2.5 Reactance and Persuasion Knowledge Flashcards
1
Q
- Reactance
- Elements of Reactance
- Typical reaction
A
Reactance:
- Psychological tension that appears when a person feels threatened in his/her freedom concerning opinion and behavior
Elements of Reactance:
- Affective component: anger
- Cognitive component: negative cognitions
Reactance is more intense if:
- The higher the perceived pressure and the experienced importance of the restricted behavior and the wider the range of the restrictions
Typical reaction:
- Eliminate the restrictions reasons, if this is not possible the restricted option becomes more attractive
2
Q
Example Reactance
A
- Reactance often results when customers perceive a restriction of choice when a product is scarce
- The threatened or lost alternative may increase in perceived value
Practical examples of how marketers can make use of reactance:
- Sale ,Limited Editions , Statements that only few items are available (scarcity)
3
Q
Persuasion Knowledge Model
Definition
Key message
Result
A
Explains:
- how a recipient reacts to a persuasion attempt
Key message:
- Recipients try to retain control over persuasion attempts via advertising by learning to recognize and handle such attempts of persuasion
Result:
- Recipients recognize, analyze, interpret, evaluate and remember
- attempts of influence and choose a suitable tactic to react to the influence and reach their own goals.
4
Q
Usage of Persuasion Knowledge Model
A
- the situation makes ulterior motives accessible. Accessibility depends on expectations, strength of association, frequency of activation, and recency of activation
–> Sales people, unsympathetic companies or companies with a bad image (or current scandal)
- consumers have unconstrained resources. Using PK requires higher-order attributional processing (instead of solely automatic processing)
5
Q
Effects during Persuasion Episode
Example PK
A
Effects during the persuasion episode:
- Distraction of the target person by drawing the attention from topic knowledge to persuasion knowledge
- Change in attitude towards the agent
- Devaluation of actual message by perception of used influence tactic
Example: Selling Situation: Blue ray player at Conrad
Agent = Selling Staff, Company, Advertisement; Promoter
- Topic knowledge: The staff member will share its knowledge on the players with the customer
- Persuasion knowledge: The staff member will use it to persuade (e.g., make compliments).
- Target knowledge: The staff member knows the customer from prior purchases or uses stereotypical knowledge and will base his/her behavior on this
Target = Customer
- Topic knowledge, e.g., knowledge and opinion about Blu-ray players
- Persuasion knowledge: The customer knows that the sales staff must sell products and is trained to do so, influences how persuasion attempts are analyzed, remembered and coped with.
- Agent knowledge: e.g. whether the agent is trustable/competent, etc.
Explanation:
- During the persuasion episode, both will interact, check out whether the other person indicates to have/use persuasion knowledge and will correspond accordingly (e.g., the target with reactance, the agent with the use of persuasive tactics).
- The target might engage in Persuasion Coping Behavior if it feels that the agent tries to persuade it (Persuasion Attempt)
6
Q
Consumer strategies for resisting advertising
A
- Forced exposure: At the cinema
- Self-affirmation: Sales staff praises your knowledge or style!, “As a mother, you only want the best”
- Branded contents: YouTube Tutorials,
- Freedom: When sales staff tells you they don’t want to influence you!