Chapter 6 Flashcards
What is attitude?
A learning predisposition (from mass media, experience etc.) to behave in a consistently favourable or unfavourable manner with respect to a given object.
What is attitude formation? How do they form attitudes?
Consumers learn attitudes
Sources of attitude formation
- Experience
- Family and friends
- Media/internet/social media
What is the role of personality factors?
The need for cognition or innovativeness affect attitude formation
Explain the tri-component attitude model
Continous cycle
Cognitive
- knowledge and perception of product or brand features
- Expressed as beliefs about a brand
Affective
- Emotions and feelings about a product or brand
- expressed as favourable or unfavourable attitude toward a brand
Conative
- Actions or behaviour toward a product or brand (ex. Intention to buy)
- Expressed as intention to purchase a brand
What is the likert scale?
The most popular form of attitude scale, where consumers are asked to check numbers corresponding to their level of “agreement” or “disagreement” with a series of statements about a studied object
What is altering consumer attitudes?
- changing beliefs about products
- changing brand image
- changing beliefs about competing brands
What is the attitude-toward-object model
- used to change attitudes
- ways: add an attribute, change perceived importance of an attribute, develop new products
What are other multi-attribute models?
Theory of reasoned action (tri-component attitude model, normative beliefs, motivation to comply with norms)
Theory of trying-to-consume (attitude toward the behaviour, personal impediments, environmental impediments)
Attitude-toward-the-ad model(attitudes toward brands are formed based on how consumers feel about the advertisements)
Attitude toward the object (does the brand have the needed attribute?, what is the importance of that attribute?)
Attitude toward behaviour (attitude toward the brand, how do I feel about buying this brand)
Attitude toward social media posts (attitudes toward brands are formed based on how consumers feel about what they see on social media about the brands)
What are the functional approach methods?
Utilitarian function
Ego-defensive function
Value-expressive function
Knowledge function (consumer has a need to understand)
Associated brands with worthy causes and events
What is the likelihood model?
The proposition that attitudes can be changed by either one of two different routes to persuasion - a central route or a peripheral route - and that the cognitive elaboration related to the processing of information received via each route is different.
Describe the central route?
-high involvement (important to the person, lots of thought)
- considered thought and cognitive processing
- learning through: attributed-based information, high quality arguments, exertion of effort to learn, comprehend, evaluate.
- comparative ads (work well for persuasion, ex. Paper towel)
- objective knowledge
Describe the peripheral route
-Low involvement
-Little thought and little information processing
-Learning through: repetition, passive processing of visual cues, holistic processing
- Non comparative ads
- Subjective knowledge
Apply product knowledge and comparative ads to central or peripheral routes
Comparative ads:
- Comparative ads are processed centrally
- Noncomparative ads processed peripherally
Product knowledge
- Higher objective knowledge for utilitiarian products than hedonic products (meaning usefulness)
- Higher subjective knowledge for hedonic products than utilitarian products (make you feel good)
What is dissonance
Regrets! There is cognitive dissonance and post purchase dissonance
Ways to reduce post-purchase dissonance
1. Rationalize decision
2. Seek advertisements that support choices (avoid competitive ads)
3. “Sell” friends on the positive features of the purchase
4. Seek reassurance from satisfied owners
Explain attribution theory
Self perception attribution (when something goes well, you take credit, but if it goes poorly, you are quick to blame)
Defensive attribution
Foot-in-the-door technique
Door-in-the-face technique