CONSUMER BEHAVIOR AND MARKETING
STRATEGY
by
J. Paul Peter & Jerry C. Olson
Fifth Edition
Irwin McGrawhill Companies
Copyright 1999
United States
The Gap
The Gap began in 1969
with a single store in San Fransisco selling jeans and records. In the 1970 s.
The Gap Grew rapidly to 200 stores, fueled by heavy advertising.
The Gap became the epitome of “cool” by offering basic items
such as T-shirts and jeans that looked like designer clothing, with out the
arrogance. Although the company encountered a few bumps along the way, growth
continued through the 19S0s with nearly 900 stores by 1994, including new
stores such as GapKids and acquisitions such as GapKids and acquisitions such
as Banana Republic. Ads were designed to communicate that Gap clothes fit with
an individual sense of style. A campaign in the early 1990s featured
celebrities such as jazz great Miles Davis and neo country singer k.d. lang
mixing Gap clothes with their personal clothing. The message was clear Gap
clothes could be combined with everything from Armani sport coats to Grateful
Dead hand bands. Ads for The Gap and GapKids were “cool” and those meanings
transferred to the clothes. In 1992 a business article identified The Gap as a
company that “connects with its consumers in the way only a few other giant
brands, such as Coca-Cola or McDonalds manage to do. “Helped by clever
advertising and the quality and style of the clothes. The Gap look managed to
be accepted by tots teenagers, young adults, and graying baby boomers.But
success can bring a lot of criticism, which can change consumers attitudes and
behaviors for products, brands and companies sometimes rapidly. The early 1990s
witnessed a backlash of radicule and resentment toward The Gap, especially
among teens ang Generation Xers. On the popular TV show “Ellen,” a character
put down the khaki-clad neighbors next door as, “Gaps.” Skit on “Saturday Night
Live” mocked The Gap’s Valley girl like salesclerks. A satire in counter
culture magazine said, “Their clothes promote a straight, white, lame
lifestyle, which is just how THEY want us to be.”Thus, The Gap, once the
epitome of “cool” among young people in the 1970s and 1980s, seemed to be
losing a bit of its cool among the youth generation of the 1990s. A series
attitude surveys found that 90 percent of teens in 1992 said The Gap was cool,
but this figure fell to 83 percent and to 66 percent in 1994. A 1994 survey
found that Nike, Guess and Levi’s all beat The Gap in the coolest brands
category.Gap, Inc., of course, can withstand comic put downs and snide essays
in Generation X magazines. Well Street analysts continue to predict strong
growth into the twenty first century. However, Gap managers are concerned that
Gap may be losing its appeal with shoppers under age 30. They are adjusting
their merchandise section to include more trendy styles and they are developing
new advertsing campaigns. You can check out the current Gap advertising on its
Web site: http://ww.gap.com/advertising/.
Source: Christina Duff, “Bobby Short Wore Khakis-Who’s He and
Cares?” The Wall Street Journal,
February 16, 1995, pp.A1, A6; Russell Mitchell, “The Gap,” Business Week, March 9, 1992, pp. 58-64; The Gap corporate Web
site: http://www.gap.com.
This example illustrate the concept of consumers’ attitudes,
one of the most important concepts in the study of consumer behavior. Each year
marketing managers like those at The Gap spend million of dollars researching
consumers attitudes, marketers hope to influence their purchase behaviors. In
this chapter we examine two types of attitudes, attitudes toward objects and
attitudes toward behaviors. We begin by defining the concept of attitude and
discussing how people’s salient beliefs causae attitudes. Then we consider the
information integration process that forms attitudes toward actions and
influences people’s intentions to perform behaviors. Finally, we discuss the
imperfect relationship between behavioral intentions and actual behaviors.
Throughout, we identify implications of these concepts and processes for
developing marketing strategies.
What Is an
Attitude?Attitude has been a key concept in
psychology for more than a century and at least 100 definitions and 500
measures of attitude have been proposed. Although the dominant approach to
attitudes has changed over the years (see Highlight 6.1), nearly all
definitions of attitude have one thing in common: They refer to people’s
evaluations. We define attitude as a persons overall evaluation of a concept.As
you learned in Chapter 3 evaluations are affective responses at relatively low
levels of intensity and arousal (refer to Exhibit 3.2). These evaluations can
be created by both the affective and the cognitive systems. The affective
system automatically produces affective responses including emotions, feelings,
moods and evaluations or attitudes as immediate, direct responses to certain
stimuli. These favorable or unfavorable affective responses are generated
without conscious, cognitive processing of information about the product. Then
through classical conditioning processes, these evaluations may become
associated with a product, or brand, thus creating an attitude.
Highlight 6.1
A Brief History of the Study of Attitude
Attitude has been
called “the most distinctive and indispensable concept in contemporary American
social psychology. “And it is one the most important concepts marketers use to
understand consumers. Over the years, researches have tried a variety of
approaches to studying attitudes in an attempt to provide a more complete
understanding of behavior.
One of the earliest
definitions of attitude was introduced by Thurstone in 1931. He viewed attitude
as a fairly simple concept the amount of affect a person has for or against an
object. A few years later, Allport proposed a much broader definition: Attitude
is a mental and neural state of readiness to respond, organized through
experience and exerting a directive and/or dynamic influence and
behavior.”
Triands and others
combined three response types (thoughts, feelings and actions) into the tripartite
model of attitude. In this scheme, attitude was seen as comprising three
related components cognition (knowledge about the object), affect (positive or
negative evaluations of the object) and conation (intended or actual behavior
toward the object). Later, Fishbein like Thurstone and Fishbein is the most
useful. That is attitude represents a person’s favorable or unfavorable
feelings toward the object in in question. Beliefs (cognition) and intentions
to behave (conation) are seen as related to attitude but are separate cognitive
concepts, not part of attitude itself. This is the perspective we take in this
book.
Source: Adapted from Martin Fishbein, “An Overview of the Attitude
Construct,”in Look Back, A Look Ahead, ed. G. B. Hafer (Chicago: American Marketing
Association, 1980), pp.1-19; and Richard J. Lutz, “The Role of Attitude Theory
in Marketing,” in Perspective in Consumer Behavior, 3 rd ed., ed. H. H
Kassarjian and T.S. Robertson (Glenview, IL: Scott, Foresman, 1981), pp.234-5.
In this chapter
however we treat attitudes as affective evaluations created by the cognitive
system. The cognitive processing model of consumer decision making (refer to
Exhibit 3.5) shows that an overall evaluation is formed when consumers
integrate (combine) knowledge, maenings, or beliefs about the attitude concept.
The goal of this integration process is to analyze the personal relevance
of the concept and determine whether it is favorable or unfavorable: “What does
this concept have to do with me? Is this good or bad thing for me? Do I like or
dislike this object?”We assume consumers from attitudes toward every concept
they interpret in terms of its personal relevance.
As shown in
Exhibition 3.5 the evaluations produced by the attitude formation process may
be stored in memory. Once an attitude has been formed and stored in memory,
consumers do not have to engage in another integration process to construct
another attitude when they need to evaluate the concept again. Instead, the
existing attitude can be activated from memory and used as a basis for
interpreting new information. Because activated attitudes can influence
consumers judgements, taste tests usually are conducted blind (tasters are not
told what brands, they are testing). This avoids activating brand attitudes
that could bias the taste judgments. Finally, the activated attitude can be
integrated with other knowledge in decision making (we discuss how attitudes
are used in decision processes in the next chapter).
Whether a given
attitude will affect interpretation or integration processes depends on its
accessibility in memory or its probability activation. Among the many factors
that can influence the accessibility of attitudes are salience or importance
(more self-relevant attitudes are more easily activated), frequency or prior
activation (attitudes that are activated more often are more accessible), and
the strength of the association between a concept and its attitude (puppies
tend to activate positive attitudes; zebras usually do not activate an
attitude). Marketers sometimes use cues to “prime” (activate) an attitude that
is relevant to their strategies consider the cute babies in ads for Michelin
tires.
Attitudes can be
measured simply and directly by asking consumers to evaluate the concept of
interest. For instance, marketing researches might ask consumers to indicate
their attitudes toward McDonalds french fries on three evaluative scales.
McDonald’s French Fries
Extremely Unfavorable
-3 -2 -1 0 +1 +2 +3 Extremely Favorable
Dislike Very Much -3
-2 -1 0 +1 +2 +3 Like Very Much
Very Bad -3 -2 -1 0
+1 +2 +3 Very Good
Consumers overall
attitudes toward McDonald’s french fries (Ao) are indicated by the average of
their ratings across the three evaluative scales. Attitudes can vary from
negative (ratings of -3 -2 -1) through neutral (a rating of 0) to positive
(ratings of +1 +2 +3). Attitudes are not necessarily intense or extreme. On the
country, many consumers have essentially neutral evaluations (neither favorable
nor unfavorable) toward relatively unimportant, non involving concepts. A
neutral evaluation is still an attitude, however, although probably a weakly
held one.
Attitudes toward What?
Consumers attitudes
are always toward some concept. We are interested in two broad types of
concepts objects and behaviors. Consumers can have attitudes toward various
physical and social objects (Ao indicates attitudes toward the object)
including products, brands, models, stores and people (salesperson at the
camera store) as well as aspects of marketing strategy (a rebate from
General Motors; an ad for Wrighley’s chewing gum). Consumers also can have
attitudes toward imaginary objects such as concepts and ideas (capitalism, a
fair price for gasoline). A 1997 survey of Americans attitudes toward pollution
and the environment found that, compared to five years ago, 76 percent were
more concerned, 19 percent were less concerned and 6 percent were unchanged.
Also, consumers can have attitudes toward their own behaviors or actions (why
did I buy that sweater?) and future behaviors (going to the mall tomorrow
afternoon).
Levels of Attitude Concepts
Consumers can have
distinct attitudes to many variations of the same general concept. Exhibit 6.1
shows several attitude concepts that vary in their levels of specificity, even
though all concepts are in the same product dominant. For instance, Rich has a
moderately positive attitude toward fast food restaurants in general, but he
has a highly favorable attitude one product form (hamburger restaurants).
However, his attitude toward McDonalds, a specific brand of hamburger restaurant,
is only slightly favorable (he likes Burger King better). Finally, his attitude
toward a particular “model” the McDonalds on the corner of Grant and Main is
somewhat negative (he had an unpleasant meal there).
Note that some
attitude concepts are defined in terms of a particular behavioral and
situational context (eating dinner with his children at the Grant Street
McDonalds after a soccer game), whereas other concepts are more general
(McDonalds restaurants). Consumers could have different attitudes toward these
concepts and the attitudes might not be consistent with each other. Rich has an
unfavorable attitude toward eating lunch with his friends at the Grant Street
McDonalds (he’d rather go to a fill service restaurant); however, he has a
somewhat favorable attitude toward eating dinner there with his kids (it’s easy
and fast).
Note that although
the same McDonalds “object” is present in each of these concepts, Rich’s
attitude toward that McDonalds is different in the two situations. Because
consumers are likely to have different attitudes toward different attitude
concepts, ,marketers must pricisely identify tha attitude concept at the level
of specificity most relevant to the marketing problem of interest.
Marketing Implications
Marketers are highly
interested in market share, a measure of purchasing behavior indicating the
proportion of total sales in a product category (or product form) received by a
brand. But marketers also need to attend to consumers brand attitudes.
Brand Equity
Brand attitude is a
critically important aspect of brand equity. Brand equity concerns the value of
the brand to the marketer and to the consumer. From the marketers perspective,
brandequity implies greater profits, morecash flow and greater market share.
For instance, Marriott estimated that adding its name to Fairfield Inn
increased occupancy rates by 15 percent (a tangible indicator of the value of
the Marriot brand). In England, Hitachi and G.E. once co owned a factory that
made identical televisions for both compasnies. The only differences were the
brand name on the seat and a $75 greater price for the Hitachi, reflecting the
equity or value of the Hitachi brand.
Exhibit 6.1
Variations in Level of Specify of Attitude Concept
Levels of attitude
concept
|
Examples
|
Examples
|
Product
class
|
Fast
food restaurants
|
Fast
food restaurants
|
Product
form
|
Pizza
restaurants
|
Hamburger
restaurants
|
Brand
|
McDonald’s
|
Burger
King
|
Model
|
Grant
Street McDonald’s
|
McDonald’s
at Chester Mall
|
Brand/model
general situation
|
Eating
lunch with friends at Grant Street McDonald’s
|
Eating
dinner with kids at Grant Street McDonald’s
|
Brand/model
specific situation
|
Eating
dinner with kids at Grant Street McDonald’s after a soccer gamr
|
Eating
dinner with kids at Grant Street McDonald’s for a birthday party
|
From a consumer perspective,
brand equity involves a strong, positive brand attitude (favorable evaluation
of the brand based on favorable meanings and beliefs that are accessible in
memory (easily activated). These three factors create a strong, favorable
consumer brand relationship, a vary important asset for a company and the basis
for brand equity. Highlight 6.2 presents more about the concept of brand
equity.
Highlight 6.2
Measuring Brand Equity
Which brands have the
highest brand equity? The Total Reseaarch Corporation, a marketing research
company based in Princeton, New Jersey, measures brand equity by focusing on
perceptions of product and brand quality. Their equitTrend survey conducted in
1992 asked 2,000 men and women over the age of 15 to rate a number of products
in terms of their quality perceptions. Disney (Disneyland/Disney World) emerged
as the top quality brand name in America in 1992. Kodak (film) came in second
and Hallmark (greeting cards) was ranked third. The other top 10 companies
included UPS (delivery service), Fisher Price (toys), Levis (jeans), Arm &
Hammer (baking soda), Mercedez Benz (cars), AT&T (long distance), and IBM
(computers). Moderately priced American brands seemed to score best in 1992,
perhaps because America was coming out of recession.
Measuring the equity
or value of a brand is a tricky business. No fully accepted way of doing so has
been developed as yet. Here are four approaches that can give a marketer
insight into the value of a brand. These measures are not independent; rather,
they are highly interrelated.
· Substitutability, if
a consumerism highly reluctant to switch to another brand, even if an
inducement to do so is offered, then that person perceives equity with the
brand, compared to another consumer who finds it easy to substitute a different
brand a regularly purchased brand.
· Repeat Purchase Rate.
Simply, the percentage of people who bought your brand last time and will do so
again. The greater the repeat rate, the higher the brand equity and the greater
the profitability of the brand.
· Concentration. If a
market is becoming concentrated, then the marketers have built equity in their
brands. Therefore, people are not inclined to switch to other suppliers. People
perceive value (equity) in the brands and do not switch easily.
· Demand Elasticity. If
consumers have a high value for a brand, they will respond enthusiastically to
a price reduction, and resist responding to price reductions for competitive
brands.
Total Research
Corporation considers quality to be the major component of brand equity.
Although a difficult concept to define and measure, quality is nonetheless an
important meaning. According to John Morton, senior VP at Total Research
Corporation, quality is the most powerful factor in determining brand success
or failure. He claims that the extra equity associated with a high quality
brand generates three times the sales of a brand that is merely “quite
acceptable” in quality.
Source: Carrie Goeme, “Disney Rated Top U.S. Brand, “Marketing News,
April 27, 1992, p.1. Reprinted by permission of the American Marketing
Association; William Moran and Kenneth Longman,”Boosting Profit
Potential,”Marketing Insight, Summer 1991, pp.24-32
Basically marketers
can get brand equity in three ways: They can build it, borrow it or buy it.
Companies can build brand equity by ensuring that the brand actually delivers
positive consequences and consistently advertising these important
consequences. Consider the considerable brand equity built up over time by
Campbell’s soup, Greent Giant vegetables. Mercedes-Benz automobiles, and
NutraSweet artificial sweetener. Anheuser-Busch created the Eagle brand of
snack foods (including honey roasted peanuts) and invested heavily in creating
positive consumer attitudes (and brand equity) through advertising and sales
promotions.
Companies can borrow
brand equity by extending a positive brand name to other products. For example,
the Coca-Cola line now includes Coca-Cola Classic, Coke, Diet Coke, Caffeine
Free Coke, Cherry Coke, and others. Tide no longer refers to only one type of
detergent; the brand name has been extended to other products, and presumably
some of Tide’s original equity has been passed along too. Consumer researches
are busy trying to determine if and how brand equity is transferred by brand
name extensions. Some research shows that the success of a brand extension
depends on the key meanings consumers associate with a brand name and whether
those meanings are consistent or appropriate for the other product. Finally, a
company can buy brand equity by purchasing brands that already have equity. For
instance, the mergers and leveraged buyouts of the 1980s were partially
motivated by the desire to buy brands with strong equity. Thus, when Grand
Metropolitan bought Pillsbury and Philip Morris bought Kraft, they acquired the
equity of all the acquired brands.
Attitude Tracking Studies
Because many
marketing strategies are intended to influence consumers attitudes toward a
brand, marketers can use measures of consumers attitudes to indicate the
success of those strategies. For instance, many companies regularly conduct
large scale attitude surveys, called tracking studies, to monitor consumers
brand attitudes over time. When these studies identify changes in
consumer attitudes, marketers can adjust their marketing strategies, as The Gap
did in the opening example.
One company that
failed to track consumers increasingly unfavorable attitudes was Howard
Johnson’s, one of the original restaurant chains in the United States. During
the highway building boom in the 1950s and 1960s, HoJo,s was known as a clean
place with nice washrooms, predictable and wholesome food, and ice cream the
kids would like. Consumers attitudes were positive, and Howard Johnson’s prospered.
But over the next 20 years, HoJo’s did not monitor customers attitude’s well;
nor did it respond effectively to the strategies of competitors that were
passing by them by. For instance, Howard Johnson’s used informal gauges of
consumer attitudes, such as comment cards left on restaurant tables.
Competitors such as Marriot, Denny’s , and McDonald’s ran sophisticated market
tests that told them what customers liked and didn’t like. Finally, after a
long decline, Marriot bought out the once powerful chain of Howard Johnson’s
restaurants.
Attitude toward Objects
In this section, we
examine the information integration process by which consumers form attitudes
toward objects (Ao), including products or brands. As shown in Exhibit 3.5
during the integration process, consumers combine some of their knowledge,
meanings and beliefs about a product or brand to form an overall evaluation.
These considered beliefs may be formed by interpretation processes or activated
from memory.
Exhibit 6.2
Relationship between Salient Beliefs about an Object and
Attitude toward the Object
All beliefs about Crest
|
Salient beliefs about Crest
|
|
|
|
Attitude toward Crest
|
Freshens breath
|
Comes in a pump
|
Has a tartar contol
formula
|
Tastes good
|
Prevent Cavaties
|
Gets teeth clean
|
Has fluoride
|
Crest
|
Is more expensive
than store brands
|
Has mint flavor
|
Crest
|
Is used by my
parents
|
Comes in a gel
|
No mess
|
Is approved by
American Dental Association
|
Has a red, white,
and blue package
|
Comes in tubes
|
Is made by Protect
& Gamble
|
Salient Beliefs
Through their varied
experiences, consumers acquire many beliefs about products, brands, and other
objects in their environment. As an Example, Exhibit 6.2 presents some of the
beliefs one consumer has about Crest toothpaste. These beliefs constitute an
associative network of linked meanings stored in memory. Because people’s
cognitive capacity is limited, only a few these beliefs can be activated and
consciously considered at once. The activated beliefs (highlighted in Exhibit
6.2) are called salient beliefs. Only
the salient beliefs about an object (those that are activated at a particular
time and in a specific context) cause or create a persons attitude toward that
object. Thus one key to understanding consumers attitude is to identify and
understand the underlying set of salient beliefs.
In principle
consumers can have salient beliefs about any type and level of meaning
associated with a product. For instance, consumers with complete means end
chains of product knowledge could activate beliefs about the products
attributes, its functional consequences or the values achieved through using
it. In addition, beliefs about other types of product related meanings such as
country of origin could be activated. Salient beliefs could include tactile,
olfactory and visual images as well as cognitive representations of the
emotions and moods associated with using the product. If activated any of these
beliefs could influence a consumers attitude toward a product.
Many factors
influence which beliefs about an object will be activated in a situation and
thus become salient determination of Ao. They include prominent stimuli in the
immediate environment (point of purchase displays, advertisements, package
information), recent events, consumers moods and emotional states and consumers
values an I goals activated in the situation. For instance, noticing a price
reduction sign for bath soap may make price beliefs salient and therefore
influential on Ao.
Marketers may find
that consumers salient beliefs vary over time or situations for some products.
That is, different sets of salient beliefs about a product may be activated in
different situations or at different times. For instance, consumers who have
just returned from the dentist are more likely to activate beliefs about tooth
decay and cavities when thinking about which brand of toothpaste to buy.
Variations in the set of salient beliefs over time and situations can produce
changes in consumer attitudes depending on the situation, context, time,
consumers mood, and so forth. Consumers have more stable attitudes toward
objects that have a stable set of salient beliefs. Normally though the amount
of variation in salient beliefs and attitudes is not great for most objects.
Salient Beliefs
Through their varied
experiences, consumers acquire many beliefs about products, brands, and other
objects in their environment. As an Example, Exhibit 6.2 presents some of the
beliefs one consumer has about Crest toothpaste. These beliefs constitute an
associative network of linked meanings stored in memory. Because people’s
cognitive capacity is limited, only a few these beliefs can be activated and
consciously considered at once. The activated beliefs (highlighted in Exhibit
6.2) are called salient beliefs. Only
the salient beliefs about an object (those that are activated at a particular
time and in a specific context) cause or create a persons attitude toward that
object. Thus one key to understanding consumers attitude is to identify and
understand the underlying set of salient beliefs.
In principle
consumers can have salient beliefs about any type and level of meaning
associated with a product. For instance, consumers with complete means end
chains of product knowledge could activate beliefs about the products
attributes, its functional consequences or the values achieved through using
it. In addition, beliefs about other types of product related meanings such as
country of origin could be activated. Salient beliefs could include tactile,
olfactory and visual images as well as cognitive representations of the
emotions and moods associated with using the product. If activated any of these
beliefs could influence a consumers attitude toward a product.
Many factors
influence which beliefs about an object will be activated in a situation and
thus become salient determination of Ao. They include prominent stimuli in the
immediate environment (point of purchase displays, advertisements, package
information), recent events, consumers moods and emotional states and consumers
values an I goals activated in the situation. For instance, noticing a price
reduction sign for bath soap may make price beliefs salient and therefore
influential on Ao.
Marketers may find
that consumers salient beliefs vary over time or situations for some products.
That is, different sets of salient beliefs about a product may be activated in
different situations or at different times. For instance, consumers who have
just returned from the dentist are more likely to activate beliefs about tooth
decay and cavities when thinking about which brand of toothpaste to buy.
Variations in the set of salient beliefs over time and situations can produce
changes in consumer attitudes depending on the situation, context, time,
consumers mood, and so forth. Consumers have more stable attitudes toward
objects that have a stable set of salient beliefs. Normally though the amount
of variation in salient beliefs and attitudes is not great for most objects.
The Multiattribute Attitude Model
A great deal of
marketing research has focused on developing models for predicting the attitudes
produced by this integration process. There are called multiattribute attitude
models because they focus on consumers beliefs about multiple product or brand
attributes. Of these, Marten Fishbein’s model has been most influential in
marketing.
The key proposition
in Fishbein’s theory is that the evaluation of salient beliefs cause overall
attitude. Simply stated, people tend to like object that are associated with
“good” characteristics and dislike objects they believe have “bad” attributes.
In Fishbein’s multiattribute model, overall attitude toward an object is a
function of two faqctors: the strengths of the salient beliefs associated with
the object and evaluations of those beliefs. Formally, the mode proposes that:
Ao= n bi ei
Where
Ao= attitude toward
the object
bi= the strength of
the belief that the object has attribute i
ei= the evaluation of
attribute i
n= the number of
salient beliefs about the object
This multiattribute
model accounts for the integration process by which product knowledge (the
evaluations and strength of salient beliefs) is combined to from an overall
evaluation or attitude. The model however does not claim that consumers
actually add up the products of belief strength and evaluation when forming
attitudes toward objects. Rather, this and similar models attitude produced by
the integration process; they are not meant to describe the actual cognitive
operations by which knowledge is integrated. In this book, we consider the
multiatribute model to be a useful tool for investigating attitude formation
and predicting attitudes.
Model Components
The two major
elements of Fishbein’s multiattribute model are the strengths and evaluations
of the salient beliefs. Exhibit 6.3 illustrate how these components are
combined to form attitudes toward two brands of soft drinks. This consumer has
salient beliefs about three attributes for each brand. These beliefs vary in
content, strength and evaluation. The Fishbein model predicts that this
consumer has a more favorable attitude toward 7UP than toward Diet Pepsi.
Belief strength (bi)
is the perceived probability of association between an object and its relevant
attributes. Belief strength is measured by having consumers rate this
probability of association for each of their salient beliefs, as shown here:
“How likely is that 7UP has no caffeine?”
Extremely Unlikely 1
2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Extremely Likely
"How likely is
that 7UP is made from all natural ingredients?"
Extremely Unlikely 1
2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Extremely Likely
Consumers who are
quite certain that 7 UP has no caffeine would indicate a very strong belief
strength, perhaps 9 or 10. Consumers who have only a moderately strength belief
that 7UP is made from only natural ingredients might rate their belief strength
as 6 or 7.
Exhibit 6.3
An Example of the Multiattribute Attitude Model
b1=10
|
No Caffeine (e1=
+3)
|
|
7 UP (A0=27)
|
b2=5
|
All natural
ingredients (e2= +1)
|
b3=8
|
Lemon –lime flavor
|
Attitude 7up= eibi
A0= (10)(3)+(5)(1)+(8)(-1)
A0= 30+5-8
A0=27
b1=7
|
No calories (e1=+2)
|
|
Diet Pepsi (A0=6)
|
b2=6
|
Caffeine (e2=-3)
|
b3=10
|
Cola flavor (e3=-1)
|
Attitude DP= eibi
A0= (7)(2)+(6)(-3)+(10)(1)
A0= 14-18+10
A0=6
Consumers who are
quite certain that 7UP has no caffeine would indicate a very strong belief
strength, perhaps 9 or 10. Consumers who have only a moderately strong belief
that 7UP is made from only natural ingredients might rate their belief strength
as 6 or 7.
The strength of
consumers product or brand beliefs is affected by their past experiences with
the object. Beliefs about product attributes or consequences tend to be
stronger when based on actual use of the product. Beliefs that were formed
indirectly from mass advertising or conversations with a salesperson tend to be
weaker. For instance, consumers are more likely to form a strong belief that
“7UP tastes good” if they actually drink a 7UP and experience its taste
directly than if they read a product claim in an advertisement. Because they
are stronger (and more likely to be activated), beliefs based on direct
experience tend to have a greater impact on Ao. Marketers therefore try to
induce potential customers to actually use their products. They may distribute
free samples; sell small, less expensive trial sizes; offer cents-off coupons;
or have a no obligation trial policy.
Fishbein argued that
the typical number of salient beliefs about an attitude object is not likely to
exceed seven to nine. Given consumers limited capacities for interpreting and
integrating information, we might expect even fewer salient beliefs for many
objects. In fact, when consumers have limited knowledge about low involvement
products, their brand attitudes toward products or brands that are more
self-relevant might be based on more salient beliefs.
Exhibit 6.4
The Means End Chain Basis for Attribute Evaluations
Attributes
|
Consequences
|
Values
|
|
No
caffeine (ei)
|
I'm
not lottery (ei)
|
Relaxation
(ei)
|
|
7UP (Ao)
|
All
natural ingredients (ei)
|
Better
for me (ei)
|
Good
health (ei)
|
Lemon-lime
flavor (ei)
|
Tastes
good (ei)
|
Pleasure
(ei)
|
Associated with each
salient belief is a belief evaluation (ei) that reflects how favorably the consumer
perceive rs that attribute. Marketers measure the ei component by having
consumers indicate their evaluation of (favor-ability toward) each salient
belief, as shown below.
“7 UP has no caffeine.”
Very Bad -3 -2 -1 0
+1 +2 +3 Very Good
“7UP has all natural ingredients,”
Very Bad -3 -2 -1 0
+1 +2 +3 Very Good
As shown in Exhibit
6.3 the evaluations of salient beliefs influence the overall Ao in proportion
to the strength of each belief (b1). Thus, strong beliefs about equally
positive attributes have greater effects on Ao than do weak beliefs about
equally positive attributes, Likewise, a negative ei reduces the favorability
of Ao in proportion to its bi “weight.”
As you learned in
Chapter 4, beliefs may be linked to form means end chains of product knowledge.
Exhibit 6.4 presents means end chains for three attributes of 7UP. Note that
the evaluation of each product attribute is ultimately derived from the
evaluation of the end consequence in its means end chain. As shown in Exhibit
6.4 the evaluation of the end “flows down” the means end chain to determine the
evaluations of the less abstract consequences and attributes. For instance, a
person who positively evaluates the end “relaxation,” an instrumental value,
would tend to positively evaluate the functional consequence “I’m not jittery”.
In turn, the product attributes “no caffeine”, which is perceived to lead to
not being jittery and relaxation would have a positive evaluation. These
evaluations would then influence the overall attitude, Ao, toward 7UP.
Consumers evaluations
of salient attributes are not necessarily fixed over time or constant across
different situations. For instance, consumers may change their minds about how
good or bad an attribute is as they learn more about its higher-order consequences.
Situational factors can also change the ei components. In a different
situation, some consumers may want to be stimulated (when getting up in the
morning or working late at night to finish a project). If so, the now negative
evaluation of the end value “relaxation” would flow down the means end chain
and create a negative evaluation of the “no caffeine” attribute which, in turn,
would contribute to a less positive overall attitude toward 7 UP (for that
situation). In this situation, the consumer might have a more positive attitude
toward Diet Pepsi, which does contain caffeine. This is yet another example of
how the physical and social environment can influence consumers affect and
cognition.
Marketing Implications
Marketers have been
using multiattribute models to explore consumer behavior since the late 1960s.
These models became popular because they have an intuitive appeal to
researchers and managers and are relatively easy to use in research. Not all of
these models accurately reflect the basic Fishbein model, but most are
adaptations of it. We will discuss a few of the many applications of these
models below.
Understanding Your Customers
The multiatribute
model is useful for identifying which attributes are the most important (or
most salient) to consumers. For instance, airline passengers love to complain
about the lousy food served on planes. Yet in a 1988 survey, only 40 percent of
passengers rated good food and beverage service as important, whereas other
attributes were mentioned as important much more frequently. These included
convenient schedules (over 90 percent), fast check-in (about 80 percent),
comfortable seats (about 80 percents), and good on time performance
(about 85 percent). Perhaps airlines use such data to justify not improving the
quality of the food they serve (airlines spend only about $4.25 per passenger
on food). The relative importance of different attributes is likely to vary
across market segments. For instance, three segments of the airline market
light travelers (1 or 2 trips), moderate travelers (3 to 9 trips per year) and
frequent travelers (10 or more trips per year) evaluated some attributes
differently. Light travelers had greater concerns about safety and efficient
baggage handling, whereas frequent travelers were more concerned with
convenient schedules and frequent flier programs.
Diagnosis of Marketing Strategies
Although
multiattribute models were developed to predict overall attitudes, marketers often
use them to diagnose marketing strategies. By examining the salient beliefs
that underlie attitudes toward various brands, marketers can learn how their
strategies are performing and make adjustments to improve their effectiveness.
For instance, in the value conscious 1990s, marketers found that many consumers
were more concerned with the quality and value of products relative to their
prices. It became fashionable once again to get a bargain, spend one’s
money wisely, and not overpay for quality. Many companies adjusted their
strategies in light of these beliefs. Consider the motto of Wal Mart, the
world’s larges retailer: “The low price on the brands you trust,” Southwest
Airlines combined low fares with friendly but bar bones service to enhance consumers
value beliefs and overall attitudes. Taco Bell reduced its operating costs
enough to price several items on the mean under $1 and create stronger beliefs
about the value provided by the fast food restaurant.
Understanding Situational Influences
Marketers can also
use the multiattribute attitude model to examine the influence of situations.
The relative salience of beliefs about certain product attributes may be
greatly influenced by the situations in which the product is used. Situations
vary in many ways, including time of day, consumer mood, environmental setting,
weather and hundreds of other variables. These situational characteristics
affect which beliefs are activated from memory and influence attitudes toward
the brands that might be purchased for use in those situations. For instance,
one study of snack products found that beliefs about economy and taste were
most important for three common snacking occasions for everyday desserts, for
watching TV in the evening and for kids lunches. However, when buying snacks
for a children’s party beliefs about nutrition and convenience were most
important. Such differences in salient beliefs can lead to different brand
attitudes in these various situations.
Attitude Change Strategies
The multiattribute model
is a useful guide for devising strategies to change consumers attitudes.
Basically a marketer has four possible attitude change strategies: (1) add a
new salient belief about the attitude object ideally, one with a positive ei;
(2) increase the strength of an existing positive belief; (3) improve the
evaluation of a strongly held belief; or (4) make an existing favorable belief
more salient.
Adding a new salient
belief to the existing beliefs that consumers have about a product or brand is
probably the most common attitude change strategy. Highlight 6.3 describes such
a strategy in an anti smoking campaign. Sometimes this strategy requires a
physical change in the product. For instance, crunchy is a new attribute added
to many food products. Consider Honey Crunch Corn Flakes from Kellogg. French
Toast Crunch from General Mills and Cranberry Almond Crunch from Post. Candy is
getting crunchier too Reese’s Crunchy Cookie Cups from Hershey and Nestle’s
White Crunch. Even smooth Yoplait Yogurt (by General Mills) introduced a
Crunchy Lite line containing nuts. People in general have positive attitudes
toward “crunchy” and “crispy”, which seem to be linked to feelings of
freshness, fun and stress relief. As one customer put it, I don’t know if it is
the sound or what, but crunchy foods are satisfying.”
Highlight 6.3
Changing Teenagers Attitudes toward Smoking
A teenager sitting in
a movie theater with his date spits a wad of gooey, chewed tobacco into a cup.
Seconds later the young woman absentmindedly reaches over and takes a drink
from the3 cup. Gross This scene is part of a TV ad, called Theater Snacks with
the tag line: “Tobacco: Tumor causing, teeth staining, smelly puking habit,
“for all the ads. The ad is one several in an anti smoking campaign sponsored by
the state of Arizona, and its gross humor, aimed at teens, has made quite a
splash around the country. The campaign was funded with moneys derived from a
40 cent-per-pack tobacco tax approved by state voters in 1994. Other states
have similar laws, but so far only Arizona is speaking to teens in their
“language”.
Consider another of
the ads in the Arizona campaign. A group of cannibals is dancing around a big
kettle simmering over a fire. A painted tribesman gives a bowl of stew to the
chief cannibal. The chief takes a mouthful and spits it out, roaring with rage.
The subtitle beneath reads,”I said I wanted smoked tourist, not a tourist who
smoked. “In another ad, Dr. Frankenstein chastises his servant for bringing him
“the lungs of a smoker!”
The Arizona campaign
uses other methods to change the attitudes and intentions of young smokers.
They offer cool merchandise, including T shirts and hats bearing the campaign
slogan. Also, there is the “Ash Kicker,” a $150,000, 43 foot trailer pulled by
a HummVee that visits up to 35 schools and fairs per month. Inside is a
simulated cancerous lung, a mannequin spewing chewing tobacco, a coffin with a
take cadaver inside and a young female smoker whose head spins to reveal a
sickly winkled woman, along with anti smoking literature.
Is the campaign
working reduce teenage smoking? Well, kids all over Arizona can repeat the
punch lines of the ads and describe the ads. At this writing, it is to early to
tell if the campaign will work to change attitudes and behaviors. We do know
that just talking about the ads isn’t enough.
Source: Barbara Martinez, “Anti smoking Ads Aim to Gross Out Teens,
“The Wall Street Journal, March 31, 1997, pp. B1, B12. Reprinted by permission
of The Wall Street Journal, copyright 1997 Dow Jones & Company, Inc All
Right Reserved Worldwide.
Marketers can also
try to change attitudes by changing the strength of already salient beliefs.
They can attempt to increase the strength of beliefs about positive attributes
and consequences; or they can decrease the strength of beliefs about
negative attributes and consequences. Papa John’s pizza (http://www.papajohns.com)
is outperforming the entire fast food indudtry. Yet, Papa John’s costs a bit more
than Little Caesar’s arrives no faster than Dominos, does not sell salads
or sandwiches and does not offer sit down service. Instead Papa John’s focuses
on taste, as indicated by their corporate slogan, “Better ingredients, better
pizza. “They make their own dough with purified water and their own sauce from
fresh tomates, and use only premium mozzarella cheese. Papa John’s works hard
to create strong consumer beliefs that its pizza tastes better, and apparently
consumers do believe. Many publications in markets around the country have
rated Papa John’s as the best tasting pizza and in 1997,
Marketers can also
try to change attitudes by changing the strength of already salient beliefs.
They can attempt to increase the strength of beliefs about positive attributes
and consequences; or they can decrease the strength of beliefs about
negative attributes and consequences. Papa John’s pizza (http://www.papajohns.com)
is outperforming the entire fast food indudtry. Yet, Papa John’s costs a bit
more than Little Caesar’s arrives no faster than Dominos, does not sell
salads or sandwiches and does not offer sit down service. Instead Papa John’s
focuses on taste, as indicated by their corporate slogan, “Better ingredients,
better pizza. “They make their own dough with purified water and their own
sauce from fresh tomates, and use only premium mozzarella cheese. Papa John’s
works hard to create strong consumer beliefs that its pizza tastes better, and
apparently consumers do believe. Many publications in markets around the
country have rated Papa John’s as the best tasting pizza and in 1997,.
Exhibit 6.5
Relationships among Beliefs, Attitudes and Behaviors
Regarding a Specific Object
Beliefs about Pizza
Hut
|
Behaviors toward
Pizza Hut
|
|
·
Has
pan pizzas
·
Has
super supreme pizzas
·
Has
a salad bar
·
Serves
beer
·
Is
more expensive than Domino’s
·
Has
convinient location
·
Has
free parking
·
Stores
have red roots
·
Has
pleasant employees
·
Has
nice atmosphere
|
Attitude toward
Pizza Hut A0
|
·
Go
to Pizza Hut on Friday night
·
Order
a large pan pizza
·
Complain
to manager
·
Ignore
Pizza Hut ad on TV
·
Use
a Pizza Hut coupon for a free soft drink
·
Recommend
Pizza Hut to boss
·
Read
Pizza Hut menu
|
Feedback
|
Hut within the next
month. If this approach seems reasonable, you may be surprised to learn that consumers
attitudes toward an object often are not good predictors of their specific
behaviors regarding that object. In fact, with a few notable exceptions, most
research has found rather weak relationships between Ao and specific single
behaviors.
One of the problems
with relating Ao to individual behaviors is illustrated in Exhibit 6.5, which
presents the relationships among a consumer’s beliefs, attitude, and behaviors
concerning a particular object Pizza Hut (in her case, a favorable Ao), which
is based on her salient beliefs about Pizza Hut. For instance, she might go to
Pizza Hut on Friday night and order a pizza, ignore a Pizza Hut ad on
television, use a Pizza Hut coupon for a free soft drink, or recommend Pizza
Hut to her boss. However, none of these specific behaviors is necessarily
consistent with or strongly related to her overall Ao, although some of them
might be.
This does not mean
consumers attitudes are irrelevant to their behaviors. As shown in Exhibit 6.5
Judy’s overall attitude (Ao) is related to the overall evaluative pattern of
her behaviors (all of her behaviors regarding Pizza Hut taken together).
However, it is not possible to predict with accuracy any specific behavior
based on a person’s overall attitude toward the object of the behavior.
Although this
proposition may seem strange, there are many examples of its validity. Consider
that many consumers probably have positive attitudes toward Porsche cars, Rolex
watches and vacation homes, but most do not buy chese products. Because favorable
attitudes toward these products can be expressed in many different behaviors,
it is difficult to predict which specific behavior will be performed. Consider
three consumers who have generally favorable attitudes toward Porsches but do
not own one. One consumer may read ads and test reports about Porsches. Another
consumer may go to showrooms to look at Porsches. A third consumer may just
daydream about owning a Porsche. In sum, having a generally favorable (or
unfavorable) attitude toward a product does not mean the consumer will perform
every possible favorable (or unfavorable) behavior regarding that product.
Marketers need a model that identifies the attitudinal factors that influences
specific behaviors; such a model is provided by Fishbein’s theory of reasoned
action.
The Theory of Reasoned Action
Fishbein recognized
that people’s attitudes toward an object may not be strongly or systematically
related to their specific behaviors. Rather, the immediate determinant of
whether consumers will engage in a particular behavior is their intention to
engage in that behavior. Fishbein modified and extended his multiattribute
attitude model to relate consumers beliefs and attitudes to their behavioral
intentions. The entire model is presented in Exhibit 6.6.
The model is called a
theory of reasoned action because it assumes that consumers consciously
consider the consequences of the alternative behaviors under consideration and
choose the one that leads to the most desirable consequences. The outcome of this
reasoned choice process is an intention to engage in the selected behavior.
This behavioral intention is the single best predictor of actual behavior. In
sum, the theory of reasoned action proposes that any reasonably complex,
voluntary behavior (such as buying a pair of shoes) is determined by the
persons intentions to perform that behavior. The theory of reasoned action is
not relevant for extremely simple or involuntary behaviors such as automatic
eye blinking, turning your head at the sound of the telephone, or sneezing.
Formally, the theory
of reasoned action can be presented as follows:
B~BI= A act (w1)+ SN
(w2)
Where
B = a specific
behavior
BI = consumer’s
intention to engage in that behavior
A act = consumer’s
attitude toward engaging in that behavior
W1 and w2 = weights
that reflect the relative influence of the A act and SN components on BI
According to this
theory, people tend to perform behaviors that are evaluated favorably and that
are popular with other people. They tend to refrain from behaviors that are
regarded unfavorably and that are unpopular with others.
Model Components
In this section, we
describe and discuss each component of the theory of reasoned action, beginning
with behavior. Note that all the components of the model are defined in terms
of a specific behavior, B.
Behaviors are
specific actions directed at some target object (driving to the store, buying a
swimsuit, looking for a lost Bic pen). Behaviors always occur in a situational
context or environment and at a particular time (at home right now, in the
grocery store this afternoon, or at unspecified location in your town next
week). Marketers need to be clear about these aspects of the behavior of
interest because the components of the theory of reasoned action must be defined
and measured in terms of these specific features.
Exhibit 6.6
The Theory of Reasoned Action
External factors
External influences:
· Physical environment
· Social environment
· Marketing environment
Personal variables
· Values, goals,
desired ends
· Other knowledge
beliefs and attitudes
· Personality traits
· Lifestyle patterns
· Demographic
characteristics
· Miscellaneous
psychological characteristics
Beliefs that behavior B leads to salient consequences (bi)
Evaluation of salient consequences (ei)
Beliefs that relevant others referents think I should
perform the behavior B (NBi)
Motivation to comply with relevant referants (Mci)
n= bi ei
m= NBj Mci
Attitude toward behavior B AB
Relative weighting for importance
Subjective norm about behavior B SNb
Intention to perform behavior B
Behavior B
Source: Adapted from Martin Fishbein, “ An Overview of the Attitude
Construct, “in A Look Back, A Look Ahead, ed. G. B. Hafer (Chicago American Marketing
Association, 1980), p.8. Reprinted by permission of the American Marketing
Association.
Basically, a
behavioral intention (BI) is a proportion connecting self and a future action:
“I intend to go shopping this Saturday. “One can think of an intention as a
plan to engage in a specified behavior in order to reach a goal. Behavioral
intentions are created through a choice/decision process in which beliefs about
two types of consequences A act and SN are considered and integrated to
evaluate alternative behaviors and select among them. Behavioral intentions
vary in strength, which can be measured by having consumers rate the
probability that they will perform the behavior of interest, as shown below:
“All things considered, how likely are you to use newspaper
coupons when buying groceries this week or next?”
Extremely Unlikely 1
2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Extremely Likely
As shown in Exhibit
6.6. the strengths and evaluations of a consumers salient beliefs about the functional
consequences of an action are combined n= bi ei to form an attitude toward the
behavior or action (A act) . A act reflects the consumer’s overall evaluation
of performing the behavior. Marketers measure the strengths and evaluations of
the salient beliefs about the consequences of a behavior in the same way that
they measure beliefs about product attributes. Highlight 6.4 discusses these
concepts.
A act is quite
different from Ao, Although both attitudes are based on an underlying set of
salient beliefs, the beliefs are about rather different concepts. For instance,
consider the following salient beliefs about “Chevrolet” (an object) and buying
a new Chevrolet this year “(a specific action involving the object).
Chevrolet
(Ao) Buying a New Chevrolet This Year (A act)
Moderately priced
(+) Gives me a mode of transportation (+)
Ordinary
(-) Will put me in financial difficulty (-)
Well built
(+) Will lead to high upkeep costs (-)
Dependable
(+) Will cost more now than later (-)
Easily serviced
(+) Will lead to high insurance rates (-)
Note that these salient
beliefs have quite different evaluations. Thus we should not be surprised to
find that some consumers like Chevrolet in general (Ao) but have negative
attitudes toward buying a Chevrolet this year (A act).
It is possible for
marketing strategies to have a different impact on A o and A act. For instance,
one study found that information about the store where a new product was sold
affected consumers attitudes toward purchasing the product (A act) but did not
influence their attitudes toward purchasing the product (A act) but did not
influence their attitudes toward the product itself (Ao). Marketers therefore
must be careful to determine whether they are concerned with consumers
attitudes toward the object in general or some action regarding the object
(such as buying it). Only attitudes toward behaviors are likely to be strongly
related to specific behavioral intentions.
In addition,
marketers must carefully identify the level of specificity most appropriate for
the marketing problem. Attitudes at one level of specificity are not always
consistently related to attitudes at other levels. For instance, Rick and Linda
very much like to go shopping (a general behavior), yet they dislike shopping
on Saturdays when the malls are crowded (a more specific behavior).
Highlight 6.4
Attitudes and Intentions toward Web Sites on the Internet
Marketers and Web
designers need to know which features of a Web site create positive attitudes
toward returning to the site and which features create negative attitudes. In
1997 a research firm called Survey Site placed a feedback icon in each site for
two weeks. Visitors who clicked on the icon could take an online survey in
which they rated various dimensions of the site and evaluated their
experiences. Participants also were asked if they intended to make a repeat
visit to the site.
SurveySite identified
about 40 factors that could potentially influence peoples intentions to make a
repeat visit. They condensed these to 12 factors in two broad categories design
features of the Web site and emotional experiences during the visit. The most
influential factor in determining a repeat visit was “good content” content
that is relevant or interesting to the participant. Other factors related to
good content included the quality of the layout, the ease of getting
information and the uniqueness of the site. Frivolous content had the strongest
association with peoples intentions not to return to the site.
The second most
important factor in peoples intentions to return to the site was whether they
enjoyed their first visit (positive affective reactions). Enjoyment could be
due to various factors, such as the novelty of the experience, interesting
design features, or the sheer fun of the visit. According to the respondents,
the overall quality of the graphics was not an important consideration in
influencing their intention to return. And sites that were “like all the rest”
did not receive high attitude and intention scores.
Source: Marshall Rice, “What Makes Users Revisit a Web
Site?”Marketing News, March 17, 1997, p.12. Reprinted by permission of the
American Marketing Association.
The subjective or
social norm (SN) component reflects consumer perceptions of what they think
other people want them to do. Consumer salient normative beliefs (NBi)
regarding “doing what other people want me to do” and their motivation to
comply with the expectations of these other people (MCi) are combined (m = NBi
MCi) to form SN. Along with A act SN affects consumers behavioral intention
(BI).
Measuring the
strength of normative beliefs is similar to the belief strength measures
discussed earlier.
“Members of my family are in favor of my using coupons.”
Extremely Unlikely 1
2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Extremely Likely
Motivation to comply
is measured by asking consumers to rate how much they want to conform to other
people’s desires.
“Generally, how much do you want to do what your family
wants you to?”
Not at All -3 -2 -1 0
+1 +2 +3 Very Much
The theory of
reasoned action proposes that A act and SN combine to affect behavioral
intentions (BI) and that their relative influence varies from situation to
situation. During the information integration process that creates BI, A act
and SN may be weighed differently (see Exhibit 6.6). Some behaviors are
primarily affected by the SN factor. For instance, intentions to wear a certain
style of clothing to a party or to work are likely to be influenced more
strongly by SN and the normative beliefs regarding conformity than beliefs
about the general consequences of wearing those clothes (A act). For other
behaviors, normative influences are minimal and consumers intentions are
largely determined by A act. For instance, consumers intensions to purchase
Contac cold remedy are more likely to be affected by their salient beliefs
about the functional consequences of using Contac and the resulting attitude
toward buying it than by what other people expect them to do.
Marketing Implications
The situational
context in which behavior occurs can have powerful influences on consumers
behavioral intentions. Consider a consumer named Brian, a 26 year old assistant
brand manager for General Foods. Last week, Brian had to decide whether to buy
imported or domestic beer in two different situations. In the first situation,
Brian was planning to drink a few beers at home over the weekend while watching
sports on TV. In the other context, he was having a beer after work in a plush
bar with a group of his co workers. The different sets of product related and
social beliefs activated in the two situations created different A act
and SN components. In the private at home situation, Brian’s products beliefs
and A act had the dominant effect on his intentions (he bought an inexpensive
domestic beer). In the highly social bar situation, his normative beliefs and
SN had the greater impact on his intentions (he bought an expensive imported
beer).
To develop effective
strategies, it is important to determine whether the A act or SN component has
the major influence on behavioral intentions (and thus on behavior). If the
primary reason for a behavior (shopping, searching for information, buying a
particular brand) is normative (you think others want you to), marketers need
to emphasize that the relevant normative influences (friends, family,
co-workers) are in favor of the behavior. Often this is done by portraying
social influence situation in advertising. On the other hand, if intentions are
largely influenced by A act factors, the marketing strategy should attempt to
create a set of salient beliefs about the positive consequences of the
behavior, perhaps by demonstrating those outcomes in an advertisement. In sum,
theory of reasoned action identifies the types of cognitive and affective
factors that underlie a consumers intention to perform a specific behavior.
Although intentions
determine most voluntary behaviors, measures of consumers intentions may not be
perfect indicators of the actual intentions that determine the behavior. In the
following section, we discuss the problems of using intention measures to
predict actual behaviors.
Intentions and Behaviors
Predicting consumers
future behaviors, especially their purchase behavior (sales, to marketers), is
a critically important aspect of forecasting and marketing planning. According
to the theory of reasoned action, predicting consumers purchase behaviors is a
matter of measuring their intentions to buy just before they make a purchase.
In almost all cases, however, this would be impractical. When planning
strategies, marketers need predictions of consumers purchase and use behaviors
weeks, months or sometimes years in advance.
Unfortunately,
predictions of specific behaviors based on intentions measured well before the
behavior occurs may not be very accurate. For instance, one survey found that
only about 60 percent of people who intended to buy a car actually did so
within a year. And of those who claimed they did not intend to buy a car, 17
percent ended up buying one. Similar examples could be cited for other product
categories (many with even worse accuracy). This does not mean the theory of
reasoned action is wrong in identifying intentions as an immediate influence on
behavior. Rather, failures to predict the behavior of interest often lie with
how and when intentions are measured.
To accurately predict behaviors, marketers should measure
consumer’s intentions at the same level of abstraction and specificity as the
action, target and time components of the behavior. Situation context also
should be specified when it is important.
Exhibit 6.7 lists several factors that can weaken the
relationship between measured behavioral intentions and the observed behavior
of interest. In situations where few of these factors operate, measured intentions
should predict behavior quite well.
In a broad sense, time is the major factor that reduces the
predictive accuracy of measured intentions. Intentions like other cognitive
factors can and do change over time. The longer the intervening time period,
the more unanticipated circumstances (such as exposure to the marketing
strategies of competitive (companies) can occur and change consumers original
purchase intentions. Thus marketers must expect lower levels of predictive
accuracy where intentions are measured long before the behavior occurs.
However, unanticipated events can also occur during very short periods. An
appliance manufacturer once asked consumers entering an appliance store what
brand they intended to buy. Of those who specified a brand, only 20 percent
came out with it. Apparently, events occurred in the store to change these
consumers beliefs, attitudes, intentions and behavior.
Despite their less than perfect accuracy, measures of
purchase intentions are often the best way to predict future purchase behavior.
For instance, every three months United Air Lines conducts a passenger survey
measuring intentions to travel by air during the next three months. Obviously
many events in the ensuing time period can change consumers beliefs A act and
SN about taking a personal or business trip by airline. To the extent that
these unanticipated factors occur, the measured intentions will give less
accurate predictions of future airline travel.
Certain behaviors
cannot be accurately predicted from beliefs, attitudes and intentions. Obvious
examples include no voluntary behaviors such as sneezing or getting sick. It is
also difficult to predict purchase behaviors when the alternatives (brands) are
very similar and the person has positive attitudes toward several of them.
Finally, behaviors about which consumers have little knowledge and low levels
of involvement are virtually impossible to predict because consumers have very
few beliefs in memory on which to base attitudes and intentions. In such cases,
consumers measured intentions were probably created to answer the marketing
researcher’s question; such intentions are likely to be unstable and poor
predictors of eventual, actual behavior. In sum, before relying on measures of
attitude and intentions to predict future behavior, marketers need to determine
whether consumers can be expected to have well formed beliefs, attitudes and
intentions toward those behaviors.
Exhibit 6.7
Factors That Reduce or Weaken the
Relationship between Measured Behavioral Intentions and Observed Behavior
Factor
|
Examples
|
Intervening
Time
|
As the time between measurement of intentions
and observation of behavior increases, more factors can occur that act to
modify or change the original intention so that it no longer corresponds to
observed behavior
|
Different
levels of specify
|
The measured intention should be specified at the same
level as the observed behavior, otherwise the relationship between them will
be weakened. Suppose we measured Judy’s intentions to wear jeans to class (in
general). But we observed her behavior on a day when she made a class
presentation and didn’t think jeans were appropriate in that specific
situation.
|
Unforeseen
environmental event
|
Sam fully intended to buy Frito’s chips this afternoon,
but the store was sold out. Sam could not carry out the original intention
and had to form a new intention on the spot to buy Ripple chips.
|
Unforeseen
situational context
|
Sometimes the situational context the consumer had in mind
when the intentions were measured was different from the situation at the
time of behavior. In general, Peter has a negative intention to buy Andre
champagne. However when he had to prepare a holiday punch calling for eight
bottles of champagne, Peter formed a positive intention to buy the
inexpensive Andre Brand.
|
Degree
of voluntary control
|
Some behaviors are not under complete volitional control.
Thus, intentions may not predict the observed behavior very accurately. For
instance, Becky intended to go shopping on Saturday when she hoped to be
recovered from about with the flu, but she was still sick and couldn’t go.
|
Stability
of intentions
|
Some intentions are quite stable. They are based on a well
developed structure of salient beliefs for A act and SN. Other intentions are
not stable, as they are founded on only a few weakly held beliefs that may be
easily changed.
|
New
information
|
Consumers may receive new information about the salient
consequences of their behavior, which leads to changes in their beliefs and
attitudes toward the act and or in the subjective norm. These changes, in
turn, change the intention. The original intention is no longer relevant to
the behavior and does not predict the eventual behavior accurately.
|
The Gap
The Gap example illustrate how consumer attitudes develop
and change over time. Understanding these trends can help marketers develop and
evaluate marketing strategies. Measures of beliefs and attitudes can also be
used to gauge the success of marketing strategies in solving a problem.
Measures of Ao
(attitudes toward The Gap) and the related salient beliefs can identify problem
areas needing attention. For instance, the negative consumer attitudes and the
underlying beliefs, especially about product quality, retailer service and
clothing styling, could suggest actions the company could take to enhance the
favorability of consumers attitudes toward Gap clothes.
For Gap, it would be
important to understand the SN (subjective norm) component in the theory of
reasoned action. The SN factor includes people’s feelings about Gap fashions.
If the SN component becomes increasingly negative, The Gap should take remedial
action. It is important to maintain strong behavioral intentions to shop at The
Gap. Thus, the company should measure consumers A act and SN concerning
shopping at The Gap, as well as their behavioral intentions to do so.
Summary
We began this chapter
by defining attitude as a consumer overall evaluation of an object. We
discussed how attitude objects varied in levels of abstraction and specificity.
We than discussed consumers attitudes toward objects, Ao and described Fishnein’s
multiatribute model of how salient beliefs create Ao. We also discussed the
theory of reasoned action, which identifies consumers attitudes toward
performing behaviors (A act) and social influences (SN) as the basis for
behavioral intentions (BI). Finally, we considered the problems of using
measures of behavioral intentions to predict actual behaviors. Throughout, we
discussed implications for marketers. In this chapter, we identified consumers
activated knowledge, in the form of beliefs as the basic factor underlying
their attitudes, subjective norms and intentions and ultimately their
behaviors. Moreover, we showed that these activated salient beliefs and the
resulting attitudes and intentions are sensitive to situational factors in the
environment, including marketing strategies. This provides another example of
how cognition, environment and behavior interact in a continuous, reciprocal
process to create new behaviors, new cognitions (beliefs, attitudes, and
intentions) and new environments.
Key
Terms and Concepts
Accessibility 122 belief
strength 129
Attitude 120 brand
equity 124
Attitude change strategies 133 evaluations
120
Attitude toward object (Ao) 126 integration
process 121
Attitude toward behavior or action (A act) 139 multiattribute models 129
Behavioral intention 139 salient beliefs 128
Behaviors 137 subjective
or social norm (SN) 140
Belief evaluation 131 theory of measured
action 137
Review
and Discussion Questions
1. Define
attitude and describe the two main ways that consumers can acquire attitudes.
2. How
are salient beliefs different from other beliefs? How can marketers attempt to
influence belief salience?
3. The
Gap has been doing business for nearly 30 years. Over this time, with its
stores, clothing products and advertising. The Gap has built up considerable
brand equity. Discuss the type of brand equity The Gap has built up over this
time among various consumer segments. Is The Gap vulnerable to losing this
equity? What can The Gap do to protect its equity?
4. Consider
a product category in which you make regular purchases (such as toothpaste or
shampoo). How have your belief strengths and evaluations and brand attitudes
changed over time? What factors or events contributed to these changes?
5. Using
a product as an example, describe the key differences between Ao and A Act Under what circumtances would marketers
be more interested in each type of attitude?
6. Visit The Gap Web site at http://www.gap.com examine either the virtual style section or the current advertising section or the current advertising section. Discuss the types of beliefs and attitudes you think this information would create. What effects might these beliefs and attitudes have on consumers behavioral intentions? (Use the theory of reasoned action to guide your thinking and your answer.)
7. Use the example of The Gap to distinguish between the multiatribute attitude model and the theory of reasoned action. How could each model contribute to the development of a more effective marketing strategy for The Gap?
8. Discuss the problems in measuring behavioral intentions to (a) buy a new car; (b) buy a soda from a vending machine; and (c) save $250 per month toward the eventual purchase of a house. What factors could occur in each situation to make the measured intentions poor predictors of actual behavior?
9. How could marketers improve their predictions of behaviors in the situations described in Question S? Consider improvements in measurements as well as alternative research or forecasting techniques.
10. Negative attitudes present a special challenge for marketing strategy. Consider how what you know about attitudes and intentions could help you address consumers who have a brand relationship described as “Don’t like our brand; buy a competitor’s brand.
6. Visit The Gap Web site at http://www.gap.com examine either the virtual style section or the current advertising section or the current advertising section. Discuss the types of beliefs and attitudes you think this information would create. What effects might these beliefs and attitudes have on consumers behavioral intentions? (Use the theory of reasoned action to guide your thinking and your answer.)
7. Use the example of The Gap to distinguish between the multiatribute attitude model and the theory of reasoned action. How could each model contribute to the development of a more effective marketing strategy for The Gap?
8. Discuss the problems in measuring behavioral intentions to (a) buy a new car; (b) buy a soda from a vending machine; and (c) save $250 per month toward the eventual purchase of a house. What factors could occur in each situation to make the measured intentions poor predictors of actual behavior?
9. How could marketers improve their predictions of behaviors in the situations described in Question S? Consider improvements in measurements as well as alternative research or forecasting techniques.
10. Negative attitudes present a special challenge for marketing strategy. Consider how what you know about attitudes and intentions could help you address consumers who have a brand relationship described as “Don’t like our brand; buy a competitor’s brand.
Marketing
Strategy in Action
Coca-Cola
Consumer
attitudes are very important to Coca-Cola, the world’s largest marketer of soft
drinks (1992 sales of $13 billion worldwide). “Coca-Cola” is perhaps the best
known brand name in the world. According to the Warren Buffet, the largest
holder of Coca-Cola stock, “This is fundamentally the best large business in
the world. [The product] sells for a moderate price. It’s universary liked. The
per capita consumption goes up almost every year in every country. There is not
another product like it.”
Coca-Cola
receives about 80 percent of its operating income ($8.6 billion in 1992) from
overseas markets. Once a big American company with a substantial foreign
market, Coca-Cola now is a huge international company with a substantial market
in the United States. What are consumers attitudes toward Coke in foreign
markets? Consumers’ attitudes toward the Coke brand and the Coca-Cola company
tend to be most favorable in countries where the culture differs considerably
from America’s. In many of these countries especially those in the former
communist world—especially those in the former communist world – Coke is an
icon of American culture and a symbol of a market economy. For instance, Polish
consumers attitudes toward Coca-Cola were so positive that a crowd gathered and
spontaneously broke into applause when the first Coke delivery truck came down
the street. Brand attitudes like these are why Coca-Cola held a 45 percent
share of the world market for soft drinks in 1992. (Although Coke and Pepsi are
closely matched in the United States, Coke outsells Pepsi by 4 to 1 margin else
where in the world. Coca-Cola held a 45 percent share of the world market for
soft drinks in 1992. (Although Coke and Pepsi are closely matched in the United
States, Coke outsells Pepsi by a 4 to 1 margin else where in the world.
Coca-Cola’s goal was to achieve a 50 percent market share by the mid 1990s.)
It seems
consumers everywhere like the product (cola soft drinks) and the Coca-Cola
brand. And those positive brand attitudes seem to influence consumers behavior.
In the United States, where attitudes toward the Coke brand are positive, the
per capita consumption of Coke products in the early 1990s was 296. This means on average every person in the United States drank 296
8-ounce servings of Coca-Cola products per year! Could this level of
consumption go even higher? Elsewhere around the world, there was substantial
room for growth. In 1992, Austria had a per capita consumption of 150 Coke
servings per year, compared to 83 in Hungary and only 8 in Romania. Consumption
in Iceland was inexplicably high at 397 servings and consumption was even
higher in American Samoa at 500 servings per year.
Over the past 20
or so years, Coca-Cola has had many occasions to pay special attention to the
attitudes of U.S. consumers. In July 1982 Coca-Cola did the unthinkable (at
that time) and introduced a new brand called Diet Coke. Several executive
feared “diluting” the Coca-Cola brand name and perhaps reducing favorable
consumer attitudes toward the flagship brand. This did not occur, however. Diet
Coke became one of the most successful new products of the 1980s. By 1984 it
displaced 7UP to become the third most popoular soft drink (after Coca-Cola and
Pepsi). Thereafter the company rapidly introduced decaffeinated versions of
Coca-Cola, Diet Coke and Tab. But these successes were overshadowed by a highly
controversial marketing decision.
In the spring of
1985, Chairman Roberto Goizueta announced a new brand with an improved taste,
to be called “Coke”. He also reported that the original Coca-Cola brand would
be retired permanently. The original formula with its secret ingredient
(Merchandise 7X) was to be locked in a bank vault in Atlanta, never be used
again. New Coke was to permanently replace the 99 year old Coca-Cola brand.
Goizueta called the new product the most significant soft drink development in
the company’s history. Americans got their first taste of the new Coke in late
April 1985. By July, the company reversed its earlier decision and announced
that the original brand (and formula) was coming back under the brand name “Coca-Cola
Classic.” New Coke was one of the most embarrassing new product launches ever
because the company failed to understand consumers strong attitudes toward the
original Coca-Cola brand.
The positive
attitudes and beliefs that kept Coca-Cola consumers buying the brand over and
over again are the basis of brand loyalty. Brand loyalty usually begins to
develop when consumers acquire positive attitudes based on beliefs about
positive product attributes and functional benefits (Coca-Cols is sweet,
carbonated or refreshing). After the brand has been around for a while it can
accumulate “extra” meanings through consumers use experiences in consuming the
product. Some of these meanings can be highly emotional and self relevant it the
brand becomes associated with consumers lifestyles and self-images.
In the case of
Coca-Cola, many brand loyal users associated the brand with fond memories of
days gone by. When the company announced that it was replacing the original
Coca-Cola brand, these consumers reacted as if they had lost an old friend.
They inundated company headquarters with protests. One group in Seattle
threatened to sue the company. Then, when June sales of new Coke didn’t pick
up, the company hastily brought back the original brand, renamed “Coca-Cola
Classic.”
The decision to
retire the old Coca-Cola formula had been very carefully researched. Managers
thought they had covered every angle, especially taste characteristics.
Coca-Cola had spent over $4 million on many different taste tests of the new flavor, involving over 200,000
consumers in some 25 cities. These tests revealed that more people liked the
new, sweeter falvor than the old (about 55 percent to 45 percent). But this
research didn’t measure everything. “All the time and money and skill poured
into consumer research on the new Coca-Cola could not measure or reveal the
deep and abiding emotional attachment to original Coca-Cola, “Donald Keough, president
of Coca-Cola, said later. A company spokesperson put it this way “We had taken
away more than the product Coca-Cola. We had taken away more than the product
Coca-Cola. We had taken away more than the product Coca-Cola. We had taken away
a little part of them and their past. They said, You have no right to do that.
Bring it back.” So Coca-Cola did.
In 1994 Coke
Classic was the leading brand in the United States with 20,4 percent markets
share (by volume); Pepsi had 17.8 percent; and New Coke, now called Coke II,
had tiny 0.1 percent. But Coca-Cola learned several valuable lessons from the
New Coke fiasco, including the amount of equity associated with Coke name.
The highly
positive meanings and feelings many consumers have for Coca-Cola constitute its
“brand equity”. Brand equity consumers the meanings that attract consumers to
the brand and that underlie positive attitudes toward a brand. The 1985 fiasco
with new Coke clearly showed that Coca-Cola has a powerful brand equity with
its customers. Managers at Coca-Cola have used this equity to develop new
brands, most of which have been successful. Most of these new brands are “line
extensions,” minor variations of the original brand. For instance, the
Coca-Cola section of a supermarket shelf might include Coca-Cola Classic,
Caffeine Free Coca-Cola Classic, Diet Coke, Caffeine Free Diet Coke, Cherry
Coke and others.
In 1994
Coca-Cola managers introduced several flavors extensions of the Minute Maid
orange soda brand along with a clear version of Tab. Managers intended these
line extensions to leverage the brand equity in the Minute Maid and Tab brands
and to defend against competitive new beverages such as Clearly Canadian and
Snapple.
After this flurry
of brand extensions, the broad strategy at Coca-Cola was to differentiate the
entire product line, without tainting the Coke icon or diminishing Coke equity.
Coca-cola recognized a strong demand for different flavors of soft drinks and
related beverages. In the decade from 1984 to 1994, teas and juices gained
share, whereas regular and diet colas declined 6 percentage points, from
approximately 64 percent in 1984 to about 58 percent in 1994. CEO Roberto
Goizueta (now decreased) stated in the 1995 Coke annual report, “If three keys
to selling real estate are location, location, location, the three keys to
selling consummer producsts are differentiation, differentiation,
differentiation. Every marketing victory we have won has been the result of our
total commitment to making cur brands clearly distinctive from every other item
on the grocery shelf. “So, instead of continuing to slap the Coke label on new
products with distinct brand names such as Fruitopia, named a top 10 new
product in its first year and Surge a soft drink with a slightly higher
caffeine content.
In the 1990s Coca-Cola
managed brand equity and consumer attitudes with a variety strategies. In 1995
it acquired brand equity by purchasing the Barq brand of root beer. Coca-Cola
attempted to create brand equity through new product development by launching a
flotilla a new flavors for its Frutopia and Nestea brands. It tried to enhance
brand equity for Sprite by using more dynamic graphics on the package. Coca-Cola
attempted to “borrow” brand equity through its sponsorship of the 1996 Summer
Olympics, held in Atlanta (location of world headquarters). Finally, and most
significantly, Coca-Cola attempted to reactivate brand equity by introducing
new packages for Coke Classic that revived the vintage contour bottle.
According to Goizueta, introducing the contour bottle throughout the world was
the single most effective differentiation effort in the soft drink industry for
years.
Discussion Questions
1.
Discuss
the attitudes toward Coca-Cola and related beliefs of intensely brand loyal
consumers (perhaps like those who were upset by the New Coke in 1985). How
might their attitudes and beliefs differ from those of less involved, less
loyal consumers? What marketing implications would these differences have?
2.
Do
you think it possible for consumers to be loyal to more than one brand of soft
drink? What about more than one brand of cola? Discuss the pros and cons of
having several brands in a product category (as do Coca-Cola and Pepsi in the
cola category). Compare the strategy of line extension to that of creating
completely distinct brands for these products? What factors should marketers
consider in making this important decision?
3.
Many
marketers made a distinction between customers and consumers. For instance,
Coca-Cola sells cola syrup directly to its customers, the operators of bottling
plants. The bottlers sell bottled Coke products to retailers, vending machine
operators, restaurants, airlines, and so forth. Those organizations in turn
sell Coca-Cola products to individual consumers who drink it. Discuss how the salient beliefs about
Coke products might differ for customers and consumers. How might their
attitudes toward Coke differ? Who should Coca-Cola pay more attention to its
customers or the consumer? Why?
4.
Discuss
Coca-Cola’s various strategies for managing brand equity of its many products.
For instance, what are the pros and cons of borrowing versus creating brand
equity. Analyze Coke’s attempt to “revive” brand equity by reintroducing the
contour bottle around the world.
Source: John Huey, “The World’s Best Brand,
Fortune, May 31, 1993, pp.44-54; Anne B. Fisher, “Coke’s Brand Loyalty Lesson, “Fortune,
August 5, 1985, pp. 44-6; Thomas Moore, “He Put the Kick Back into Coke, “Fortune,
October 26, 1987, pp. 46-56; Seth Lublove, “We Have a Big Pond to Play In, “Forbes,
September 18, 1993, pp.216-24; Andrew Wallenstein, “Coca-Cola’s Sweet Return to
Glory Days, “Advertising Age, April 17, 1995, p.6. Copyright. Crain
Communications, inc., 1995.