Categorization Flashcards
Schemas
beliefs about and knowledge linked to a concept (product, brand, people, etc.)
Image
A subset of salient and feeling-related associations stored in a brand schema
Brand Personality
the set of associations that reflect the personification of the brand.
Like human personality, it’s distinctive and enduring.
AXE: seductive, masculine, individualistic, unconventional
Marlboro: masculine, adventurous, free
Creating schemas, images, and personalities
Help consumers better understand what a product is offering and how it is different from the competition.
Can be created by brand extensions, licensing, brand alliances, and sponsorship.
Scripts
Knowledge of a sequence of events
Procedure for doing various things learned over time
Tell a story
Visit a restaurant
Marketing of services
Print ads
Helps marketers understand how consumers buy and use an offering
May want consumer to consider brand as part of scripted activity
Taxonomic
Similar objects in the same category
Objects in categories have same features
Lots of sharing within categories
Little sharing across categories
Taxonomic Categorical Structure
Hierarchical structure (“different levels of specificity”)
Basic
Superordinate
Subordinate
Part-list cueing
harder to come up with members if given a few to start.
Graded Structure
Some members represent category better than others
Best example of a category
IE Protoype
Most easily recalled
Standard of comparison for category
Shares the most associations with other members of its own category
Downsides of categories
Sales may be lost as well as gained from such over-familiarity
Legal: a trademark that is used to describe a type of product rather than a brand of product, is said to be generic and won’t be given any protection (lose legal status as a trademark)
Goal-Derived Categories
Contain things relevant to a goal
Focus on consumer need rather than product form
We use rules/experience to create these
ie wedding gift, quick breakfast
Taxonomic
naturally occurring relationship between objects and features Examples: dogs, birds, beverages, cameras, cars
Analogies
Help people better understand your product (providing a reference point)
Fax machine is like..
Gatorade is like..
iPad is like..
How Marketers Influence Categorization?
Create a new category
Often a combination of two “known” categories
Goal-derived categories
Repositioning:
Can use placement to change categorization