CONSUMER BEHAVIOR AND MARKETING STRATEGY
by
J. Paul Peter & Jerry C. Olson
Fifth Edition
Irwin McGrawhill Companies
Copyright 1999
United States
What
Were These Marketers Trying to Do?
Rabston Purina ran a
promotion for six of its children’s cereals aimed at adults. Inside 11 million
because of cereal with names like Freakie and Ghostbusters. Ralston Purina
included tiny models of sports cars, Ten of the boxes contained a scale model
red Corvette that could be redeemed for the real thing a new Chevrolet
Corvette.
Citicorp offered gifts
tired to the amount charged on its credit cards. For $500 charged on its Visa
card, consumers got free golf balls or a travel clocks; for $8,000 in charges,
they received a round trip airline ticket to any where in the United States.
General Mills inserted
a single $1 bill into every twentieth box of its Cheerios cereal. The promotion
involved giving away $ 1 million.
Pepsi Cola offered
chances to win cash and prizes in its “Count the Wins” baseball game. Numbers
were printed inside specially marked cans and bottle caps. If the number
matched the total number of wins by the Milwaukee Brewers on specific lates,
the holder qualified for drawings for $10,000 and $30,000. In addition there
were a number of instant prizes including $1,000, two tickets to a Brewers game
and 2 liter bottles of any Pepsi product.
American TV of Madison,
Wisconsin, offered 100 pounds of beefsteak to those who purchased specially marked
items. Some items with prices as low as $69 still qualified for the steak
bonus.
Exhibit
10.1
Approaches
to Influencing Overt Consumer Behavior
Information
about consumers affect, cognitions, behaviors
|
Marketing mix
stimuli placed in the environment
|
Influence
consumers affect and cognitions
|
Influence
overt consumer behaviors
|
Consumer
research data sales, market share data
|
What types of
strategies were these marketers using? In the previous chapters in this section
we discussed a variety of types of consumer behavior that marketers try to
influence and suggested several types of conditioning and learning that are
used to do so. In this chapter we provide an overview of strategies used to
influence consumer behaviors, discuss behavior influence strategies in two
areas of marketing and describe a model for developing consumer behavior
influence strategies.
Consumer
Behavior Influence Strategies
Exhibit 10.1 presents a
model of how marketers can influence overt consumer behaviors. First, marketers
obtain information on consumers affect, cognition and behavior relative to the
product, service, store, brand or model of concern through consumer research.
Based on this information and managerial judgment, various marketing mix
stimuli are designed or changed and are implemented by placing them in the
environment. These stimuli include such things as products, brand marks,
packaging, advertisements and commercials, price tags, coupons, store signs and
logos and many others.These stimuli are designed to influence consumers in one
or more ways. Often they are designed to influence consumers affect and
cognition in positive ways to increase the chances of overt behavior. In other
cases, they are designed to influence behavior somewhat directly without a
complete analysis of affective and cognitive responses. Measuring changes in
consumers affect, cognitions and behaviors results in feedback in the form of
consumer research data, as well as sales and market share information. These
help marketers evaluate the success of the strategy and provide new input into
the strategy development process. Based on this information, the process
continous as marketing mix stimuli are reworked to further influence consumers.
The model in Exhibit
10.1 is completely consistent with the Wheel of Consumer Analysis because
consumers affect, cognitions, and behaviors lead to changes in the environment
(marketing strategy elements), which can lead to further changes in the
environment. It again demonstrates the dynamic nature of consumer behavior and
marketing strategy.
The model in Exhibit
10.1 is completely consistent with the Wheel of Consumer Analysis because
consumers affect, cognitions, and behaviors lead to changes in the environment
(marketing strategy elements), which can lead to further changes in the
environment. It again demonstrates the dynamic nature of consumer behavior and
marketing strategy.
Exhibit
10.2
Strategies
Designed to Influence Overt Consumer Behaviors
Type of Strategy
|
Description of Strategy
|
Strategic
Focus
|
Sample
Strategies
|
Ultimate
Objective of Strategy
|
Affective
|
Strategies
designed to influence consumers affective responses
|
Consumer
emotions, moods, feelings, evaluations
|
Classically
conditioning emotions to products
|
Influence
overt consumer behaviors
|
Cognitive
|
Strategies
designed to influence consumers cognitive responses
|
Consumers
knowledge, meanings, beliefs
|
Providing
information highlighting competitive advantages
|
Influence
overt consumer behaviors
|
Behavioral
|
Strategies
designed to influence consumers behavioral responses
|
Consumers
overt behaviors
|
Positive
reinforcement; modeling desired behaviors
|
Influence
overt consumer behaviors
|
Combined
|
Strategies
designed to influence multiple consumer responses
|
More
than one of the above
|
Information
about product benefits with emotional tie-ins and rebates
|
Influence
overt consumer behaviors
|
It is important to
recognize that influencing overt consumer behavior is most critical. If
consumers only change what they think and feel bat do nothing, then no
exchanges occur, no sales are made and no profits are earned. Thus, although
changing consumer affect and cognition are often useful and important steps in
influencing overt consumer behavior, they are often only intermediate steps in
the influence process. Consumers must perform one or more overt behaviors, such
as store contacts, product contacts, transactions, consumptions and
communication so that marketing strategies can benefit organizations. Also,
products and brands can not satisfy consumer needs and wants unless some
behavior occurs, such as buying and using them.
Marketers usually want
to maintain a particular level of overt consumer behaviors or increase the
level. If market share is at an optimal level, such that increasing it would be
unprofitable, then marketers would likely try to maintain the level. However,
in most cases, marketers try to increase the number of consumers who purchase
an offering and/or increase the frequency of purchase by current buyers. In
some cases, organizations try to decrease behavior, such as reducing the joint
behaviors of driving and drinking.
Exhibit 10.2 presents
four strategies designed to influence overt consumer behavior. For affective
strategies, marketing mix elements are designed to influence consumers
affective responses in order to influence overt consumer behaviors. For
example, for many years Michelin tire ads have featured a cute baby sitting in
a floating tire to generate warm feelings and attention to the importance of
safe tires when driving with children.
In the second strategy,
marketing mix elements are designed to influence consumers cognitions in order
to influence consumer behaviors. Lands End catalogs include extensive product
information to help consumers decide whether particular garments are right for
them.
In the third strategy,
marketing mix elements are designed to influence consumers overt behaviors
somewhat directly. This does not mean that consumers do not think about or feel
anything when they experience antecedents or consequences of their behaviors.
However, it does suggest that, in some cases, information processing is rather
automatic and little conscious information processing occurs. Many consumer
behaviors are habitual and involve little decision making. Many marketing
strategies are designed to influence these behaviors without a complete
analysis of affect and cognition, such as coupons and other sales promotions
tactics.
Finally, as is common
in practice, various marketing mix stimuli are used to influence some combination
of consumers affect, cognitions and behaviors in order to influence other
consumer behaviors. For example, a Target ad featured a color picture of a Little
Tikes Playhouse with two cute kids enjoying it, a product description, an age
range of 1.5 to 4, the words “assembly required,” and a sale price of $98.88.
This ad was trying to influence affect from the cute kids enjoying the
playhouse, cognition in terms of product and price information and the
behaviors of store contact, product contact, transaction and consumption.
In sum, marketing
strategies are designed to ultimately influence overt consumer behavior. These
strategies should be designed with a precise understanding of the behaviors
they are designed to influence, as well as whether affect and cognition are
also to be influenced in important ways. In the next sectrion, we discuss two
areas of marketing sales promotion and social marketing that have focused on
influencing behavior somewhat directly.
Sales
Promotion
One area of consumer
research that has recognized the value of analyzing overt behaviors is sales
promotion. Leading experts define sales promotion as “an action focused
marketing event whose purpose is to have a direct impact on the behavior of a
firm’s customers. Two points are noteworthy in this definition.
First, the firm’s customers
may be channel members, such as retailers, in which case the promotion is
called a trade promotion. Trade promotions, such as advertising or display
allowances, are used by companies to push products through the channel to
consumers. Alternatively, the firm’s customers may be final consumers, in which
case the promotions are called consumer promotions. Consumer promotions, such
as coupons and free samples, are used by manufacturers and retailers to
persuade consumers to purchase products and visit retail outlets. In one recent
year, overall expenditures on promotion were divided 44.3 percent on trade
promotions, 30.6 percent on advertising and 25.1 percent on consumer
promotions.
Second, most consumer
promotions are designed to influence the probability of purchase or other
desired behaviors without necessarily changing prepurchase consumer attitudes
about a brand. If the promotion is for a new brand, then purchase and use may
lead to favorable postpurchase attitudes and future purchases. If purchase is
for an existing brand, consumers with a neutral or slightly positive attitude
may use the promotion to reduce purchase riskand try the brand. For consumers
who already purchase a brand, a promotion may be an added incentive to remain
loyal.
The primary concern of
this text is with consumer promotions and their influence on consumer behavior.
These are many types of consumer promotions. The list below covers the majority
of them.
1.Sampling. Consumers are offered regular
or trial sizes of the product either free or at a nominal price. For example,
Hershey Foods out 750,000 candy bars on 170 college campuses.
2. Price Deals. Consumers are given
discounts from the product’s regular price. For example, Coke and Pepsi are
frequently available at discounted prices.
3. Bonus Packs. Bonus packs consist of
additional amounts of the product that a company gives to buyers of the
product. For example, Gilette occasionally adds a few extra blades to its blade
packs without increasing the price. Bonus packs are discussed in Highlight
10.1.
4. Rebates and Refunds. Consumers, either
at purchase or by mail, are given cash reimbursements for purchasing products.
For example, consumers are often offered rebates for purchasing Chrysler or
Ford automobiles.
5. Sweeptakes and Contests. Consumers are
offered chances to win cash and/or prizes through either chance selection or
games of skill. For example, Marriott Hotels teamed up with Hertz Rent A Car in
a scratch card sweeptakes that offered over $90 million in prizes.
6. Premiums. A premium is a reward or gift
that comes from purchasing a product. For example, Procter & Gamble offered
a free package of Diaperene baby wash cloths with the purchase of any size
Pampers.
7. Coupons. Consumers are offered cents-off
or added value incentives for purchasing specific products. For example,
Lenscrafters offered newspaper coupons for $20 off on the purchase of on
the purchase of contacy lenses from its
stores.
These basic types of
consumer promotions are often used in combination to increase the probability
of desired behaviors. For example, P&G offered a $1 off coupons plus a
premium coupon for a free Duncan Hines cake mix for purchasing any size Folgers
coffee. Recently, many consumer promotions have featured coupons plus a promise
to make donations to specific charities for every coupon or refund certificate
redeemed. For example, P&G offered a $-off coupon plus a premium coupon for
a free Duncan Hines cake mix for purchasing any size Folgers coffee. Recently,
many consumers promotions have featured coupons plus a promise to make
donations to specific charities for every coupon or refund certificate
redeemed. For example, Hartz Mountain offered a $1 coupon on its flea and tick
repellent plus a 50 cent donation to the Better Health for Pets Program.
Consumer promotions can
be used to influence behavior in a variety of ways. Next we discuss four
aspects of behavior that promotions are designed to affect.
Highlight
10.1
Consumer
Reactions to Bonus Packs
Bonus packs are
frequently used consumer promotions. You can walk down the health andbeauty
aids aisles of any discount store and see all sorts of products claiming “25%
more free” or “4 ounces free.” These package labels are designed to attract
shoppers’ attention and ultimately get consumers to buy the products. Some
shoppers, when presented with bonus packs, will buy them rather than another
brand or buy more than planned, knowing that the larger size will be offered
for a limited time only. Others are rewarded for continuing to buy their
regular brands when they are promoted as bonus packs.
Marketers can track
bonus pack sales easily to determine the effectiveness of promotions and their
impact on market share. But how do bonus packs influence consumer cognitions? A
study of hair shampoo found that 43 percent of respondents said they would
switch for “20% more free, ”but 90 percent said that “25% more free “would get
them to switch brands.
Marketers commonly use
three ways to present bonus pack information: “Units free,” percent free.” And “percent
more free.”Units free,” simply tells the consumer how many extra ounces or
pieces are included in the package at no additional cost. The “percent free”
format presents the free amount as a percentage of bonus size, whereas “percent
more free” presents the free amount as a percentage of the smaller, regular
size.
Consumers apparently
have a preference for how this information is presented as 91 percent of the
respondents in the survey indicated a clear preference for the “percent more
free” format. They believed that “more” was better and preferred the “percent
more free”wording, even when the actual amount of free product was greater in
the “percent free” format. In addition, 73 percent of respondents preferred the
“percent more free” format to “ounces free.”
When questioned as to
who they thought was paying for the “free” product, 75 percent of all
respondents believed the consumer was either directly or indirectly paying for
the extra amount offered in bonus packs. Interestingly, those who switched for
a bonus pack believed that the manufacturer incurred the cost of the extra
product, whereas those who did not switch believed the consumer paid. Nearly
half the respondents surveyed said the amount of free product it would take to
get them to switch depended on the type of product.
How do you react to
bonus packs? Will you switch brands of shampoo, deodorant, or toothpaste to get
an extra amount free? Do you make careful decisions about whether to accept a
bonus pack deal versus your regular brand or do you just go for it? How much
thinking do you do in the grocery store when presented a different brand of
coffee with an extra “2 ounce free” before making a coffee purchase?
Source:
Larry
J. Seibert, “What Consumers Think about Bonus Pack Sales Promotions, “Marketing News, February 17, 1997, p.9.
Reprinted by permission of the American Marketing Association.
Purchase
Probability
Most consumer
promotions are designed to increase the probability that consumers will
purchase a particular brand or combination of products. However, a firm may
hope to achieve any number of subgoals when running a promotion. The primary
goal be to get consumers to try a new product. For example, Hershey offered a
free package of Reese’s Crunchy Peanut Butter Cups with the purchase of any
other Reese’s candy product to attempt to induce trial of the new product.
Kellogg’s offered a coupon for an 18 ounce box of its popular corn flakes with
the purchase of its new Kellog’s Mini Buns. Also, some car dealers offer
special discounts for first time buyers.
A second subgoal of
consumer promotions may be to position a brand or company in the minds of
consumers to encourage them to purchase and continue to purchase the company’s
brand. In this case, the promotion is designed to maintain or change consumer
affect, cognitions and behaviors. One way of doing so is to use frequent
promotions to obtain a competitive price
on a brand that is positioned as a high priced, high quality product. In this
way, the lower price has less chance of leading consumers to believe the
product is of lower quality than competitive brands. For example, Kellogg’s
frequently offers coupons and premiums on its market leading cereals.
Another use of promotion
for positioning purposes is to offer to make contributions to charity for each
coupon or refund certificate redeemed by consumers. This tactic may increase
consumer percepetions of the societal commitment of firms. Consumers who are
socially and ecologically concerned may then switch to purchashing these
companies brands. In addition to the Hartz Mountain example already noted, many
other companies also use this type of promotion. Post Alpha Bits offered a 50
cent coupon and promised to make an unspecified donation to Hospitals for
Children for each coupon redeemed. Krunchers Potato Chips offered a 25 cent
coupon and promised to make a contribution to the Better Homes Foundation.
Procter & Gamble offered a 50 cent refund for a number of its soap products
and promised a $1 contribution to Keep America Beautiful, Inc., for each refund
certificate redeemed
A third subgoal of
consumer promotions is to obtain a brand switch. Consumer promotions may obtain
brand switches by making the purchase of a brand more attractive than purchase
of the usual brand at full price.
A final goal of
consumer promotions is to develop brand loyalty. Because some consumers tend to
purchase products based on coupons and other deals, frequent deals on
particular brands may keep them relatively loyal in terms of purchasing the
firm’s brands. Companies, such as Kellogs and P&G, that have broad product
lines and a number of top selling products frequently offer a variety of forms
of consumer promotions for their products. Even deal prone consumers who have
preferred brands may remain loyal through a long succession of coupons and
other deals.
Purchase
Quantity
A number of consumer
promotions are designed not only to influence purchase of a brand but also to
influence the number or size of units purchased. For example, Quaker Oats
offered a 70 cent coupon for purchasing two 18 ounce or larger jars of Skippy
peanut butter. P&G offered $2, $5 and $8 refunds for purchasing one, two
and three gallons of Tide, Cheer, Era, or Solo liquid laundry detergent. A free
Mennen Speed Stick deodorant was offered with the purchase of two at the
regular price. Such promotions may increase the amount of a company’s product
that consumers purchase and may increase brand loyalty. However, consumers who
already are loyal to particular brands may simply stock up on them during a
promotion and wait until the next promotion to purchase again. Some consumers
prefer to purchase products only when they can get a deal on them. U.S. car
manufacturers have unintentionally conditioned many consumers to wait for
rebates rather than buy a car without one.
Purchasing
Timing
Consumers promotions
can also be used to influence the time at which consumers purchase. For
example, special discounts can be offered to encourage consumers to eat at
particular restaurants on nights when business is slow. Pizza Hut often offers discounts
and special family prices for Monday or Tuesday nights. Other retail stores
have special sales on specific dates to encourage purchases at that time.
Services such as airlines and telephone companies offer special rates to
encourage consumers to use them at specific times and dates to even out demand.
One trend in the use of coupons shortens the redemption period to encourage
consumers to purchase sooner. Finally, most sweeptakes and contests are of
relatively short duration to encourage consumers to enter the contest by
purchasing the product promptly.
Highlight
10.2
Amoco’s
Big Summer Fill-Up
Amoco Oil Company ran a
promotion designed to build store loyalty to Amoco filling stations. The
promotion required consumers to fill up (a minimum of 8 gallons) at an Amoco
station 10 times and get a promotion card punched by an attendant. This all had
to be done within a specified three month period. After 10 fill-ups, consumers
could mail the card to the “Amoco Fill-Up” address and receive coupons for $1
off on their next five fill-ups.
Consider the possible
outcomes of this promotion. If consumers complied with all of the requirements
and used the five coupons, they made trips to an Amoco station and made 15
purchases of 8 gallons or more. This is a considerable amount of behavior and
sales to generate for the company for a relatively small $5 reward. In
addition, because Amoco gas is more expensive than gas at discount stations,
the consumer may not have saved money. If a consumer averaged buyimg 10 gallons
at a time and paid 5 cents more a gallon for Amaco gas, in 15 trips, he or she
spent an additional $7.5 to save $5. However, Amoco gas is ofexcellent quality
and may give the consumer savings in better gas mileage, and the consumers car
may run better by using it. Thus, the promotion could get consumers in the
habit of going to an Amoco station and lead to loyalty. The superior product
could also contribute to this loyalty.
The promotion card also
stated that it would take six to eight weeks to receive the coupons. If the
consumer continued to use Amoco in the meantime, the cdompany continued to make
full-price sales. If the consumer went to other stations during the waiting period,
then receipt of the coupons could bring them back to Amoco, giving the company
a second chance to develop loyalty.
If consumers did not
fill up 10 times in three months, they did not qualify for the promotion.
However, in making a point of trying to go to an Amoco station, the consumer
might also have developed a loyalty to it. In this case, Amoco developed a
loyalty to it. In this case, Amoco developed a loyal customer but did not have
to pay the promotion value to do so. Overall, this promotion strategy would
appear to be one that was well designed and capable of building long-term loyal
to customers. To learn more about Amoco, visit its Web site at http://www.amoco.com.
Purchase
Location
Consumer promotions can
also be used to influence the location or vendor of particular products. Retail
stores and retail chains offer their own coupons, contests and other deals to
encourage consumers to shop at their outlets. For example, one grocery chain
offered $20 worth of beef if a consumer was selected at a specific store and
was found to have a beef product in his or her shopping cart. Some retail
chains, such as Wal-Mart, have a standing offer to meet my other store’s price
on a product if the Wal-Mart price is higher. Such promotions and tactics can
build store traffic and encourage store loyalty as discussed in Highlight 10.2.
Exhibit
10.3
Promotions
Effects on Consumer Behavior
1. Bought didn’t need
Coupons=
22%
Rebates=
9%
Sweeptakes=11%
Premiums=19%
2. Bought never tried
Coupons=
69%
Rebates=
38%
Sweeptakes=18%
Premiums=39%
3. Bought different brand
Coupons=
71%
Rebates=
49%
Sweeptakes=19%
Premiums=39%
4. Bought more
Coupons=
56%
Rebates=
39%
Sweeptakes=17%
Premiums=32%
5. Bought sooner
Coupons=
69%
Rebates=
39%
Sweeptakes=18%
Premiums=39%
6. Bought later
Coupons
= 20%
Rebates
= 9%
Sweeptakes
= 8%
Premiums=
9.5%
Source:
“Study
Some Promotion Change Consumer Behavior,”Marketing News, October 15, 1990,
p.12.
Effective
of Sales Promotions
There is little
question that promotions effectively influence consumer behavior. However,
which promotion tools are generally most effective for achieving particular
behavioral changes is not fully understood. One study compared four consumer
promotion tools coupons, rebates, sweeptakes and premiums for their impact on
various consumer purchase behaviors. These behaviors included purchasing a
product consumers said they didn’t need, purchasing a product they had never
tried before, purchasing a different brand than they regularly used, purchasing
more than usual, purchasing sooner than usual and purchasing later than usual.
Exhibit 10.3 presents
the results of that study. In general, consumers reported that coupons were the
most effective promotion for changing these behaviors. Over 70 percent of the
consumers reported they purchased a product they had never tried before because
of a coupon and more than 70 percent said they purchased a different brand than
they regularly use because of a coupon. Of the four promotion tools, coupons
are the most commonly available and easiest to use.
Rebates and premiums
were both shown to be effective in changing consumer behavior in this study,
but less so than coupons. The study found that the greater the rebate, the
greater effort consumers would expend to obtain the product. Finally, although
some consumers also reported that sweepstakes influenced them, such promotions
were the least effective overall. The study also found that changes in behavior
varied by the type of product and characteristics of the consumers. For
example, for products such as shampoo, coffee, batteries, toothpaste and
personal appliances, promotions could persuade the majority of consumers to try
a different brand. However, for products such as alcoholic beverages,
automobiles, motor oil, pet food and floor coverings, consumers reported that
promotions would not persuade them to switch brands. In terms of consumer
characteristics, consumers who are more affluent, educated and older are more
likely to participate in consumer promotions, according to this study.
In sum, promotions can
influence consumer behavior, although many factors alter their effectiveness.
It seems likely that the greater the reward, the less effort required to obtain
the reward and the sooner the reward is obtained after the behavior, the more
likely the promotion will be influential. However, further reseaerch on
consumer promotions is needed to better understand the affective, cognitive,
behavioral and environmental factors that influence their effectiveness.
Social
Marketing
Social Marketing is “the
application of commercial marketing technologies to the analysis, planning,
excution and evaluation of programs designed to influence the voluntary
behavior of target audiences in order to improve their personal welfare and
that of their society.”Unlike commercial marketing, which benefits consumers as
a means to achieving the organization’s objectives, the end goal of social
marketing is to benefit the target audience or the broader society. Social
marketing is typically concerned with influencing and changing consumers overt
behavior, but can also be used to influence affect and cognitions as an
intermediate step. For example, social marketing could be used to increase the
self esteem of laid off workers or to help traumatized patients be less
distressesd so that they can function more effectively in society. As with
commercial marketing, social marketing can be applied at the individual,
household, target market, or societal levels.
Increasing
Desired Behaviors
Many type of behaviors
can be increased through the use of social marketing. For example, reseaech has
shown that various incentives can incease the probability that parents will
take their children in for dental and health care. In addition, prompts can be
used to increase parental discussion of a childs problems with health care
providers. By providing feedback and chances to win prizes, seat-belt usage can
be increased, which could save thousands of lives each year. Small incentives
can also increase the use of car pools, which could help save natural resources
and reduce air pollution. Providing information to consumers in grocery stores
concerning the amount of fat and fiber in products and offering alternatives
can influence the purchase of more nutrional foods.
Decreasing
Undesired Behaviors
Many types of undesired
consumer behaviors also can be decreased through social marketing programs. For
example, various types of interventions can decrease smoking, drunken and other
unsafe driving, dropping out of school, illegal drug use and teenage
pregnancies. Although no program has been totally effective, the importance of
these problems makes even small changes very valuable in improving individuals
lives and society in general.
Some famous ad
campaigns were designed to decrease undesired behaviors. These ads were
developed by the Ad Council of the United States and participating ad agencies.
For example, “Just Say No” was designed by DDB Needham Worldwide to decrease
the use of illicit drugs; “Help stop AIDS. Use a condom “was designed by Scali,
McCabe, Sloves, Inc., to decrease the frequency of unprotected sex; “Take time
out. Don’t take it out on your kid” was designed by Lintas: Campbell-Ewald to
decrease physical abuse of children. A stronger focus on problems such as these
from a consumer behavior perspective could provide even better approaches to
solving them.
A
Strategic Model for Influencing Consumer Behaviors
Marketing manager
develop strategies to accomplish particular objectives. Often these objectives
deal with maintaining or increasing sales or market share by a particular
amount or percentage, subject to a budget constraint. In order to accomplish
these objectives, managers focus on influencing consumers affect, cognition and
behaviors. Influencing these can involve both long-term and short term
strategies. For example, building brand equity consumers beliefs about positive
product attributes and favorable consequences of brand use is usually a
long-term strategy designed to influence long-term sales and the ability to
charge higher prices. Brands like Harley-Davidson, Titleist and Sony have developed
high brand equity and market share by influencing consumers affective and
cognitive responses, which had led to long term purchase and use behaviors.
Stores like The Gap and Wal-Mart also develop store images and store equity to
influence consumers to shop at their stores. American Express has developed a
prestige image for its credit cards to influence consumers to use them.
Exhibit
10.4
Steps
in Developing Consumer Behavior
Influence Strategies
Measure
current levels of consumer affect, cognition and behavior
|
Analyze
consumers and markets
|
Select and
implement influence strategy
|
Measure
strategic affects
|
Desired
influence occur?
|
Evaluate for
performance improvement
|
In other cases,
marketing managers use strategies to influence consumers in the short run but,
at the same time, they hope that these consumers will also become long-term,
loyal customers. Many of the sales promotion tactics discussed in this chapter
are designed to increase sales quickly for a short period of time.
Regardless of whether
the strategy is for the short or long run, managers need to understand
consumers affect, cognitions and behaviors to develop strategies to influence
them. Exhibit 10.4 presents a general model managers can use to help develop successful
influence strategies.
Measure
Current Levels of Consumer Affect, Cognition and Behavior
In order to design
successful strategies, marketers should first know what consumers think, feel
and do about a company’s products, stores or other offerings. Marketers should
also know these same things about competitive offerings. In other words,
consumers affect, cognitions and behaviors should be measured to form the basis
for successful strategies. Because a number of ways to measure various
affective and cognitive responses were discussed in the previous section of the
book, Exhibit 10.5 lists some ways of measuring overt consumer behaviors. As
shown for each of the seven types of behavior identified, there are a variety
of ways of measuring them. Although all of these methods are commonly used in
marketing and consumer reasearch, they are not always used sequentially to
investigate all of the behaviors consumers must perform to purchase and use
products correctly.
Exhibit
10.5
Examples
of Methods Used to Measure Overt Consumer Behaviors
Types of
Behavior
|
Measurement
|
Information
contact
|
Day
after recall scores
Scanner
cable data
Nielsen
data
Starch
reports
|
Funds
access
|
Loan
application
Checkbook
entries
Credit
card debits
Scanner
cable data
|
Store
contact
|
“Laboratory”
store studies
Physical
count of shoppers
Vidiotapes
of shopping behavior
Scanner
cable data
“Hits”on
a web page
|
Product
contact
|
Inventory
analysis
Physical
count of items removed from display or other locations
Consumer
diaries or other verbal reports
Scanner
cable data
|
Transaction
|
Monitor
cash register tapes
Credit
card receipts
Consumer
purchase diaries
Scanner
cabel data
|
Consumption
and disposition
|
In
home inventory and use research
After
purchase telephone surveys
Consumer
diaries
Repurchase
rate research
Scanner
cable data
Garbology
|
Communication
|
Diffusion
research
Sociometric
net research
Warranty
card information
Consumer
complaint/compliment responses
|
One approach that
allows a number of stages in a purchase sequence to be monitored is the scanner
cable method available from research companies such as Information Resources,
Inc. (IRI) and Nielsen Marketing Research USA. IRI’s research system are used
by many leading companies including General Foods, Procter & Gamble,
General Mills and Frito-Lay. The system are designed to predict which products
will be successful and which ads work best to sell them. They have been
expanded from use in grocery stores to include drugstores and mass
merchandisers. IRI has constructed consumer panels in a number of cities and
monitors households nationwide. It monitors purchases in grocery stores in many
markets ranging from big cities to small towns.
Panel members provide
information about the size of their families, their income, their marital
status, how many TVs they own, what types of newspapers and magazines they read
and who does most of the shopping. IRI provides a special bar-coded
identification card that shoppers present to the cashier when they pay for
products in grocery stores, drugstores and others. By passing the card over the
scanner or entering the digits manually into register, the cashier records
everything each shopper has purchased.
One executive for
Frito-Lay, which used IRI’s services for the introduction of Sun Chips snacks,
concluded, “The beauty of scanner data is that we get a complete description of
a household from the panel and can match it with purchasing patterns. We know
exactly who’s out there buying our our product and that helps us design
marketing and advertising plans accordingly.
A number of behaviors
in the purchase sequence can be monitored and influenced using scanner methods.
For example, information contact can be influenced because media habits of
households are monitored and commercials can be changed until contact occurs.
Funds access can be monitored on the cash register tape by recording prices and
the method of payment. Because every purchase in the store is recorded, store
contact, product contact and transaction information are available, as well as
the dates and times of these behaviors. As such, the effectiveness of various
sales promotions and other marketing strategies on specific consumer behaviors
can be determined. Successful promotions can be offered again to encourage
store and brand loyaty. Because the time between purchases can be determined,
information is also available on consumption and usage rates.
There are two reasons
to start strategy development by measuring consumers affect, cognition and
behavior. First, these measures provide baseline data for determining the
effectiveness of the influence strategy after it has been implemented. A
baseline is the level of consumers responses prior to implementation of a new
strategy. Second, these measures help identify opportunities and threats in the
market. For example, if consumer know more about a competitive retail chain,
like it better, and shop there more frequently, then strategies must be
developed to increase these responses for the company’s stores. Hopefully, the
research also identifies the reasons why consumer shop at the competitive chain
so that a strategy could be developed to increase consumers acceptance and
purchases at the company’s stores.
Analyze
Consumers and Markets
After baseline data
have been collected, the next steps to analyze the information by evaluating
consumer responses from various current and potential markets. Consumers may
not purchase a product for many reasons and consumer research is designed to
uncover the reasons. Perhaps they do not know about the product, do not like
it, or do not know where to buy it. Perhaps they purchase a competitive product
with which they are highly satisfied. The strategiesn that are appropriate
depend on the levels of consumers affective, cognitive and behavioral responses
to the company’s products relative to competitive products.
For existing products,
marketer often seek strategies to attract consumers away from competitive
products. There are many strategies for doing so, including developing
advertising to highlight superior benefits of competitive offerings, developing
more convinient packaging, lowering prices through sales promotions, or
expanding distribution outlets. Strategies for existing products may also focus
on increasing purchases by current users. These strategies involve finding new
uses for a product, new occasions for its use, or decreasing the cost of using
it. Finally, strategies for existing products involve expanding markets
geographically, such as seeking global markets where opportunities may be
better because there are so many consumers who are nonusers, many American
products and brands are well liked and sought out by consumers in some global
markets. However, failure to analyze global consumers can lead to poor
strategies, as discussed in Highlight 10.3.
For new products,
strategies often focus on affect and cognition in order to create favorable
behavioral responses. Consumers are informed about the nature of a new
products, its benefits and where it can be purchased to increase the
probability that they will buy it. Creating positive affect is part of the
process. For example, when J.C. Penney developed its Diahann Carroll line of
women’s clothes and its Nefertiti Collection of African prints, it sought to create
positive affect for its stores with African-American women consumers. In other
cases, marketers focus more on behavioral responses initially for new products.
For example, free samples of a new soap or toothpaste are mailed to consumers
to generate trial.
Select
and Implement Influence Strategy
Based on the consumer
and market analyses, a strategy to influence consumer responses is selected and
implemented. The strategy may involve any or all of the marketing mix elements
and may be designed to accomplish both-short term and long-term objectives. For
example, many sales promotions have short-term objectives of generating sales
to new customers which hopefully lead to long-term loyalty. Advertising
campaigns may increase short-term sales, but are often designed to create long
term brand equity and deep meanings for consumers that will also lead to long
term loyalty. Most product strategies involving changes in quality, packaging
or branding include long term brand equity and deep meanings for consumers that
will also lead to long term loyalty. Advertising campaigns may increase
short-term sales, but are often desined to create long-term brand equity and
deep meanings for consumers that will also lead to long-term loyalty. Most
product strategies involving changes in quality, packaging or branding include
long-term objectives as do strategies involving new or different distribution
methods. Pricing strategies most often incorporate short-term changes to
influence sales, but long-term strategies are also used. Keeping prices high
relative to competition over many years can create an image of distinctiveness
or quality, whereas charging low prices for many years can cretae the perception
of value for the money. For example, when Toyota introduced new models of the
Camry, Celica and Paseo in 1996, it cut prices by $700 to $1,000 to positively
influence consumer value perceptions.
Highlight
10.3 American Appliance Makers Misjudge European Consumers
In the late 1980s the
U.S. market for refrigerators and other major appliances was mature. But in
western Europe barely 20 percent of households have clothes dryers versus some
70 percent in the United States. In Europe, there are dozens of appliance
makers, nearly all ripe for consolidation, whereas in the United States, there
are four producers that control 90 percent of the market. Europe then should
have been a golden opportunity for U.S. appliance makers, Whirlpool Corp. and
Maytag.
In 1989 archivals
Whirlpool Corp and Maytag leaped across the Atlantic. Maytag bought Britain’s
Hoover for about $320 million and Whirlpool paid $960 million for the appliance
unit of Dutch electronics giant Philips and spent another $500 million to
retool its plants.
But the invasion
fizzled. In 1995, Maytag sold its European operations to an Italian appliance
maker, booking a $135 million loss. Whirlpool continued in the market, but
experienced flat sales and declining earnings per share. Where did these companies
go wrong?
In part, these
companies misjudged European consumers. American consumers often want the
lowest price and when appliances wear out, they buy new ones. However, manu
Europeans still think of appliances as investments. They will pay more and
expect to get more in finish, durability and appearance. Also, American
households will often put their washer/dryer in the garage or basement or tuck
it away in a closet, where noise and appearance don’t matter. However, many
Europeans live in smaller houses and often put their laundry equipment in their
kitchens, where noises and looks matter greatly.
Apparently the failure
to properly analyze consumers in European markets led to market entry
strategies that were unsuccessful. Although there were many factors that made
the market an attractive opportunity, failure to understand consumers affect,
cognition and behavior led to a huge loss for Maytag and a marginal position
for Whirlpool in European markets. Whirlpool has designed a new strategy involving
three pan European brands Bauknecht, for the affluent; Whirlpool, for the
middle market; and Ingis, for the low end and only time will tell if this
strategy shows a better understanding of consumers and markets. To learn more
about these companies, visit their Web sites at http://www.maytag.com
and http://www.whirlpool.com.
Measure
Strategic Effects
After implementing the
strategy, its effects must be measured to see whether and how much it
influenced consumers affect, cognition and behavior and whether it did so
enough to achieve objectives. If not considerable analysis and evaluation need
to be done to determine why the strategy failed. This is a complicated problem
because there are a number of potential reasons why influence strategies fail:
1.
Faulty objectives. The objectives were
set too high and consumers were more resistant to influence than anticipated.
In this case, the objectives would have to be reconsidered.
2.
Faulty Strategy. The objectives were
appropriate but the strategy was faulty. In this case, the strategy could be
improved and reimplemented or a new strategy could be developed and
implemented.
3.
Faulty Implementation. The objectives
were appropriate and the strategy was appropriate but it was poorly implemented.
In this case, the strategy could be implemented more effectively if it were
still viable or a new strategy could be developed and implemented.
4.
Faulty Measurement. Either the baseline
or strategic effects measures were faulty. In this case, measurement would have
to be improved and the same or a new strategy developed and implemented.
5.
Unanticipated Competitive Reactions or
Consumer Changes. The objectives were appropriate, the strategy was appropriate
and implemented well, but competitors developed and implemented better
strategies or consumers changed in unanticipated ways. In this case, a new
strategy likely would be needed.
6.
Combination. Two or more of the above occurred.
In this case, a complete audit of the strategy development system islikely
needed.
Sorting out thereasons
why a strategy failed is obviously a difficult yet critical task if a company
is to be successful. Without knowledge of why a strategy failed, managers have
a difficult time improving their new strategies.
If the strategy is
successful in achieving desired changes in consumer responses, this may
indicate that the company did a good job of consumer analysis and strategy
development and implementation. However, there could still be important
problems in the process. Objectives could have been set too low, measurement
could have over estimated the responses, or competition could have made a major
strategic error that helped the company. Thus not only the effects, but also
the process of developing consumer behaviors that influence strategies need to
be frequently evaluated.
Evaluate
for Performance Improvement
Regardless of how
successful a particular marketing strategy is, there is often room for
improvement. Developing and implementing strategies to influence consumer
behavior is a dynamic process that requires constant monitoring of a company’s
and the competitors ongoing strategies, developing new strategies and
anticipating competitors new strategies. In additioon, other environmental
changes that influence consumers should also be analyzed and evaluated.
Marketing
Implications
Marketers need to
ultimately influence consumers overt behavior in order to achieve organizational
objectives such as sales, market shhare and profits. This is sometimes done by
first influencing consumers affect and cognition. In other cases marketers
focus on intermediate behaviors that lead to the desired behaviors of purchase
and use or focus on the desired behaviors somewhat directly. Regardless, it is
useful to follow a sequential process for developing successful strategies that
allows success or failure to be measured. The model discussed in this part of
the chapter is one approach to help marketers do so. Although marketers often
develop strategies with particu;ar
objectives in mind, commonly used approaches are often somewhat ad hoc and do
not always allow for detailed analyses and evaluations of consumers responses
to a chosen strategy. The model presented here provides a general framework for
overcoming this problem. Although using this approach requires considerable
consumer research, such research could help develop better strategies. Even if
only a few types of affective cognitive and behavioral responses are identified
and analyzed, marketers could have a better system for developing and
evaluating their strategies. Of course, the costs and benefits of detailed
consumer analysis have to be assessed in deciding how much time and money
should be expended.
What
Were These Marketers Trying to Do?
What were these
marketers trying to do? Clearly, they were trying to influence consumer
behavior by changing the consequences of the behavior. Both Ralston-Purina and
Gebneral Mills were trying to get consumers to buy their cereals and Pepsi was
trying to get consumers to buy its soft drinks. Note that although consumers
would have to do some amount of information processing to purchase these
products, the promotions were designed to get them to buy the products not to
change their attitudes or beliefs about the products. Perhaps purchase and use
would then lead consumers to remember how good the products were or change
their attitudes about the taste or quality of the products. However, such
changes in cognition would likely come after the desired change in purchase and
use behavior.
Citicorp was also
trying to influence consumer behavior by getting consumers to charge more on
their credit cards. American TV was trying to get consumers to come to its
retail stores and make purchases, including those with free steak offer. As
with the manufacturers previously discussed, this credit card company and this
retailer were not trying to change what consumers thought or felt about their
services or stores. Rather, they were trying to influence consumer behavior by
changing the consequences. Of course this in turn might change consumers
cognition about these marketers and their products and services. Further
depending on the success of such promotions, these marketers and their
competitors might continue to offer them or come up with new promotion
approaches, which are evidenced in the environment.
Thus while the focus of
this chapter and section is on behavior, analysis of the reciprocal
interactions among affect and cognition, behavior and the environment is still
required for complete understanding of consumer behavior. Finally after
completing this section of the text, you should have new insights into the use
of promotions such as those discussed.
Summary
The chapter discussed a
general approach to influencing overt consumer behaviors. Marketers accomplish
this by changing the environment to influence consumers affective and cognitive
responses as intermediate steps or by focusing on behavioral responses somewhat
directly. Two areas of marketing that have focused on overt consumer behavior
sales promotion and social marketing
were discussed. Finally, a model of the steps in developing consumer
behavior influence strategies was presented and details were offered as to how
marketers can use it effectively.
Key
Terms and Concepts
Baseline 239 Scanner cable method
237
Consumer promotion 228 Social marketing 234
Sales promotion 227 Trade promotion 227
Review
and Discussion Questions
1.
This chapter argues that influencing
overt consumer behavior is more critical for marketers than just influencing
affect and cognition. Do you agree? Why or why not?
2.
Offer one example of each of the seven
types of sales promotion listed in the chapter. How many of these have
influenced your consumer behavior? Which ones do you prefer?
3.
Offer one example of a situation where a
sales promotion could affect your purchase probability, purchase quantity,
purchase timing or purchase location.
4.
What factors do you think influence
whether consumer respond to a social marketing campaign to donate blood to the
Red Cross?
5.
What factors do you think influence
whether consumer respond to a social marketing campaign to reduce drunken or
other unsafe driving?
6.
List everything you know (cognition,
feel, affect) and do behavior concerning Crest toothpaste. How could marketers
identify your level of each of these?
7.
In reviewing Exhibit 10.5 which methods
do you think are best for measuring the effects of a marketing strategy?
8.
Why is it so difficult to determine the
reasons for a strategic failure to influence consumers?
9.
If a consumer behavior influence
strategy met its objectives, can the marketer conclude that everything was done
as effectively as possible? Why or why not?
Marketing
Strategy in Action
Cub
Foods
Leslie Wells’s recent
expedition to the new Cub Foods store in Melrose Park, lllinois, was no
ordinary trip to the grocery store. “You go Crazy” says Wells, sounding a
little shell-shocked. Overwhelmed by Cub’s vast selection, tables of samples
and discounts as high as 30 percent, Wells spent $76 on groceries $36 more than
she had planned. Wells tell prey to what a Cub executive calls “The wow factors”
a shopping frenzy bought on by low prices and clever marketing. That’s the
reaction Cub’s super warehouse stores strive for and often get.
Cub Foods has been a
leader in shaking up the food industry and forcing many conventional
supermarkets to lower prices, increase service, or in some cases go out of business.
With Cub and other super warehouse stores springing up cross the country,
shopping habits are changing, too. Some shoppers drive 50 miles or more to a
Cub store instead of going to the nearest neighborhood supermarket and must bag
their own groceries at Cub Foods. Their payoff is that they find almost
everything they need under one roof and most of it is cheaper than at competing
supermarkets. Cub’s low prices, smart marketing and sheer size encourage
shoppers to spend far more than they do in the average supermarket.
The difference between
Cub and most supermarkets is obvious the minute a shopper walks through Cub’s
doors. The entry aisle called a “power alley” by some, is lined two stories
high with specials, such as bean coffee at $2 a pound and half price apple
juice. Above the ceiling joists and girders are exposed, giving “the subliminal
feeling of all the spaciousness up there. It suggests there’s massive buying
going on that translates in a shopper’s mind that there’s tremendous savings
going on as well, “says Paul Suneson, director of marketing research for Cub’s
parent, Super Valu Stores Inc., the nation’s largest food wholesaler.
Cub’s wider than usual
shopping carts, which are supposed to suggest expansive buying, fit easily
through Cub’s wide aisles, which channel
shoppers toward high profit impulse foods. The whole store exudes a seductive,
horn of plenty feeling. Cub customers typically buy in volume and spend $40 to
$50 a trip, four times the supermarket average. The average Cub stores has
salesof $800,000 to $1 million per week, quadruple the volume conventional
stores.
Cub Foods has a simple
approach to grocery retailing: low prices, made possible by rigidly controlled
costs and high volume sales; exceptionally high quality for produce and meats
the items people build shopping trips around; and immense variety. Its all
packaged in clean stores that are twice as big as most warehouse outlets and
four times as big as most supermarkets. A Cub store stocks as many as 25,000
items, double the selection of conventional stores, mixing staples with luxury,
ethnic and hard to find foods. This leads to overwhelming displays 88 kinds of
hot dogs and dinner sausages, 12 brands of Mexican food, and fresh meats and
produce by the ton.
The store distributes maps
to guide shoppers. But without a map or a specific destination, a shopper is
subliminally led around by the arrangement of the aisles. The power alley
spills into the produce department. From there the aisles lead to highly
profitable perimeter departments meat, fish bakery, and frozen foods. The deli
comes before fresh meat because Cub wants shoppers to do their impulse buying
before their budgets are depleted on essentials.
Overall, Cub’s gross
margin the difference between what it pays for its goods and what it sells them
for is 14 percent, six to eight points less than most conventional stores.
However because Cub relies mostly on word of mouth advertising, its ad budgets
are 25 percent less than those of other chains.
Discussion
Questions
1.
List at least five marketing tactics Cub
Foods employs in its stores to increase the probability of purchases.
2.
What accounts for Cub’s success in
generating such large sales per customer aqnd per store?
3.
Given Cub’s lower prices, quality
merchandise excellent location, and superior assortment, offer reasons why many
consumers in its trading areas refuse to shop there.
Source:
Experted
from Steve Weiner and Betsy Morris, “Bigger, Shrewder and Cheaper Cub Leads
Food Stores into the Future,”The Wall
Street Journal, August 26, 1985, p.17; also see Michael Garry,”Cub Embraces
Non-Foods,”Progressive Grocer, December
1991, pp.45-48.