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COPYRIGHT © 2005 Thomson South-Western, a part of The Thomson Corporation. Thomson, the Star logo, and South-Western are trademarks used herein under license.

COPYRIGHT © 2005 Thomson South-Western, a part of The Thomson Corporation. Thomson, the Star logo, and South-Western are trademarks used herein under license.

COPYRIGHT © 2005 Thomson South-Western, a part of The Thomson Corporation. Thomson, the Star logo, and South-Western are trademarks used herein under license.

Roger D. Blackwell Paul W. Miniard James F. Engel

Consumer Behavior

Requests for permission to make copies of any part of the work should be mailed to the following address:

Permissions Department, Thomson Business and Economics

5109 Natorp BoulevardMason, OH 45040

800–423–0563

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Consumer Knowledge

CHAPTER 9

COPYRIGHT © 2005 Thomson South-Western, a part of The Thomson Corporation. Thomson, the Star logo, and South-Western are trademarks used herein under license.

COPYRIGHT © 2005 Thomson South-Western, a part of The Thomson Corporation. Thomson, the Star logo, and South-Western are trademarks used herein under license.

Importance of Consumer Knowledge

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What we know or don’t know strongly influences our decision-making processes

It affects how decisions are made

It may determine the finaldecision itself

Importance of Consumer Knowledge

COPYRIGHT © 2005 Thomson South-Western, a part of The Thomson Corporation. Thomson, the Star logo, and South-Western are trademarks used herein under license.

Blackwell, Miniard, and Engel, Consumer Behavior, Ninth Edition, Copyright© 2001 by Harcourt, Inc. All rights reserved.

Consumer Knowledge Affects Product Demand

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Knowledge about a brand’s associations (linkages in memory between the brand and other concepts) can affect consumer behavior in many ways

Importance of Consumer Knowledge

COPYRIGHT © 2005 Thomson South-Western, a part of The Thomson Corporation. Thomson, the Star logo, and South-Western are trademarks used herein under license.

Blackwell, Miniard, and Engel, Consumer Behavior, Ninth Edition, Copyright© 2001 by Harcourt, Inc. All rights reserved.

Different Brand Associations HaveDifferent Effects on Consumers

Source: A. Belen del Rio, Rodolfo Vacquez, and Victor Iglesias, “The Effects of Brand Associations on Consumer Response,” Journal of Consumer Marketing, 18 (2001), 410–425.

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Knowledge shapes inferences about unknown product attributes using known product attributes

Importance of Consumer Knowledge

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Knowledge about competitors’ prices can determine consumer acceptance of a company’s price

Importance of Consumer Knowledge

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Knowledge can influence consumer response to salespeople

Importance of Consumer Knowledge

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Types of Consumer Knowledge

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Product Knowledge

Purchase Knowledge

Consumption and Usage Knowledge

Persuasion Knowledge

Self-Knowledge

Types of Consumer Knowledge

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Types of Consumer Knowledge

Product Knowledge

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Product Knowledge

Represents information stored in consumers’ memory about a general product category

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Represents information stored in consumers’ memory about products

Can be divided into product category knowledge (i.e., knowledge about a general product category) and brand knowledge (i.e., knowledge about a brand in the product category)

Product Knowledge

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Product Category Knowledge

Product novices possess very simply levels of product category knowledge

Product experts possess vast amounts of product category knowledge

Product Knowledge

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Brand Knowledge

Whether the consumer is aware of the brand or not is the most fundamental aspect of brand knowledge

Product Knowledge

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Creating knowledge of the brand’s existence is a challenge facing:

New products in the current market

Product Knowledge

COPYRIGHT © 2005 Thomson South-Western, a part of The Thomson Corporation. Thomson, the Star logo, and South-Western are trademarks used herein under license.

Blackwell, Miniard, and Engel, Consumer Behavior, Ninth Edition, Copyright© 2001 by Harcourt, Inc. All rights reserved.

Americans’ Awareness of New Products in 2004

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Creating knowledge of the brand’s existence is a challenge facing:

New products in the current market

Established brands and companies in the current market

Product Knowledge

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Creating knowledge of the brand’s existence is a challenge facing:

New products in the current market

Established brands and companies in the current market

Established brands and companies in new markets

Product Knowledge

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Assessing Awareness

Product Knowledge

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Assessing Awareness

Recall: which brands can be retrieved from memory

Top-of-the-mind awareness: the particular brand that is remembered first

Product Knowledge

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Assessing Awareness

Recall: which brands can be retrieved from memory

Top-of-the-mind awareness: the particular brand that is remembered first

Recognition: identify familiar brands from a list

Product Knowledge

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Assessing Awareness

Choosing the best indicator of knowledge depends on whether consumers construct their consideration sets based on recall or recognition

Product Knowledge

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Brand image: defined by entire array of associations activated from memory when consumers think about a brand

May involve product attributes and associations

May also include endorsers, ad campaigns, symbols, product slogans, etc.

Product Knowledge

COPYRIGHT © 2005 Thomson South-Western, a part of The Thomson Corporation. Thomson, the Star logo, and South-Western are trademarks used herein under license.

Blackwell, Miniard, and Engel, Consumer Behavior, Ninth Edition, Copyright© 2001 by Harcourt, Inc. All rights reserved.

Linking Brands to Product Slogans

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Image analysis: involves examining the current set of brand associations that exist in the marketplace

Identify attributes and associations that come to mind about the brand

Assess strengths of associations

Examine what an association represents in the consumer’s psyche

Product Knowledge

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Perceptual Mapping: image analysis that derives brand images from consumers’ similarity judgments

Consumers judge the similarity of brands examined in the analysis

Brands perceived as similar are located close together on the perceptual map

Placement of the “ideal brand” may suggest new products

Product Knowledge

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Blackwell, Miniard, and Engel, Consumer Behavior, Ninth Edition, Copyright© 2001 by Harcourt, Inc. All rights reserved.

Hypothetical Perceptual Map

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Product Knowledge

Purchase Knowledge

Types of Consumer Knowledge

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Encompasses the various pieces of information consumers possess about buying products

Includes information about the product’s price, where it can be purchased, and whether it can be purchased less expensively later

Purchase Knowledge

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How much does it cost?

Knowledge about typical range of prices for a product helps consumer evaluate fairness of the price of a particular brand

Businesses are concerned about the accuracy of consumers’ price knowledge and what consumers know about their competitors’ prices (relative price knowledge)

Purchase Knowledge

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When to buy?

Knowledge about when a product typically goes on sale may delay purchase

May determine when new innovations are purchased—many consumers do not purchase new innovations when introduced because they believe the price will drop over time

Purchase Knowledge

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Where to buy?

Purchase Knowledge

Knowledge about where to buy aproduct guides purchase decisions

Includes knowledge about where product is located in the store—when consumers are unfamiliar with store layout, they rely more on in-store information

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Creating Knowledge about Where to Buy

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Product Knowledge

Purchase Knowledge

Consumption & Usage Knowledge

Types of Consumer Knowledge

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Encompasses the information in memory about how a product can be consumed and what is required to actually use it

Consumers are unlikely to buy a product when they lack information about how to use it

Consumption & Usage Knowledge

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Creating Usage Knowledge

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Consumption & Usage Knowledge

Sometimes consumer have incomplete information about different ways a product can be consumed

Care must be taken in selecting new uses for an existing product so not to lower its appeal

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Expanding Usage Knowledge

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Product Knowledge

Purchase Knowledge

Consumption and Usage Knowledge

Persuasion Knowledge

Types of Consumer Knowledge

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Information about what consumers know about the goals and tactics of those trying to persuade them

Persuasion knowledge influences how consumers respond to persuasion attempts

Knowledge about a particular tactic may eliminate its effectiveness

Persuasion Knowledge

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Product Knowledge

Purchase Knowledge

Consumption and Usage Knowledge

Persuasion Knowledge

Self-Knowledge

Types of Consumer Knowledge

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A person’s understanding of one’s own mental processes

Can the consumer accurately assess and report the importance of product attributes used in the decision process?

Companies are better off relying on the results of statistical models than those reported by consumers

Self-Knowledge

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Sources of Consumer Knowledge

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Sources of Consumer Knowledge

Personal versus Impersonal

Business versus Nonbusiness Controlled

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Consumers’ Sources of Knowledge

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Sources of Consumer Knowledge

Business sources of knowledge are often viewed with suspicion

Consumers have more faith in personal knowledge sources that are not controlled by businesses

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Sources of Consumer Knowledge

Differing credibility of sources

Relative influence of product sources depends on the type of information conveyed

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Perceptions of Media Credibility

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Sources of Consumer Knowledge

Experience from buying and consuming a product

Direct experience increases confidence in knowledge and makes it more likely to be used in making decisions

Companies may adjust their marketing strategies when targeting consumers lacking direct experience with the product

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Sources of Consumer Knowledge

Companies need to decide which source to use when delivering their messages

Essential that the company monitor what is being transmitted to consumers about them

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Monitoring Media Coverage

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Benefits of Understanding Consumer Knowledge

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Benefits of Understanding Consumer Knowledge

Gauging Positioning Success

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Benefits of Understanding Consumer Knowledge

Gauging Positioning SuccessBy examining a product’s image among target consumers, a company can determine its success in achieving the desired image among consumers?

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Benefits of Understanding Consumer Knowledge

Identifying Purchase Barriers

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Benefits of Understanding Consumer Knowledge

Identifying Purchase BarriersCan occur due to a lack of knowledge

Knowledge gaps: an absence of information in memory

Firms need to identify knowledge gaps which undermine product purchase

Knowledge gaps may exist for new and existing products

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Educating Consumers

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Benefits of Understanding Consumer Knowledge

Identifying Purchase BarriersCan occur due to a lack of knowledge

Can occur due to inaccurate knowledge (misperceptions)

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Benefits of Understanding Consumer Knowledge

MisperceptionsCan occur in many areas including knowledge of the brand, company, product, or product’s price

Fixing misperceptions requires changing how the product is perceived

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Benefits of Understanding Consumer Knowledge

Discovering New Uses

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Benefits of Understanding Consumer Knowledge

Discovering New UsesConsumers often develop new ways of using a product

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New Product Uses

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Benefits of Understanding Consumer Knowledge

Discovering New UsesConsumers often develop new ways of using a product

Companies may find that these new uses can be promoted as a means of broadening a product’s appeal

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Benefits of Understanding Consumer Knowledge

Gauging the Severity of Competitive Threats

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Benefits of Understanding Consumer Knowledge

Gauging the Severity of Competitive Threats

How much do consumers know about competitive products?

Understanding what consumers know about competitive brands can guide marketing activities with respect to those competitive brands

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Benefits of Understanding Consumer Knowledge

Enhancing the Effectiveness of Customer Recruitment Activities

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Benefits of Understanding Consumer Knowledge

Enhancing the Effectiveness of Customer Recruitment Activities

What product changes are needed to attract competitors’ customers?

How might these changes best be accomplished? Advertising, personal sales, or public relations?

Should sales messages focus on technical information or easy to understand product attributes?

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Safeguarding and improving consumer welfare is the primary concern

Policies and legislation aimed at protecting the uninformed consumer

Includes areas such as appropriate disclosure of information and educating consumers

Implications for Public Policy

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