chapter 8 judgment & decision making based on high consumer effort

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Chapter 8 Judgment & Decision Making Based on High Consumer Effort

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Page 1: Chapter 8 Judgment & Decision Making Based on High Consumer Effort

Chapter 8

Judgment & Decision Making Based on High Consumer Effort

Page 2: Chapter 8 Judgment & Decision Making Based on High Consumer Effort

Learning Objectives~ Ch. 8

1. To understand why judgment & decision making is important in consumer behavior

2. To access types of cognitive models for high-effort decision making & influencing

3. To know the role of affective decisions in high-effort situations

4. To identify types of high-effort decisions made by consumers & how marketers can influence them

Page 3: Chapter 8 Judgment & Decision Making Based on High Consumer Effort

Judgment & Decision Making: High Consumer Effort

Page 4: Chapter 8 Judgment & Decision Making Based on High Consumer Effort

High-Effort Judgment Processes

Estimation of likelihood

Goodness/badness– Anchoring/adjustment– Imagery

Conjunctive probability assessment

Illusory correlation

Page 5: Chapter 8 Judgment & Decision Making Based on High Consumer Effort

Biases in Judgment Processes

Confirmation

Self-positivity—prime

Negativity

Mood

Prior brand evaluations

What past brand experiences have biased your judgment about future brand consumption?

Page 6: Chapter 8 Judgment & Decision Making Based on High Consumer Effort

High-Effort Consumer Decisions~1

Deciding which brands to consider– There is a vast menu of choices that you

must break down to possible choices– Consideration set (evoke set)

Deciding what is important to the choice– Goals– Time– Framing

Page 7: Chapter 8 Judgment & Decision Making Based on High Consumer Effort

High-Effort Consumer Decisions~2Deciding what offerings to choose– Thought-based decisions

• Brands• Product attributes• Gains & losses

– Feeling-based decisions• Appraisals & feelings• Affective forecasts

Page 8: Chapter 8 Judgment & Decision Making Based on High Consumer Effort

High-Effort Consumer Decisions~3

Deciding whether to make a decision now– Decision delay

Deciding when alternatives cannot be compared

Page 9: Chapter 8 Judgment & Decision Making Based on High Consumer Effort

High-Effort Decision Making Processes

Consideration set

Inept set

Inert set

What are the differences among these sets?

Page 10: Chapter 8 Judgment & Decision Making Based on High Consumer Effort

High-Effort Thought-Based Decisions

Cognitive decision-making models

Types of decision processes

Compensatory vs. noncompensatory

Brand vs. attribute

Compensatory brand-processing models

Additive difference model

Page 11: Chapter 8 Judgment & Decision Making Based on High Consumer Effort

Cognitive Choice Models

Page 12: Chapter 8 Judgment & Decision Making Based on High Consumer Effort

Brand Processing Models

Compensatory Models– Multiattribute models (Theory of Reasoned Action

[TORA])

Noncompensatory Models– Conjunctive model– Disjunctive model

– What is the main difference between compensatory and noncompensatory models?

Page 13: Chapter 8 Judgment & Decision Making Based on High Consumer Effort

Brand vs. Attribute Models

Noncompensatory

brand-processing

models

- Cutoff levels

- Models

• Conjunctive

• Disjunctive

Noncompensatory

attribute-processing

models

- Lexicographic

- Elimination-by-

aspects

Multiple models

Page 14: Chapter 8 Judgment & Decision Making Based on High Consumer Effort

Noncompensatory Attribute Processing Models

Elimination by Aspects

– Attributes ordered by importance; alternatives acceptable on first attribute proceed to evaluation on further attributes

– I will eliminate any brands with a value of 3 or below, beginning with most important attribute

– Note the “most important” attribute is up to the consumer (e.g., car safety, style, value/gas mileage, etc.)

Page 15: Chapter 8 Judgment & Decision Making Based on High Consumer Effort

Decisions Based on Gains & Losses

Prospect Theory– Losses have more influence than gains– Think-have you ever spent more on gas to “save” on a

price?– Consumers have stronger reaction to price increases than

price decreases

Endowment effect– Ownership increases value (& loss) associated with an item– This is why the 24 hour test drive of vehicles is often a

success

Page 16: Chapter 8 Judgment & Decision Making Based on High Consumer Effort

High-Effort Feeling-Based Decisions

Affective decision making:

decisions are made in a more holistic manner on the basis of feelings or emotions

What is an example of an affective-based purchase that you have made?

Was it a good purchase in retrospect? Why/not?

Page 17: Chapter 8 Judgment & Decision Making Based on High Consumer Effort

Affective Decision-MakingAppraisal Theory: how your emotions are determined by the way you appraise the situation; explains how & why certain emotions can affect future judgments & choices

Affective Forecasting: you predict how you will feel in the future– Valence– Intensity– Duration

Imagery: you imagine yourself consuming a product or service; a key role in emotional decision making

Page 18: Chapter 8 Judgment & Decision Making Based on High Consumer Effort

Additional High-Effort Decisions

1. Decision delay– Decision too risky– Decision entails unpleasant task

2. Decision making when alternatives cannot be compared (noncomparable decisions)

Page 19: Chapter 8 Judgment & Decision Making Based on High Consumer Effort

Noncomparable Decisions

Noncomparable Decisions: process of making decisions about products or services from different categories (e.g., weekend entertainment)

Consumers use an alternative-based strategy OR an attribute-based strategy

2 Main Consumer Strategies:– Alternative-Based (top-down processing): overall

evaluation, may use pros & cons– Attribute-Based (bottom-up processing): consumers form

abstract representations to help them compare options

Page 20: Chapter 8 Judgment & Decision Making Based on High Consumer Effort

Contextual Effects on Consumer Decision Making

Consumer Characteristics

Task Characteristics

Task Definition/Framing

Presence of a Group

Page 21: Chapter 8 Judgment & Decision Making Based on High Consumer Effort

Consumer Characteristics Affecting Decision Making

Expertise

Mood

Time pressure

Extremeness aversion

Metacognitive experiences

Page 22: Chapter 8 Judgment & Decision Making Based on High Consumer Effort

Task Characteristics Affecting Decision Making

Information availability

Information format

Trivial attributes

Page 23: Chapter 8 Judgment & Decision Making Based on High Consumer Effort

Group Decision Making

How does your consumer behavior/decisions change when you are alone vs. with: your friends? parents?

Individual-alone goals

Individual-group goals

Page 24: Chapter 8 Judgment & Decision Making Based on High Consumer Effort

Group Context & Decision Making

Self-Presentation

Minimizing Regret

Information Gathering

Page 25: Chapter 8 Judgment & Decision Making Based on High Consumer Effort

Goal Classes Affecting Decision Making

Page 26: Chapter 8 Judgment & Decision Making Based on High Consumer Effort

Geico gecko is an effective retrieval cue in insurance; generally a high-effort decision. Geico has used repetition to ensure that the gecko/Geico link is stored in consumers’ long-term memory.

© GEICO 2008

Page 27: Chapter 8 Judgment & Decision Making Based on High Consumer Effort
Page 28: Chapter 8 Judgment & Decision Making Based on High Consumer Effort

Automobiles: high effort consumer decision

Smart car has been touted as being environmentally friendly. This ad demonstrates another benefit of the Smart car: the goal of parking in a city.

Courtesy Daimler AG

Page 29: Chapter 8 Judgment & Decision Making Based on High Consumer Effort

Questions?