2: Decision Making Flashcards

1
Q

What are the 6 Stages of Decision Making?

A
  1. Problem Recognition
  2. Information Search
  3. Evaluation of Alternatives
  4. Product Choice
  5. Product Consumption
  6. Post-Consumption Evaluation
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2
Q

How can the marketer influence problem

recognition?

A
  • Social Norms & Cultural Mores

- Tactics to promote Problem Recognition:

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3
Q

Problem Recognition: Which works best for Educate?

A
  • Products that are complex, novel, risky, or durable
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4
Q

Problem Recognition: Which works best for Remind?

A
- Products that are common, well-understood, or
frequently bought (non-durables)
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5
Q

Problem Recognition: Which works best for Exaggerate?

A
  • Products that are not risky or where problem is

underestimated by consumer

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6
Q

Three basic factors that impact amount of

search:

A
  • Optimizer or satisficer?
  • Consumer expertise
  • Product risk
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7
Q

Information Search: Optimizing versus Satisficing?

A

Optimizers search much more
- Do consumers optimize or satisfice?
- Depends on both the importance of the purchase
to the consumer (high involvement) and their
belief that there is one BEST choice

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8
Q

Information Search: How expertise impacts search?

A

Internal
- memory of own experiences, beliefs
External
- magazines, salespeople, opinion leaders, word-of-mouth

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9
Q

Information Search: Four reasons why experts search more?

A
1) Economic model of search
\+ More benefits, fewer costs
2) “Knowing what you don’t know”
3) Consumption vocabulary
\+ More external search
4) Experts can do more internal search
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10
Q

Information Search: How does product risk influence search?

A

Perceived Risk
- Consumers search more when the purchase
decision is seen as risky
- 5 Types of Product Risk: Monetary, Functional,
Physical, Social, and Psychological Risk
- Marketers can increase the perception of risk
- What firms want to increase search?

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11
Q

Evaluation of Alternatives: Can you influence the consideration set?

A

part-list cuing effect

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12
Q

Evaluation of Alternatives: Evaluative Criteria

A
  • the dimensions used to judge and compare products
  • just a subset of all possible dimensions
  • consumer uses those that are salient
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13
Q

Evaluation of Alternatives: Point of purchase

A

displays to educate consumers about key attributes

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14
Q

Product Choice?

A
  • Choice of option with highest utility

- Decision Framing – perceived utility

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15
Q

Prospect Theory: Framing & Loss Aversion

A
-Prospect theory relies on this
value function which shows a
differential approach to valuing
gains and losses.
-Thus, framing is the way in which
a person defines a choice as a
gain or a loss.
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16
Q

Prospect Theory: 4 Principles of Mental Accounting (Thaler)

A
  1. Segregate gains
  2. Integrate losses
  3. Segregate a small
    gain from a larger loss
    (silver lining effect)
  4. Integrate a small loss
    into a larger gain
    (income tax effect)
17
Q

Prospect Theory: Framing in choice…

A
Sure Thing Bias: The human tendency to
OVERWEIGHT “sure things.”
- Example: Probabilistic Insurance
- 99% à 100%
- 80% à 81%
18
Q

Prospect Theory: Framing in choice

A
  • FRAMING uses the
    human tendency to
    be sensitive to
    losses.
19
Q

Post-Consumption Evaluation

A
  • “Buyer’s Remorse”
    Reactance
    Cognitive Dissonance & CD Reduction
20
Q

Cognitive Dissonance:- What is dissonance?

A

-Dissonance Reduction Processes
Even-handed before, biased after
Bias? Inflate the good, ignore the bad

21
Q

How can managers facilitate reduction?

A
How can managers facilitate reduction?
 Small good things
 Mini-cooper example
 Don’t ask for an evaluation (right away)
 Land Rover example