

France - Risk, Learning, Attitude, Personality & Social Group & Behavior

Price has been an essential element in the buying process;

Quality is becoming more and more important for the consumer;

Buying equals pleasure;

The French consumer is impulsive;

Domestic Products are preferred (Food).

Page 9: CONSUMER BEHAVIOR & MARKET SEGMENTATION

India – Consumer Behavior

Environment of the consumer

Geographic influences

Influence of occupation

Place of purchase

Creative use of products http://India and Washing Machines

Page 10: CONSUMER BEHAVIOR & MARKET SEGMENTATION

India – Consumer Market Structure

The Rich

The Consuming Class

The Climbers

The Aspirants

The Destitutes

Page 11: CONSUMER BEHAVIOR & MARKET SEGMENTATION

India - The Purchase DecisionKFC example

The need was hung

er and the immediat

e satisfaction of hung

er throu

gh fast food

Search by consumer

s  throu

gh the

Internal

factors and external

factors of Informatio

n

Comparing the food

joints-Mc

Donald,

Wimpy’s and KFC.,

Rational

choice,

attribute

choice, KFC

attribute

choice theory

The decision

of buying a product at KFC

was backed

by many

factors(as

known by

consumer

survey like

social surroundings,

physical surroundings and

antecedent

states.

like some consumers were

satisfied with

the quality

and taste

of food NEGAT

IVE FEEDBACK so

me found the food

as oily and

bland.

Page 12: CONSUMER BEHAVIOR & MARKET SEGMENTATION

Personality

Who are you? Big5 VALS

Page 13: CONSUMER BEHAVIOR & MARKET SEGMENTATION

Personality Is ‘personality profiling’ valuable to a marketing strategy?

How do we gather ‘personality’ data about the masses? Or specific target markets?

Page 14: CONSUMER BEHAVIOR & MARKET SEGMENTATION

Population ‘Personalities’

Demographic data: Applied Geographic Solutions Inc. Experian: Mosaics

Page 15: CONSUMER BEHAVIOR & MARKET SEGMENTATION

School and Church Plot: 10-mile radius

Legend

Trinity School 292 Trinity Church 588

Page 16: CONSUMER BEHAVIOR & MARKET SEGMENTATION

Mosaic Types 10 mi%

Cong % Sch %

J34 Aging in Place 6.1 9.1 3.3C11 Aging of Aquarius 6.1 6.8 3.3I31 Blue Collar Comfort 6.0 10.9 12.7L42 Rooted Flower Power 6.0 5.7 5.5E20 No Place Like Home 5.8 12.3 9.8O51 Digital Dependents 5.1 4.3 6.5M45 Diapers and Debit Cards

4.5 3.4 6.9

B09 Family Fun-tastic 3.6 6.0 9.1A02 Platinum Prosperity 3.5 3.6 2.2Total 46.7 62.1 59.3

Page 17: CONSUMER BEHAVIOR & MARKET SEGMENTATION

J34 Aging in Place

Page 18: CONSUMER BEHAVIOR & MARKET SEGMENTATION

J34 Aging in Place

Page 19: CONSUMER BEHAVIOR & MARKET SEGMENTATION

E20 No Place Like Home

Page 20: CONSUMER BEHAVIOR & MARKET SEGMENTATION

E20 No Place Like Home

Page 21: CONSUMER BEHAVIOR & MARKET SEGMENTATION

E20 No Place Like Home

Page 22: CONSUMER BEHAVIOR & MARKET SEGMENTATION
Page 23: CONSUMER BEHAVIOR & MARKET SEGMENTATION

Franco Modigliani

Franco Modigliani Italian economist naturalized American, a professor at the MIT

Sloan School of Management and MIT Department of Economics who won the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economics in 1985

the life-cycle theory individuals build up a store of wealth during their younger

working lives to consume during their own old age.proved useful in study of demographics based on age

Predicting pension plansPredicting consumption

Page 24: CONSUMER BEHAVIOR & MARKET SEGMENTATION

Life-Cycle Hypothesis

consumption is patterned by the stage of life

consumption patterns change during different stages of their lives

individuals plan their consumption and savings behavior

Individual want to maintain stable lifestyles so work to build assets during working lives

use assets during retirement years

Page 25: CONSUMER BEHAVIOR & MARKET SEGMENTATION

Life-Cycle Hypothesis

Most believe that this working generation will aim for a level of consumption in their post-retirement years larger than the consumption enjoyed by the currently retired individuals belonging to a less affluent generation.

Most believe that to support this future level of consumption post-retirement, the working individuals will have to save on a higher scale higher than the current retired generation achieved

Page 26: CONSUMER BEHAVIOR & MARKET SEGMENTATION

Life-Cycle Hypothesis

However, Consumer behavior researchers find that Elderly do not

“dissave” or spend as quickly as expected from the life-cycle model

There are several reasons: precautionary saving because cautious about unpredictable

expenses and worried about living longer worried that ill-health will result in assistance and nursing

expenses leaving bequests to their children Leaving bequests to charity

Page 27: CONSUMER BEHAVIOR & MARKET SEGMENTATION

Finding Common Ground

Dates Vary by Author

1927-1942: Silent Generation1946-1964: Baby Boomers1965-1983: Gen X or the Busters1984-2002: Gen Y or the Millennials2003-Current: Gen Z or the Digital Generation

Source: Connecting Across Generations

Page 28: CONSUMER BEHAVIOR & MARKET SEGMENTATION

Controversy Among Researchers

More important than age group is where the individual is in their life cycle rather than their generational cohorts

For example, if a family is having children or helping to raise grandchildren, their spending patterns and housing choices are driven by need and activity rather than age group category

Generalizations have a “kernel of truth,” however like astrology can always find some characteristics that fit and some that do not.

In general in the US, the population is becoming “larger, older, and more diverse” as cited by Marketing: the Core, p. 61.

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Age Group

Generation Y: 1984-2002 AKA “millennials” and “baby boomet” Defined by communication technologies. 80 million Generation Y in US. Peer-oriented Instant Gratification Events, leaders, trends of its time Facing higher costs for education Not used to negative feedback themselves Raised by Boomers. Interested in Environmental Sustainability. Want work/life balance Multi-taskers

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Age Group

Page 33: CONSUMER BEHAVIOR & MARKET SEGMENTATION

Age Group

Generation X: 1965-1983 AKA “Baby Bust” Also unimpressed with authority 40 Million in US Tolerant of all peoples Drug problems. Self-absorbed, Clothes and fashion labels are important Late to marry, quick to divorce, single parents, short on loyalty,

relative values, self-reliant, Struggling to buy Suspicious, cautious, skeptical Computer oriented. Define self by skill set, not firm membership

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Page 35: CONSUMER BEHAVIOR & MARKET SEGMENTATION

Age Group

Baby Boomers: 1946-1964 “Me” generation. 80 million Boomers in US. Defined by “rock and roll” music, free love, “non-violent” protests First TV generation Poor marital skills and were first divorced generation Shaped by AIDs epidemic and began support for gay citizens Individual rights of members of minority and gender groups

championed Optimistic Team-oriented

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Age Group

Silent Generation: 1927-1945 Born in the great Depression of 1929 or children of parents

who lived through the Depression Married for life. One firm for life. Labor Unions World War II, Korean and Viet Nam Wars Well behaved in school: complaints from teachers regarding

chewing gum and passing notes. Big Band/Swing music Believe in sacrificing for next generation, disciplined,

cautious spenders.

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Conclusion

Perception Attitude Behavior