Marketing 10th Canadian Edition By Frederick Crane - Test Bank

Marketing 10th Canadian Edition By Frederick Crane - Test Bank   Instant Download - Complete Test Bank With Answers     Sample Questions Are Posted Below   Chapter 05 Consumer Behaviour     Multiple Choice Questions Which of the following statements about how women buy cars today is NOT true? A.Women prefer minimal maintenance. B. Most …

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Marketing 10th Canadian Edition By Frederick Crane – Test Bank

 

Instant Download – Complete Test Bank With Answers

 

 

Sample Questions Are Posted Below

 

Chapter 05

Consumer Behaviour

 

 

Multiple Choice Questions

  1. Which of the following statements about how women buy cars today is NOT true?
    A.Women prefer minimal maintenance.
    B. Most women approach car buying in a deliberate manner, gathering information before they go to a dealership.
    C. Most women enjoy the challenge of negotiating price.
    D. 55 percent of all vehicle purchases in Canada are by women.

(Chapter Opening Example) Research has indicated that women dread car price negotiations.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 05-01 Describe the stages in the consumer purchase decision process.
Topic: 05-02 Enlightened Carmakers Know What Custom(h)ers Value

  1. Many automakers have changed how they conduct business because of female consumers. All of the following are true except:
    A.vehicles are designed for easy entry and exit.
    B. women purchase the majority of cars sold in Canada.
    C. design and marketing are still mostly done by males because they understand the female driver.
    D. dealerships are now more “female friendly.”

(Chapter Opening Example) Enlightened carmakers have hired women designers, engineers, and marketing executives to better understand and serve this valuable automobile consum(h)er and influenc(h)er of purchase decisions.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-01 Describe the stages in the consumer purchase decision process.
Topic: 05-02 Enlightened Carmakers Know What Custom(h)ers Value

 

  1. Which of the following statements is true?
    A.For men, styling is more about a car’s exterior lines and accents. Women are more interested in interior design and finishes.
    B. Men purchase the majority of new cars sold in Canada.
    C. Design and marketing are still mostly done by males because they understand the female driver.
    D. Men approach the car shopping experience as an intelligence gathering expedition. They actively seek information and postpone a purchase decision until all options have been evaluated.

(Chapter Opening Example) For men, styling is more about a car’s exterior lines and accents. Women are more interested in interior design and finishes.

 

Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-01 Describe the stages in the consumer purchase decision process.
Topic: 05-02 Enlightened Carmakers Know What Custom(h)ers Value

  1. When considering buying the latest smartphone, you talk to various friends, research extensively online, and demo several products in store. What are you undertaking?
    A.Marketing
    B. Consumer behaviour
    C. Market research
    D. Consumer management

The actions that a person takes in purchasing and using products and services, including the mental and social processes that precede and follow these actions.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-01 Describe the stages in the consumer purchase decision process.
Topic: 05-02 Enlightened Carmakers Know What Custom(h)ers Value

 

  1. After buying your new smartphone, you proceed through several stages that may include the feeling of post-purchase anxiety. This end-to-end process is referred as:
    A.situational analysis sequence.
    B. VALS inventory.
    C. hierarchy of learning.
    D. purchase decision process.

The stages a buyer passes through in making choices about which products and services to buy.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-01 Describe the stages in the consumer purchase decision process.
Topic: 05-03 Consumer Purchase Decision Process

  1. Following on the 25th anniversary of the “Back to the Future” franchise, Nike has developed a new automatic lacing system for a range of high-top basketball shoes. Nike believes this new characteristic – promoted as quicktie – will make the new shoe a superior product. Due to increased costs of materials and production, the price will be about $150. Based on responses of people who have tried the new product, Nike is confident consumers will have a relatively favourable evaluation of the shoe. To have a favourable evaluation, consumers must first:
    A.experience problem recognition.
    B. consult a public source of information.
    C. consult a personal source of information.
    D. make a purchase decision.

A buyer passes through five stages of the purchase decision process when making choices about which products and services to buy. The initial step in the process is problem recognition.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Hard
Learning Objective: 05-01 Describe the stages in the consumer purchase decision process.
Topic: 05-04 Problem Recognition

 

  1. As an aspiring athlete you train hard several times during the week. Your coach asks you to train in a specific ‘heart rate zone,’ however, you do not possess the required equipment to accurately measure your heart rate during training. You know to improve your training you must fix this issue, what have you experienced?
    A.problem recognition
    B. alternative evaluation
    C. cognitive dissonance
    D. routine response behaviour

Problem recognition, the initial step in the purchase decision, is perceiving a difference between a person’s ideal and actual situations that is big enough to trigger a decision.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-01 Describe the stages in the consumer purchase decision process.
Topic: 05-04 Problem Recognition

  1. One of your classmates consistently showed up to class late, finally your Professor, Stephen, asked the student what the issue was. When the marketing student said, “It’s really hard for me to get to class on time without a car,” she was entering which stage of the consumer decision process?
    A.purchase decision
    B. alternative evaluation
    C. information search
    D. problem recognition

During the purchase decision process, an individual at the problem recognition will perceive differences between his or her ideal and actual situations big enough to trigger a decision. The student would be unable to get to class without a car.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-01 Describe the stages in the consumer purchase decision process.
Topic: 05-04 Problem Recognition

 

  1. When the marketing student who has recently moved out of residence and now shares a house with 4 others, where it is the responsibility of the tenants to mow the large lawn said, “It’s really hard for me to mow such a large lawn without a power mower,” he was entering which stage of the consumer decision process?
    A.problem recognition
    B. alternative evaluation
    C. information search
    D. purchase decision

During the purchase decision process, an individual at the problem recognition will perceive differences between his or her ideal and actual situations big enough to trigger a decision. The student would be unable to mow the large lawn without a power mower.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-01 Describe the stages in the consumer purchase decision process.
Topic: 05-04 Problem Recognition

  1. When Marty attended his first new product development class, he realized that he ought to have an AutoCAD type software program to enable him to do proper designs or else he would be unable to do his assignments. In which stage of the consumer purchase decision process was Marty when he made this realization?
    A.information search
    B. problem recognition
    C. purchase behaviour
    D. alternative evaluation

During the purchase decision process, an individual at the problem recognition will perceive differences between his or her ideal and actual situations big enough to trigger a decision. Marty realized that he was unable to pass statistics without the right tools.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-01 Describe the stages in the consumer purchase decision process.
Topic: 05-04 Problem Recognition

 

  1. At what stage in the consumer purchase decision process might you review the report: “Canada’s Most Trusted Brands: Hockey Equipment?”
    A.problem recognition
    B. information search
    C. alternative evaluation
    D. purchase decision

Once a need is recognized the consumer enters the information search stage.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-01 Describe the stages in the consumer purchase decision process.
Topic: 05-05 Information Search

  1. The question “How long is the warranty for this smartphone?” would be asked during the _____ stage in the consumer purchase decision process.
    A.problem recognition
    B. information search
    C. alternative evaluation
    D. purchase decision

The information search stage clarifies the problem for the consumer by suggesting criteria to use for the purchase, yields brand names that might meet the criteria, and develops consumer value perceptions.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-01 Describe the stages in the consumer purchase decision process.
Topic: 05-05 Information Search

  1. Jo is considering purchasing a new cat, but is unsure of which ones shed, which ones are indoor or outdoor, and which ones are most friendly around children. She decides to ask several friends, who already have cats, to list out the reasons they used when they purchased their own cats. In which stage of the consumer purchase decision process is Jo?
    A.problem recognition
    B. information search
    C. alternative evaluation
    D. purchase decision

The information search stage clarifies the problem for the consumer by suggesting criteria to use for the purchase, yields brand names that might meet the criteria, and develops consumer value perceptions.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-01 Describe the stages in the consumer purchase decision process.
Topic: 05-05 Information Search

 

  1. Kirk, an avid Ultimate Fighting Champion (UFC) fan, is glued to the television screen at his local sports bar every Saturday evening as he watches his favourite fighters. He thinks pay-per-view matches would be more enjoyable at home if he had a high-definition big screen television. Kirk has begun talking with his friends to learn more about the various brands of high-definition big screen televisions available. In which step of the purchase decision making process is Kirk engaged?
    A.problem recognition
    B. evaluation of alternatives
    C. purchase decision
    D. information search

After a consumer has recognized a problem, the next step in the decision making process is to search for information. When past experience or personal knowledge does not provide adequate information upon which a consumer can make a decision, the consumer may seek information from external sources. Primary external sources of information for many consumers are family and friends.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-01 Describe the stages in the consumer purchase decision process.
Topic: 05-05 Information Search

  1. When the elementary teacher needed to buy poster board for her class, she remembered that she had found some poster boards at her local 99 Cents Only store, at Walmart, and at her Family Dollar Store. What term best describes the information search method used by the teacher?
    A.personal external source
    B. public external source
    C. market-dominated external source
    D. internal search

When you scan your memory for previous purchase experiences, you are engaged in an internal search.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-01 Describe the stages in the consumer purchase decision process.
Topic: 05-05 Information Search

 

  1. Sid’s friend Jerry turns 40 next week and will have a party. Sid decided to purchase some vintage wine as a present. Because they like the wines Sid scanned his memory for various wine options. This is an example of what part of the consumer purchase decision process?
    A.memorization
    B. external search
    C. evaluative criteria
    D. internal search

The stage in the consumer decision process when consumers scan their memory for previous experiences with products or a brand is called internal search.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-01 Describe the stages in the consumer purchase decision process.
Topic: 05-05 Information Search

  1. In the consumer purchase decision process when consumers scan their memory for previous experiences with products or brands, this is referred to as a(n).
    A.problem recognition
    B. internal search
    C. external search
    D. purchase task

The stage in the consumer decision process when consumers scan their memory for previous experiences with products or a brand is called internal search.

 

Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-01 Describe the stages in the consumer purchase decision process.
Topic: 05-05 Information Search

  1. An owner of two new kittens would most likely use an internal search or prior experiences when purchasing:
    A.a gift for a best friend.
    B. a Blu-Ray player.
    C. cat litter.
    D. perfume.

A consumer would typically find an internal search or previous experiences provide enough purchase information for frequently purchased products such as cat litter.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-01 Describe the stages in the consumer purchase decision process.
Topic: 05-05 Information Search

 

  1. Fred is an avid comic book reader and has decided to purchase a comic book for his best friend. Since the two friends enjoy the same types of comics, Fred will know exactly which comic his friend would like. When Fred was scanning his memory for various comic book options, he was engaged in:
    A.problem recognition.
    B. an internal search.
    C. an external search.
    D. a purchase task.

The stage in the consumer decision process when consumers scan their memory for previous experiences with products or a brand is called internal search.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-01 Describe the stages in the consumer purchase decision process.
Topic: 05-05 Information Search

  1. When considering purchasing a new computer, you investigate several social media sites to gather information on products, services, and brands. Which of the following statements is correct?
    A.social media does not play a major role in the purchasing decision
    B. brands are paying very close attention to what others are saying about them on social media
    C. social media often contains incorrect information
    D. brands are not concerned about social media reviews

As you have already learned from previous chapters, more and more often, consumers are relying on social media for information on products, services, and brands, and paying very close attention to what others are saying about various brands on these social media sites.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-01 Describe the stages in the consumer purchase decision process.
Topic: 05-05 Information Search

 

  1. Using Internet for an external search for product information satisfies which requirement?
    A.The cost of gathering information is low.
    B. Review of past experience provides adequate information.
    C. The risk of making a wrong purchase decision is low.
    D. The item is frequently purchased.

An external search for information is especially needed when past experience is insufficient, the risk of making a wrong decision is high, and the cost of gathering information is low.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-01 Describe the stages in the consumer purchase decision process.
Topic: 05-05 Information Search

  1. Sarah wants to purchase a new iPad. She is unsure about what peripherals she will need. As a result, she has begun asking for advice from friends and relatives. In addition, she has talked to several consumer electronics salespeople and has looked at the Apple website. Sarah is engaging in:
    A.problem recognition.
    B. an internal search.
    C. an external search.
    D. a purchase task.

Sarah is externally searching for information about iPads. An external search is especially important when the cost of gathering information is low, when past experience is insufficient and when the risk of making a wrong decision is high.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-01 Describe the stages in the consumer purchase decision process.
Topic: 05-05 Information Search

  1. Examples of public sources of information for an external information search include:
    A.advertising.
    B. Consumer Reports magazine.
    C. sales personnel.
    D. friends and relatives.

Public sources include various product-rating organizations such as Consumer Reports, government agencies, and radio and TV “consumer programs.”

 

Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 05-01 Describe the stages in the consumer purchase decision process.
Topic: 05-05 Information Search

 

  1. An example of a marketer-dominated source of information for an external information search is:
    A.point-of-purchase displays.
    B. Consumer Reports magazine.
    C. consumer programs on talk radio stations.
    D. friends and relatives.

Marketer-dominated sources of information originate with the sellers of products and services, and include advertising, salespeople, and point-of-purchase displays in stores.

 

Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 05-01 Describe the stages in the consumer purchase decision process.
Topic: 05-05 Information Search

  1. You recently searched a brand’s website to find information about purchasing a new netbook. This is an example of:
    A.marketer-dominated source
    B. brand website source
    C. social media source
    D. internal search

Marketer-dominated sources of information originate with the sellers of products and services, and include company websites, advertising, salespeople, and point-of-purchase displays in stores.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-01 Describe the stages in the consumer purchase decision process.
Topic: 05-05 Information Search

  1. All of the following statements are correct about visiting a travel agent to search for information, except:
    A.a travel agent is like a salesperson
    B. a travel agent is an example of a marketer-dominated source
    C. a travel agent is part of an internal search
    D. a travel agent should provide unbiased answers

Marketer-dominated sources of information originate with the sellers of products and services, and include company websites, advertising, salespeople, and point-of-purchase displays in stores.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-01 Describe the stages in the consumer purchase decision process.
Topic: 05-05 Information Search

 

  1. Kip was thirsty, but he couldn’t decide what he wanted to drink. When Kip saw the television ad for Mountain Dew, he knew exactly what he wanted. Kip’s information search was shorted by the appearance of a _____ source.
    A.private information
    B. consumer-controlled
    C. public information
    D. marketer-dominated

Marketer-dominated sources of information originate with the sellers of products and services, and include advertising, salespeople, and point-of-purchase displays in stores.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-01 Describe the stages in the consumer purchase decision process.
Topic: 05-05 Information Search

  1. Ruby is buying a new watch appropriate to her role as the newest vice president at her company. She was overheard telling a co-worker, “The Rolex has a great reputation, but the Tag just looks nicer.” In which stage of the purchase decision process is Ruby?
    A.problem recognition
    B. information search
    C. alternative evaluation
    D. purchase decision

The problem recognition stage prompted the need for a new classier piece of ‘jewelry’, the information stage clarified the problem for the consumer by suggesting methods of satisfying the need by means of an watch, earrings, necklace, etc. The alternative evaluation stage provides evaluative criteria by which to make a decision from an evoked set. In this case the purchase will be a specific watch, but is it more important to image or preferred look?

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-01 Describe the stages in the consumer purchase decision process.
Topic: 05-06 Alternative Evaluation

 

  1. The objective and subjective attributes of a brand that consumers use to compare different products are called:
    A.temporal states.
    B. antecedent states.
    C. information sources.
    D. evaluative criteria.

Factors that represent both the objective attributes of a brand (such as display screen) and the subjective ones (such as brand prestige) you use to compare different products and brands.

 

Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 05-01 Describe the stages in the consumer purchase decision process.
Topic: 05-06 Alternative Evaluation

  1. When you set out to buy a Blu-ray player for yourself, factors you might consider before purchase, which represent both the objective attributes of a brand and the subjective ones you use to compare different products and brands, are called
    A.hot buttons
    B. informational alternatives
    C. evaluative criteria
    D. buying decision-makers

Factors that represent both the objective attributes of a brand (such as display screen) and the subjective ones (such as brand prestige) you use to compare different products and brands.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-01 Describe the stages in the consumer purchase decision process.
Topic: 05-06 Alternative Evaluation

  1. When Rita decided to buy a radio as a wedding present, she wanted to buy a brand name radio that was waterproof, looked nice, and was designed to be mounted in a shower. What did Rita use during the alternative evaluation stage of the purchase decision process?
    A.hot buttons
    B. informational alternatives
    C. evaluative criteria
    D. buying decision-makers

Evaluative criteria represent both the objective attributes of a brand and the subjective ones you use to compare different products and brands.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-01 Describe the stages in the consumer purchase decision process.
Topic: 05-06 Alternative Evaluation

 

  1. When looking for a luxury car, you only consider Lexus, Mercedes, and BMW as acceptable brands to purchase from. These brands are known as your:
    A.evaluative set.
    B. evoked set.
    C. aspiration group.
    D. alternative selection group.

The group of brands that a consumer would consider acceptable from among all the brands of which he or she is aware.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-01 Describe the stages in the consumer purchase decision process.
Topic: 05-06 Alternative Evaluation

  1. You want to buy some instant rice, and you are in the mood for wild rice. The store you go to has two brands of instant rice: Uncle Bens and Minute Rice. Collectively, what is this group of instant rice brands called?
    A.a value group
    B. a consideration set
    C. an evaluative criterion
    D. an impulse set

The group of brands that a consumer would consider acceptable from among all the brands of which he or she is aware.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-01 Describe the stages in the consumer purchase decision process.
Topic: 05-06 Alternative Evaluation

 

  1. BMW StreetCarver is a skateboard that features BMW’s technology in its wheel suspension, which stabilizes the board’s sleek design and allows for greater control around sharp curves. BMW is concerned with making sure its skateboard is in the evoked set of potential skateboard buyers. In this case, it most likely should focus on:
    A.reducing the post-purchase dissatisfaction that may result from purchasing its product.
    B. making sure its advertisements get on the air during sporting events such as exhibition skateboarding.
    C. making appeals directed towards motivational ego needs.
    D. trying to determine the most important evaluative criteria skateboarders use when judging the product.

The key influence in determining the products in the evoked set is to have a set of important attributes, which matches the evaluative criteria employed by consumers. The most important evaluative criteria establish the brands in consumers’ evoked set. Therefore, by identifying the most important attributes, a firm can design a product which matches consumers’ interests.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Hard
Learning Objective: 05-01 Describe the stages in the consumer purchase decision process.
Topic: 05-06 Alternative Evaluation

  1. The brands that you learn of during your information search become part of your:
    A.consideration set
    B. awareness set
    C. thinking set
    D. inert set

The group of brands that a consumer would consider acceptable from among all the brands of which he or she is aware.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-01 Describe the stages in the consumer purchase decision process.
Topic: 05-06 Alternative Evaluation

  1. Consideration set is a term that means the same as:
    A.contemplation set
    B. awareness set
    C. evoked set
    D. inert set

The group of brands that a consumer would consider acceptable from among all the brands of which he or she is aware.

 

Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 05-01 Describe the stages in the consumer purchase decision process.
Topic: 05-06 Alternative Evaluation

 

  1. Raul overheard one of his co-workers in a phone conversation say, “Thank you for taking my call so quickly. I’d like to order number 1284H, the All-Canadian Mary Hanks doll. Can I use the easy pay plan?” The co-worker was in which stage in the consumer purchase decision process?
    A.problem recognition
    B. alternative evaluation
    C. information search
    D. purchase decision

Having examined the alternatives of the evoked set, the consumer makes a purchase decision.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-01 Describe the stages in the consumer purchase decision process.
Topic: 05-07 Purchase Decision

  1. Which of the following statements about the purchase stage of the consumer purchase decision process is NOT true?
    A.The purchase stage requires choosing from whom to buy.
    B. The purchase stage includes deciding when to buy.
    C. The purchase stage follows the alternative evaluation stage in the consumer purchase decision process.
    D. The purchase stage involves gathering last minute information to aid in the decision about what to buy.

The stages a buyer passes through in making choices about which products and services to buy.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 05-01 Describe the stages in the consumer purchase decision process.
Topic: 05-07 Purchase Decision

 

  1. Factors, such as the store atmosphere, pleasantness of the shopping experience, salesperson persuasiveness, time pressure, and financial circumstances tend to have the biggest influence on which stage of the consumer purchase decision process?
    A.Whether a purchase decision is made or postponed.
    B. The search for information.
    C. The recognition of a need.
    D. Post-purchase assessment of any purchase anxiety.

The stages a buyer passes through in making choices about which products and services to buy.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Hard
Learning Objective: 05-01 Describe the stages in the consumer purchase decision process.
Topic: 05-07 Purchase Decision

  1. Maria has just told her supervisor, “I’m so glad I bought the Apple iPhone 5 phone rather than those other models I was looking at. I have really enjoyed the fact that its iTunes service gives me an always-on music connection. I haven’t seen another phone with that feature.” Which stage of the consumer purchase decision process is demonstrated by Maria’s conversation?
    A.problem recognition
    B. information search
    C. post-purchase behaviour
    D. purchase decision

After buying a product, a consumer compares it with his or her expectations and is either satisfied or dissatisfied. The consumer may attempt to reduce cognitive dissonance by reinforcing the belief that he or she made the right choice. This occurs at the post-purchase stage.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-01 Describe the stages in the consumer purchase decision process.
Topic: 05-08 Post-purchase Behaviour

 

  1. Providing toll-free telephone numbers, offering liberalized return and refund policies, and engaging in staff training to handle complaints, answer questions, and record suggestions are examples of what firms do to address which stage of the consumer purchase decision process?:
    A.The purchase decision.
    B. The search for information.
    C. The recognition of a need.
    D. Post-purchase behaviour.

Firms such as General Electric (GE), Johnson & Johnson, Coca-Cola, and British Airways focus attention on post-purchase behaviour to maximize customer satisfaction and retention. These firms, among many others, provide toll-free telephone numbers, offer liberalized return and refund policies, and engage in staff training to handle complaints, answer questions, and record suggestions.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-01 Describe the stages in the consumer purchase decision process.
Topic: 05-08 Post-purchase Behaviour

  1. Consumer behaviour is an important focus for marketers because:
    A.marketing research is an inexpensive process.
    B. companies use this knowledge to provide value to consumers.
    C. customer value is a non-quantifiable statistic.
    D. attracting new customers is easier than keeping old ones.

Various marketers have calculated the value of customer retention over time and found it to be very profitable. Customers continue to buy from a specific marketer because that marketer provided them with value.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-01 Describe the stages in the consumer purchase decision process.
Topic: 05-07 Purchase Decision

 

  1. More and more firms are monitoring social media sites to understand what is being said about their brands as a way to gauge what?
    A.Customer satisfaction.
    B. Warranty reviews.
    C. Recommendations for new products.
    D. Viral comments.

After buying a product, the consumer compares it with his or her expectations and is either satisfied or dissatisfied. If the consumer is dissatisfied, marketers must decide whether the product was deficient or consumer expectations were too high.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-01 Describe the stages in the consumer purchase decision process.
Topic: 05-08 Post-purchase Behaviour

  1. Rackspace is a web hosting company. That means that if you want to have a site on the web, you could buy not only Internet space from them, but also technical support, and design services. When its ad tells you that its users consider Rackspace “the risk-free host because it offers dedicated and helpful support any time day or night,” you know that Rackspace is trying to:
    A.downgrade the competition.
    B. reduce new buyers’ cognitive dissonance.
    C. increase new buyers’ cognitive dissonance.
    D. produce an evoked set.

Firms often use ads at the post-purchase stage to reduce cognitive dissonance by convincing consumers that they made the correct purchase decision.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-01 Describe the stages in the consumer purchase decision process.
Topic: 05-08 Post-purchase Behaviour

 

  1. You have just purchased a Samsung S5 smartphone, after learning how to use it, you tweet out to the Samsung handle, that “S5 best phone ever! Great screen & battery life! Thx!” Brands who monitor their social media attempt to understand different levels of customer ____________.
    A.indecisiveness
    B. cognitive dissonance
    C. post-purchase stress
    D. satisfaction

More and more firms are monitoring social media for customer satisfaction.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-01 Describe the stages in the consumer purchase decision process.
Topic: 05-08 Post-purchase Behaviour

  1. How might consumers who purchased a new innovative type of running shoe try to reduce any cognitive dissonance they might feel?
    A.Use only an internal information search.
    B. Have little or no problem-solving involvement.
    C. Read ads for running shoes even after the purchase has been made.
    D. Use routine problem solving.

To alleviate cognitive dissonance, consumers attempt to applaud themselves for making the right choice. One way to seek information to confirm a choice is by reading ads about the product.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-01 Describe the stages in the consumer purchase decision process.
Topic: 05-08 Post-purchase Behaviour

  1. You have just purchased a suit to wear to an important job interview. As you head home from the store, you agonize in your mind about whether your choice of dark gray was right, or whether you should have chosen dark blue. This is an example of:
    A.cognitive dissonance.
    B. marketer anxiety.
    C. purchasing angst.
    D. panic reaction.

The feeling of post-purchase psychological tension or anxiety is called cognitive dissonance.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 05-01 Describe the stages in the consumer purchase decision process.
Topic: 05-08 Post-purchase Behaviour

 

  1. You have just purchased an expensive piece of jewelry for your girlfriend without really knowing her specific likes and dislikes. As you head home from the jewelry store, you agonize in your mind about whether your choice of a ruby necklace was right, or whether you should have chosen pearl earrings. This is an example of:
    A.cognitive dissonance.
    B. marketer anxiety.
    C. purchasing angst.
    D. panic reaction.

The feeling of post-purchase psychological tension or anxiety is called cognitive dissonance.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 05-01 Describe the stages in the consumer purchase decision process.
Topic: 05-08 Post-purchase Behaviour

  1. Nick was happy with his newly purchased ultrabook computer. It had all the features he wanted, including wider screen, lightweight design, and a high-end graphics chip for playing games, and the $1200 price tag was reasonable. As he was taking the ultrabook out of the box, Nick noticed an advertisement in the local paper showing a similar ultrabook configuration for only $1100. Suddenly, Nick began to doubt his purchase decision – maybe he hadn’t gotten such a good deal. He was experiencing:
    A.buyer’s uncertainty.
    B. cognitive dissonance.
    C. selective discord.
    D. product dissonance.

Consumers are often faced with the dilemma of choosing between two or more comparable alternatives. After making a purchase, consumers may question the purchase decision and wonder whether or not they selected the best alternative.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 05-01 Describe the stages in the consumer purchase decision process.
Topic: 05-08 Post-purchase Behaviour

 

  1. Sometimes consumers skip one or more of the purchase-decision process stages because of their level of ___________.
    A.involvement
    B. aspiration
    C. acculturative response
    D. motivation

The personal, social, and economic significance of the purchase to the consumer.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-02 Distinguish among three variations of the consumer purchase decision process: routine, limited, and extended problem solving.
Topic: 05-09 Situational Influences

 

TB Figure 1

Make Model Price Quality of Smartphone Features  
Camera Screen Battery Storage Waterproof  
Apple iPhone 7 $1200 Very Good Very Good Fair Very Good Very Good
Samsung Galaxy S7 $900 Excellent Excellent Good Fair Good
Sony Xperia X $700 Excellent Poor Good Good Very Good
HTC 10 $900 Poor Good Fair Good Poor
LG G5 $750 Good Excellent Fair Fair Poor
BlackBerry Passport $750 Good Good Good Excellent Poor
Nexus 6P $500 Fair Fair Fair Good Poor

 

 

  1. In TB Figure 1, a number of factors are listed such as camera quality, screen quality, and battery life. These are typical __________ for smartphones.
    A.considerations
    B. evaluative criteria
    C. information bits
    D. quality considerations

Factors that represent both the objective attributes of a brand (such as display screen) and the subjective ones (such as brand prestige) you use to compare different products and brands.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-01 Describe the stages in the consumer purchase decision process.
Topic: 05-06 Alternative Evaluation

  1. According to the information in TB Figure 1, which of the following brands would be the best choice if the consideration set for a smartphone included the following criteria: (1) camera, (2) waterproof, and (3) storage?
    A.Apple
    B. BlackBerry
    C. HTC
    D. Nexus

A consideration set is the group of brands that a consumer would consider acceptable from among all the brands in the product class of which he or she is aware. The evaluative criteria given in the question result in Apple as the best choice.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-01 Describe the stages in the consumer purchase decision process.
Topic: 05-06 Alternative Evaluation

  1. According to the information in TB Figure 1, which smartphone offers the best storage?
    A.Apple
    B. HTC
    C. Blackberry
    D. Samsung

A consideration set is the group of brands that a consumer would consider acceptable from among all the brands in the product class of which he or she is aware.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-01 Describe the stages in the consumer purchase decision process.
Topic: 05-06 Alternative Evaluation

 

  1. Which problem solving variation would normally be used to purchase such items as toothpaste, soda, or chewing gum?
    A.routine problem solving
    B. limited problem solving
    C. extended problem solving
    D. simulated selection

For these types of products, consumers recognize a problem, make a decision, and spend little effort seeking external information and evaluating alternatives. These behaviours are characteristics of routine problem solving.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-02 Distinguish among three variations of the consumer purchase decision process: routine, limited, and extended problem solving.
Topic: 05-09 Situational Influences

 

Figure 5-2

 

 

 

  1. In Figure 5-2, column “A” represents which of the following?
    A.Simulated selection
    B. Routine response behaviour
    C. Limited problem solving
    D. Extended problem solving

Extended problem solving makes use of each stage of the consumer purchase decision process including considerable time and effort on external information search and in identifying and evaluating alternatives.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Hard
Learning Objective: 05-02 Distinguish among three variations of the consumer purchase decision process: routine, limited, and extended problem solving.
Topic: 05-09 Situational Influences

  1. In Figure 5-2, column “B” represents which of the following?
    A.Simulated selection
    B. Routine response behaviour
    C. Limited problem solving
    D. Extended problem solving

In limited problem solving, consumers typically seek some information or rely on a friend to help them evaluate alternatives. There is little time or effort used in these situations. In general, several brands might be evaluated using a moderate number of different attributes.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Hard
Learning Objective: 05-02 Distinguish among three variations of the consumer purchase decision process: routine, limited, and extended problem solving.
Topic: 05-09 Situational Influences

 

  1. In Figure 5-2, column “C” represents which of the following?
    A.Routine problem solving
    B. Limited problem solving
    C. Extended problem solving
    D. Simulated selection

Routine problem solving involve low-priced, frequently purchased products. Consumers typically spend very little effort or time seeking or evaluating alternatives. Purchase decisions resemble habitual responses and are typical of low-involvement decisions.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Hard
Learning Objective: 05-02 Distinguish among three variations of the consumer purchase decision process: routine, limited, and extended problem solving.
Topic: 05-09 Situational Influences

  1. Consumers spend little time and effort evaluating alternatives in the purchase of soap and milk. The purchase process for such items that is virtually a habit, and typifies low-involvement decision-making is called:
    A.routine problem solving
    B. limited problem solving
    C. extended problem solving
    D. situational problem solving

Routine problem solving is typically the case for low-priced, frequently purchased products.

 

Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-02 Distinguish among three variations of the consumer purchase decision process: routine, limited, and extended problem solving.
Topic: 05-09 Situational Influences

 

  1. Between classes, many university students stop at conveniently located coffee shops. Their choices are generally made quickly and with little or no effort to consider alternative product offerings. The university students are involved in:
    A.limited problem solving situations.
    B. routine problem solving situations.
    C. extensive problem solving situations.
    D. intensive problem solving situations.

Routine purchase decisions involve low-priced, frequently purchased products. Consumers typically spend very little effort or time seeking or evaluating alternatives. Purchase decisions resemble habitual responses and are typical of low-involvement decisions.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-02 Distinguish among three variations of the consumer purchase decision process: routine, limited, and extended problem solving.
Topic: 05-09 Situational Influences

  1. A typical consumer in choosing a toaster, a restaurant for dinner, or a pair of sandals would most likely use
    A.routine response behaviour
    B. limited problem solving
    C. extended problem solving
    D. simulated selection

In limited problem solving, consumers typically seek some information to help them evaluate alternatives. There is little time or effort used in these situations.

 

Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-02 Distinguish among three variations of the consumer purchase decision process: routine, limited, and extended problem solving.
Topic: 05-09 Situational Influences

 

  1. Which problem solving variation would likely be used for clothing, sheets and towels, or electric can openers?
    A.routine response behaviour
    B. limited problem solving
    C. extended problem solving
    D. simulated selection

In limited problem solving, consumers typically seek some information to help them evaluate alternatives. There is little time or effort used in these situations.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-02 Distinguish among three variations of the consumer purchase decision process: routine, limited, and extended problem solving.
Topic: 05-09 Situational Influences

  1. Janine has decided to purchase a car GPS and plans to call several friends for information about alternative brands. She is NOT concerned about where she buys it as long as she receives a very liberal return policy should anything go wrong. In making her decision, Janine will engage in which of the following problem solving methods?
    A.limited
    B. extended
    C. habitual
    D. classical

In this case the person seeks some information, but has little interest in spending time or effort in searching out the right place to purchase the item. These are characteristics of limited problem solving.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-02 Distinguish among three variations of the consumer purchase decision process: routine, limited, and extended problem solving.
Topic: 05-09 Situational Influences

 

  1. Robert is considering purchasing a new vacation property in Florida, as he is nearing retirement, what sort of problem solving variation is he likely to use?
    A.routine response behaviour
    B. limited problem solving
    C. extended problem solving
    D. simulated selection

Extended problem solving makes use of each stage of the consumer purchase decision process including considerable time and effort on external information search and in identifying and evaluating alternatives.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 05-02 Distinguish among three variations of the consumer purchase decision process: routine, limited, and extended problem solving.
Topic: 05-09 Situational Influences

  1. Reid wants to find the perfect gift for his parents’ 50th wedding anniversary. He started looking for the gift last month and expects to spend another couple of months if needed to find a gift they both will like. Reid is engaging in:
    A.routine response behaviour.
    B. limited problem solving.
    C. extended problem solving.
    D. simulated selection.

Extended problem solving makes use of each stage of the consumer purchase decision process including considerable time and effort on external information search and in identifying and evaluating alternatives.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-02 Distinguish among three variations of the consumer purchase decision process: routine, limited, and extended problem solving.
Topic: 05-09 Situational Influences

 

  1. The purchase of a bottle of water is a low-involvement purchase. How can a marketer convince people to buy Dasani instead of one of the numerous other brands displayed on retailers’ shelves?
    A.Make good use of Dasani stock-outs.
    B. Make the purchase decision high involvement.
    C. Offer coupons for Dasani bottled water.
    D. Convince retailers to only offer Dasani water.

Avoiding stock-out decisions would benefit Dasani. The decision is and will remain a low-involvement one. Persuading retailers to stock only one brand is unlikely unless they are paid.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Hard
Learning Objective: 05-02 Distinguish among three variations of the consumer purchase decision process: routine, limited, and extended problem solving.
Topic: 05-09 Situational Influences

  1. Which of the following choices is NOT an example of situational influences affecting the purchase decision process?
    A.The reason for engaging in the decision in the first place.
    B. Social surroundings, including the other people present when a purchase decision is made.
    C. Decor, music, and crowding in retail stores.
    D. The golf club to which you belong.

Have an impact on your purchase decision process: (1) the purchase task, (2) social surroundings, (3) physical surroundings, (4) temporal effects, and (5) antecedent states.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-02 Distinguish among three variations of the consumer purchase decision process: routine, limited, and extended problem solving.
Topic: 05-09 Situational Influences

 

  1. The purchase task, social surroundings, physical surroundings, temporal effects, and antecedent states are all examples of:
    A.marketing mix influences.
    B. psychological influences.
    C. situational influences.
    D. sociocultural influences.

Have an impact on your purchase decision process: (1) the purchase task, (2) social surroundings, (3) physical surroundings, (4) temporal effects, and (5) antecedent states.

 

Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 05-02 Distinguish among three variations of the consumer purchase decision process: routine, limited, and extended problem solving.
Topic: 05-09 Situational Influences

  1. Five situational influences have an impact on a consumer’s purchase decision process which are the purchase task, social surroundings, physical surroundings, temporal effects, and:
    A.frame of mind.
    B. antecedent states.
    C. dependent variables.
    D. independent variables.

Have an impact on your purchase decision process: (1) the purchase task, (2) social surroundings, (3) physical surroundings, (4) temporal effects, and (5) antecedent states.

 

Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 05-02 Distinguish among three variations of the consumer purchase decision process: routine, limited, and extended problem solving.
Topic: 05-09 Situational Influences

 

  1. When a woman picks up a lace nightgown in a lingerie store and tells the clerk, “This is for my sister’s first wedding anniversary,” which situational influence has she demonstrated?
    A.Purchase task
    B. Social surroundings
    C. Physical surroundings
    D. Temporal effects

The factor prompting the purchase in this case is the sister’s first anniversary. This reason for engaging in the decision process is called the purchase task.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-02 Distinguish among three variations of the consumer purchase decision process: routine, limited, and extended problem solving.
Topic: 05-09 Situational Influences

  1. The three teenaged girls spent hours at the store trying on various outfits, looking at possible combinations, and asking each other, “How do you think this outfit looks?” This situation is most closely related to which of the following situational influences?
    A.purchase task
    B. social surroundings
    C. physical surroundings
    D. temporal effects

Social surroundings, including other people present when a purchase decision is made, may affect what is purchased.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-02 Distinguish among three variations of the consumer purchase decision process: routine, limited, and extended problem solving.
Topic: 05-09 Situational Influences

 

  1. As she hunted for rice crackers, LeeAnn thought, “Nothing in this store is logically arranged.” Then she banged her cart into the side of a display because the aisle was so crowded. As a result of ______________, she has vowed never to shop at that store again.
    A.purchase task
    B. social surroundings
    C. physical surroundings
    D. temporal effects

Physical surroundings such as decor, music in retail stores, and crowded aisles may alter how purchase decisions are made.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-02 Distinguish among three variations of the consumer purchase decision process: routine, limited, and extended problem solving.
Topic: 05-09 Situational Influences

  1. The ads for Visa debit cards show people who need to make a purchase quickly, but are unable to do so because the retailer won’t accept a check without several forms of identification. Which situational influence is Visa using to show the benefits offered by its debit cards?
    A.purchase task
    B. social surroundings
    C. physical surroundings
    D. antecedent states

Antecedent states, which include the consumer’s mood or amount of cash on hand, can influence purchase behaviour and choice.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Hard
Learning Objective: 05-02 Distinguish among three variations of the consumer purchase decision process: routine, limited, and extended problem solving.
Topic: 05-09 Situational Influences

 

  1. When Linda wants to purchase a new bicycle, she considers all of the following psychological influences, except
    A.motivation
    B. personality
    C. perception
    D. antecedent state

The five psychological influences are: motivation and personality; perception; learning; values, beliefs, and attitudes; and lifestyle. Antecedent states are a situational influence.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-10 Psychological Influences on Consumer Behaviour

 

Figure 5-3

 

 

 

  1. In Figure 5-3, letter “A” represents the __________ influences that can affect the consumer purchase decision process.
    A.economic
    B. situational
    C. psychological
    D. socio-cultural

The psychological influences include motivation and personality; perception; learning; values, beliefs, and attitudes; and lifestyle.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-02 Distinguish among three variations of the consumer purchase decision process: routine, limited, and extended problem solving.
Topic: 05-09 Situational Influences

  1. In Figure 5-3, letter “B” represents the __________ influences that can affect the consumer purchase decision process.
    A.economic
    B. situational
    C. environmental
    D. marketing mix

The marketing mix influences are the 4Ps: product, price, promotion, and place.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-02 Distinguish among three variations of the consumer purchase decision process: routine, limited, and extended problem solving.
Topic: 05-10 Psychological Influences on Consumer Behaviour

 

  1. In Figure 5-3, letter “C” represents the ____________ influences that can affect the consumer purchase decision process.
    A.economic
    B. situational
    C. environmental
    D. socio-cultural

The socio-cultural influences include personal influence; reference groups; family; social class; and culture and subculture influences.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-02 Distinguish among three variations of the consumer purchase decision process: routine, limited, and extended problem solving.
Topic: 05-10 Psychological Influences on Consumer Behaviour

  1. In Figure 5-3, letter “D” represents the __________ influences that can affect the consumer purchase decision process.
    A.economic
    B. situational
    C. psychological
    D. socio-cultural

The situational influences include purchase task, social surroundings, physical surroundings, temporal effects, and antecedent states.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-02 Distinguish among three variations of the consumer purchase decision process: routine, limited, and extended problem solving.
Topic: 05-10 Psychological Influences on Consumer Behaviour

 

  1. David works in the sales department for a mid-sized hardware manufacturer, he has a growing family at home and the budget is always tight. He often travels the province and receives a commission on sales that he makes. How is David likely to view receiving commission for completing sales?
    A.as perception
    B. as encouragement
    C. as motivation
    D. as cognitive dissonance

The energizing force that causes behaviour that satisfies a need.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-11 Motivation and Personality

  1. Which of the following lists the hierarchy of needs in its correct order beginning with the most basic?
    A.personal, social, physiological, psychological, and safety
    B. physiological, safety, social, personal, and self-actualization
    C. safety, physiological, safety, and self-actualization, and personal
    D. self-actualization, social, personal, safety, and physiological

People have both physiological needs and learned needs. Once the physiological needs are met, people seek to satisfy their learned needs. Refer to Figure 5-4.

 

Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-11 Motivation and Personality

  1. The most basic of our needs are physiological, followed by safety, social, and personal type needs. According to the hierarchy of needs, what category of needs is of the highest order?
    A.personal needs
    B. social needs
    C. self-actualization needs
    D. safety needs

Figure 5-4 illustrates the hierarchy of needs, with self-actualization needs at the top.

 

Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-11 Motivation and Personality

 

  1. Michael, makes an above average living working for the federal government, while Johnny is a recent graduate living day-to-day looking for work while paying off his student debt. Which needs are satisfied for Michael, but are a constant struggle for Johnny?
    A.Physiological needs.
    B. Safety needs.
    C. Social needs.
    D. Personal needs.

Needs that are basic to survival and must be satisfied first are physiological needs.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-11 Motivation and Personality

  1. In the hierarchy of needs, water, food, and sex would be considered _____ needs.
    A.physiological
    B. safety
    C. social
    D. personal

People possess physiological needs for basics such as water, food, and sex, which are basic to survival and must be satisfied first.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-11 Motivation and Personality

  1. In the hierarchy of needs, financial security would be an example of a _____ need.
    A.physiological
    B. safety
    C. social
    D. personal

Safety needs involve self-preservation and physical well-being.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-11 Motivation and Personality

 

  1. Canadians are well known to apologize out of courtesy, in day to day life, even if it seems unneeded. This personality characteristic is an example of our
    A.ethnicity
    B. self-concept
    C. national character
    D. ethno-characteristics

A distinct set of personality characteristics common among people of a country or society.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-11 Motivation and Personality

  1. A magazine ad shows a cherubic baby sitting inside an automobile tire. The ad copy touts the dramatically improved traction of Michelin radial tires in rain and snow and informs parents of the ways in which the tires will help them protect and ensure the well-being of their children. The marketers of Michelin tires are attempting to appeal to consumers’ ______ needs.
    A.physiological
    B. safety
    C. social
    D. personal

The Michelin tire ad seeks to appeal to parents’ needs to ensure the safety of their children.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Hard
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-11 Motivation and Personality

  1. Those needs that are concerned with love and friendship are _____ needs.
    A.physiological
    B. safety
    C. social
    D. personal

Needs concerned with love and friendship are called social needs.

 

Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-11 Motivation and Personality

 

  1. Those needs that are represented by the need for achievement, status, prestige, and self-respect are _____ needs.
    A.physiological
    B. self-actualization
    C. social
    D. personal

Personal needs are needs that are represented by the need for achievement, status, prestige, and self-respect.

 

Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-11 Motivation and Personality

  1. A person’s consistent behaviour or response to recurring situations is known as:
    A.motivation
    B. routinized response
    C. coping
    D. personality

A person’s consistent behaviours or responses to recurring situations.

 

Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-11 Motivation and Personality

  1. An ad for State Farm life insurance asks the question, “How do you plan on supporting your family after you pass away?” The ad shows a tombstone with a sign that offers the face of the stone as ad space. The ad is intended to appeal to which of the needs in the hierarchy of needs?
    A.physiological needs
    B. safety needs
    C. social needs
    D. personal needs

Safety needs involve self-preservation and physical well-being. Providing security for one’s family would help to satisfy that need.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-11 Motivation and Personality

 

  1. The statement by a senior executive at Lenovo, a global supplier of notebook computers that “The notebook market is getting more like cars. The car you drive reflects you, and notebooks are becoming a form of self-expression as well” illustrates the importance of ________ in reflecting the products and brands that consumers buy.
    A.self-actualization
    B. optics
    C. self-fulfillment
    D. self-concept

Lenovo wants you to know that your laptop is a clear reflection of you.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Hard
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-11 Motivation and Personality

  1. An ad for The King’s Daughters’ School, a private academy for children, has the headline, “Living Up to Their Potential.” This ad is appealing to the parents’ desire to satisfy their children’s:
    A.physiological needs.
    B. self-actualization needs.
    C. social needs.
    D. personal needs.

The school wants the parents to know that the school will make sure that each student achieves as much as possible.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-11 Motivation and Personality

  1. L’Oreal’s former advertising theme, “Because you’re worth it” relied on which of the psychological influences on behaviour?
    A.motivation
    B. learning
    C. perception
    D. antecedent states

The slogan suggested that using L’Oreal products could satisfy an individual’s need for self-fulfillment.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-11 Motivation and Personality

 

  1. Research has suggested that those who apply more cologne or after-shave lotions are more likely to have which personality trait?
    A.Aggressiveness.
    B. Compliance.
    C. Extroversion.
    D. Introversion.

A person’s consistent behaviours or responses to recurring situations.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-11 Motivation and Personality

  1. The distinct set of personality characteristics common among people of a particular country or society is known as
    A.Cultural personality.
    B. Ethnocentrism.
    C. Sociocultural bonding.
    D. National character.

A distinct set of personality characteristics common among people of a country or society.

 

Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-11 Motivation and Personality

  1. Americans and Germans are relatively more assertive than Russians and the English, when you define individuals using:
    A.national character
    B. self-concept
    C. ethnocentric origin
    D. demographic measurements

National character is a distinct set of personality characteristics common among people of a particular country or society.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-11 Motivation and Personality

 

  1. A classmate of yours, Linda, who works out at the gym every day, is likely to see herself as fit, healthy, and in-shape. Linda would classify herself using which term?
    A.Self-evaluation
    B. Self-concept
    C. Aspirational concept
    D. Individualized perception

The way people see themselves and the way they believe others see them.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-11 Motivation and Personality

  1. In the 1960s when the province of Ontario used the slogan “Is There Any Other Place You’d Rather Be?” it was trying to attract people to live and work there by appealing to a lifestyle motivator that marketers call:
    A.self-concept.
    B. greed.
    C. lust.
    D. avarice.

Lifestyle is a mode of living that is identified by how people spend their time and resources, what they consider important in their environment, and what they think of themselves and the world around them. Moreover, lifestyle reflects consumers’ self-concept, which is the way people see themselves and the way they believe others see them. This example illustrates the point.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-11 Motivation and Personality

  1. The ad for Dove body wash asks the question, “How old will you be when you stop feeling 29?” The ad is using the _____ to appeal to its target market.
    A.self-concept
    B. greed
    C. lust
    D. avarice

Lifestyle is a mode of living that is identified by how people spend their time and resources, what they consider important in their environment, and what they think of themselves and the world around them.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-11 Motivation and Personality

 

  1. Suppose a soft drink company sponsored a made-for-television movie with the understanding that subliminal images of its product logo would be interspersed throughout the program. Which of the following is the strongest argument that such a marketing strategy would be unethical?
    A.Soft drinks can cause tooth decay.
    B. The images of the product logo might interfere with the plot and impact of the movie.
    C. The soft drink company would be attempting to influence the behaviour of the consumers in a manner the consumers might object to if they were aware of what was occurring.
    D. The soft drink company may not have paid a fair price to have the images of its logo placed in the movie.

The strongest ethical argument against subliminal advertising is that it exploits a psychological vulnerability in human perception to persuade consumers to act in a manner they might not if they were consciously making the choice. In other words, if it did have any effect on behaviour, subliminal advertising might rob the consumer of the freedom to make a choice.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Hard
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-12 Perception

  1. The process by which an individual selects, organizes, and interprets information to create a meaningful picture of the world is referred to as:
    A.Motivation
    B. Attitude formation
    C. Conformance
    D. Perception

The process by which an individual selects, organizes, and interprets information to create a meaningful picture of the world.

 

Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-12 Perception

 

  1. Because the average consumer operates in a complex environment, the human brain attempts to organize and interpret information with a process called:
    A.selective retention.
    B. selective attention.
    C. selective exposure.
    D. selective perception.

Human brain attempts to organize and interpret information in a complex environment with a process called selective perception.

 

Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-12 Perception

  1. Many have described 2002 as the year of the palindrome – a word or phrase that reads the same whether read from right or left. While Ahmed was unaware of the term, once he read an article about palindromes for his English class, he saw the term three more times that week. This is probably the result of:
    A.selective retention.
    B. selective attention.
    C. selective intuition.
    D. selective perception.

Selective perception occurs because consumers operate in a complex environment, and they are unable to respond to all stimuli to which they are exposed.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Hard
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-12 Perception

 

  1. If you were to watch a television commercial for a new automobile, and not notice it had dual airbags, side impact bars, and antilock brakes, but that it did have a high-performance engine that could take it to high speeds as indicated in the film footage, this would be an example of _____ perception.
    A.retentive
    B. interpretive
    C. reclusive
    D. selective

Selective perception is a filtering of exposure, comprehension, and retention.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Hard
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-12 Perception

  1. The tendency to pay attention to messages consistent with one’s attitudes and beliefs and to ignore messages that are inconsistent is called:
    A.selective retention.
    B. selective comprehension.
    C. selective exposure.
    D. selective perception.

The tendency to pay attention to messages consistent with one’s attitudes and beliefs and to ignore messages that are inconsistent is called selective exposure.

 

Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-12 Perception

 

  1. Because Marla is so strongly committed to a fat-free diet, she did not see a recent report by the New England Journal of Medicine that suggested that some fat in our diet is healthy. The report was contained in the newspaper that Marla reads daily, but the reason Marla did not see it is probably the result of:
    A.selective retention.
    B. selective comprehension.
    C. selective exposure.
    D. selective perception.

Selective exposure is the tendency to pay attention to messages consistent with one’s attitudes and beliefs and to ignore messages that are inconsistent.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Hard
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-12 Perception

  1. Charlie needs to purchase an automobile to drive to his new job in the city center. He begins to notice ads for many cars he wasn’t aware of previously. This is an example of:
    A.subliminal perception.
    B. selective exposure.
    C. retention.
    D. tuning out.

Selective exposure occurs when people pay attention to messages that are consistent with their attitudes or when a need exists.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Hard
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-12 Perception

  1. Interpreting information so that it is consistent with your attitudes and beliefs is called:
    A.selective retention.
    B. selective comprehension.
    C. selective exposure.
    D. selective analysis.

Interpreting information so that it is consistent with your attitudes and beliefs is called selective comprehension.

 

Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-12 Perception

 

  1. Tyler was offended by the brand name of a new product for women. She believes that the name is demeaning for women and that its use means the manufacturer is unsympathetic to women. The future of this product may be poor unless it changes its name because of consumers’ _______________.
    A.selective retention
    B. selective comprehension
    C. selective exposure
    D. selective analysis

A consumer using selective comprehension is interpreting information so that it is consistent with his or her attitudes and beliefs.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Hard
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-12 Perception

  1. While in the market for a new laptop, you start reviewing the technical specifications provided on the Apple’s website. You then shift over to Dell’s website and begin reviewing a similar laptop, however, you do not remember some of the information you just saw on Apple’s website. This is an example of:
    A.selective retention
    B. selective comprehension
    C. selective exposure
    D. selective perception

When the consumers do not remember all the information they see, read, or hear, even minutes after exposure to it is called selective retention.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-12 Perception

 

  1. Retailers can reduce problems associated with selective retention by:
    A.hiring well-known celebrities to sponsor their products.
    B. using a more convoluted store layout.
    C. providing brochures for consumers to take home.
    D. adopting advertising campaigns that use bright colours and/or snappy background music.

Selective retention means consumers do not remember all they see, hear, or read, even minutes after exposure to it. Furniture and automobile retailers often give consumers product brochures to take home after they leave the showroom to help them remember.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Hard
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-12 Perception

  1. After watching a movie about going on a road trip with your best friends, you have a strong inclination to drink a Coke, although you were not aware of seeing or hearing messages in the movie about Coke. You have most likely experienced:
    A.selective retention.
    B. subliminal perception.
    C. selective perception.
    D. selective attention.

Means that you see or hear messages without being aware of them.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-12 Perception

 

  1. In an attempt to sell more soft drinks and popcorn, a theatre owner embedded very brief messages in the feature film. The messages, which flashed on the screen for such a short time that moviegoers were not consciously aware of the message, urged consumers to ‘Drink Coke’ and to ‘Eat Popcorn’. Research showed the messages were largely ineffective. This example suggests that:
    A.selective perception overrides advertising messages.
    B. selective exposure is difficult for marketers to overcome.
    C. subliminal messages may be of limited value to marketers.
    D. subliminal perception enables marketers to take advantage of consumers.

Subliminal perception suggests consumers view or hear messages without consciously being aware of those messages. The concept of subliminal perception is that after hearing or seeing such messages, the behaviour of consumers might be altered in a manner that would benefit the marketer. Little evidence exists to support the effectiveness of subliminal perception in the marketing realm.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-12 Perception

  1. Many experts suggest that the use of subliminal messages by marketers, effective or not, is _______ and _____.
    A.cost-effective; ethical
    B. deceptive; unethical
    C. worthwhile; efficient
    D. suggested; encouraged

Many experts suggest that the use of subliminal messages by marketers, effective or not, is deceptive and unethical.

 

Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-12 Perception

 

  1. The anxiety felt because the consumer cannot anticipate the outcomes of a purchase but believes there may be a negative consequence associated with making the wrong purchase decision is called:
    A.a negative antecedent.
    B. perceived risk.
    C. temporal uncertainty.
    D. spatial uncertainty.

The anxiety felt because the consumer cannot anticipate the outcomes of a purchase but believes that there may be negative consequences is called perceived risk.

 

Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-12 Perception

  1. For which of the following products is perceived risk likely to be the greatest for a female who has just taken her first job after college graduation?
    A.a magazine subscription to Glamour
    B. a cell phone
    C. flowers to decorate her new apartment
    D. a new outfit for her first day at work

Perceived risk is the anxiety felt because the consumer cannot anticipate the outcomes of a purchase but believes there may be a negative consequence associated with making the wrong purchase decision. Because of the widespread usage of cell phones and the ease with which servers are changed, the phone would not be a source of nearly as much risk as the outfit.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-12 Perception

  1. For which of the following products is perceived risk likely to exemplify psychosocial risk for a female who has just taken her first job after college graduation?
    A.a magazine subscription to Glamour
    B. a cell phone
    C. flowers to decorate her new apartment
    D. a new outfit for her first day at work

The text example of psychosocial risk is concern over whether my friends will like my sweater. Whether my co-workers will like my clothes is a similar concern.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-12 Perception

 

  1. Which of the following is NOT a method marketers can use to reduce perceived risk for consumers?
    A.Obtain seals of approval for products.
    B. Secure endorsements from influential people.
    C. Provide trial usage of the product.
    D. Provide minimal usage instructions.

The anxiety felt because the consumer cannot anticipate the outcomes of a purchase but believes that there may be negative consequences is called perceived risk.

 

Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-12 Perception

  1. After working on an assembly line for several months, you feel there are more efficient and effective ways to go about constructing the widgets. You go to your manager and tell him what you experienced, your ideas, and your thoughts. What have you just demonstrated?
    A.Psychosocial perception
    B. Acculturation
    C. Attitudinal identification
    D. Learning

Those behaviours that result from (1) repeated experience, and (2) thinking.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-13 Learning

  1. While working in the military, you have built up an automatic response to the constant yelling and verbal aggression communicated by your superiors. This learning is referred to as:
    A.Perceptual
    B. Retentive
    C. Functional
    D. Behavioural

Behavioural learning is the process of developing automatic responses to a situation built up through repeated exposure to it.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Hard
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-13 Learning

 

  1. The famous experiment wherein Dr. Pavlov presented dogs with food at the same time as he rang a bell; this resulted in dogs that salivated when the bell was rung even when food was not presented. What principle related to consumer behaviour did this research involve?
    A.changing antecedent states
    B. behavioural learning
    C. tone as a motivator
    D. cognitive dissonance

Behavioural learning is the process of developing automatic responses to a situation built up through repeated exposure to it. This is what the classic Pavlov experiment proved.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Hard
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-13 Learning

  1. There are many perfumes in the market, but only one that breaks down fragrances into elements so people can wear the particular scents with which they have emotional ties. The perfume’s manufacturer is Demeter, and it makes over 150 different fragrances with names like Dirt, Lobster, Dandelion, Sugar Cookie, Brownie, Woodsmoke, Leather, and Turpentine. Because repeated exposure to these scents has made us connect them with some important event or memory, we can say the appeal of the scent is due to:
    A.cognitive learning.
    B. cognitive dissonance.
    C. behavioural learning.
    D. functional adaptation.

Behavioural learning is the process of developing automatic responses to a situation built up through repeated exposure to it.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Hard
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-13 Learning

 

  1. A need that moves an individual to action is a(n):
    A.drive.
    B. cue.
    C. attitude.
    D. response.

A drive is a need that moves an individual to action. Drives, such as hunger, might be represented by motives.

 

Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-13 Learning

  1. There are many perfumes in the market, but only one that breaks down fragrances into elements so people can wear the particular scents with which they have emotional ties. The perfume’s manufacturer is Demeter, and it makes over 150 different fragrances with names like Dirt, Lobster, Dandelion, Sugar Cookie, Brownie, Woodsmoke, Leather, and Turpentine. The maker of Demeter perfumes treats smells as if they were:
    A.drives.
    B. cues.
    C. attitudes.
    D. responses.

A cue is a stimulus (in this case a smell) perceived by consumers.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Hard
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-13 Learning

  1. A stimulus or symbol perceived by consumers is known as a(n)
    A.drive.
    B. cue.
    C. attitude.
    D. response.

A cue is a stimulus or symbol perceived by consumers.

 

Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-13 Learning

 

  1. You are driving along the road when you notice your stomach starting to grumble and gurgle. You see a flashing neon sign at a restaurant saying “all you can eat” and so you stop in and enjoy an extremely satisfying meal. In the corresponding order, the grumbling stomach, the sign, the meal, and feeling satisfied after the meal correspond to:
    A.drive, cue, response, and reinforcement.
    B. cue, drive, response, and reinforcement.
    C. drive, cue, learning, and satiation.
    D. cue, drive, behaviour, and learning.

Behavioural learning is the process of developing automatic responses to a situation built up through repeated exposure to it.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-13 Learning

  1. The PRIZM5 lifestyle system classifies Canadian neighbourhoods into ___ different lifestyle types.
    A.88
    B. 63
    C. 68
    D. 43

See Marketing Matters box.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-15 Lifestyle

  1. Thinking, reasoning, and mental problem solving without direct experience describes ________.
    A.operant conditioning
    B. behavioural learning
    C. cognitive learning
    D. imprinting

Cognitive learning is a type of learning in which consumers learn through thinking, reasoning, and mental problem solving without direct experience.

 

Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-13 Learning

 

  1. While in a team building exercise, you notice two team members are a little shyer than everyone else. As a result, you make an extra effort to include them in the activities and make sure to check in on how they are feeling throughout the exercise. The best term to describe your behaviour is:
    A.operant conditioning.
    B. behavioural learning.
    C. cognitive learning.
    D. imprinting.

Cognitive learning is a type of learning in which consumers learn through thinking, reasoning, and mental problem solving without direct experience.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-13 Learning

  1. Jack is hungry (drive); she sees an advertisement (cue), goes to the store, and buys the product (response). In terms of behavioural learning, the great taste of the food is a(n):
    A.achievement.
    B. drive.
    C. reinforcement.
    D. prestige.

The reinforcement is the reward.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-13 Learning

  1. Using the same brand name for different products is an application of which concept from behavioural learning theory?
    A.selective comprehension
    B. selective retention
    C. stimulus generalization
    D. stimulus discrimination

The occurrence of a response elicited by one stimulus (cue) generalized to another stimulus is known as stimulus generalization.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-13 Learning

 

  1. When the television production company that produces Law & Order series uses the Law & Order name on two other series (Law & Order: Special Victim’s Unit, and Law & Order: Criminal Intent), it relies on _____ to convince fans of the original show that the new shows will be equally well crafted.
    A.selective comprehension
    B. selective retention
    C. stimulus generalization
    D. stimulus discrimination

Stimulus generalization exists when a response elicited by one stimulus (cue) is generalized to another stimulus. The consumer would have the same feelings toward one Law & Order series as for another even before the new series was shown.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-13 Learning

  1. Consumers’ ability to perceive taste differences in chocolate bars is an example of:
    A.stimulus discrimination.
    B. selective retention.
    C. selective comprehension.
    D. stimulus generalization.

Stimulus discrimination refers to a person’s ability to perceive differences in stimuli.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-13 Learning

  1. Betty contends that she can taste the difference between fat-free cheese and cheese with its regular fat content. Tom says that he cannot tell a difference between the two products. Their inability to agree on the taste of the fat-free cheese when compared to other cheese is how consumers exhibit:
    A.stimulus discrimination.
    B. selective retention.
    C. selective comprehension.
    D. stimulus generalization.

Stimulus discrimination refers to a person’s ability to perceive differences in stimuli.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Hard
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-13 Learning

 

  1. Political advertising in which one candidate is compared to another is intended to cause voters to perceive differences between the candidates featured in the advertising. Marketers who use political advertising are trying to make consumers believe that its product is better than the other one. This is known as:
    A.stimulus discrimination
    B. selective retention
    C. selective comprehension
    D. stimulus generalization

Stimulus discrimination refers to a person’s ability to perceive differences in stimuli.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Hard
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-13 Learning

  1. Making connections between two or more ideas, or simply observing the outcomes of others’ behaviours and adjusting one’s own behaviour accordingly is what type of learning?
    A.stimulus discrimination
    B. cognitive learning
    C. brand loyalty
    D. stimulus generalization

Cognitive learning is a type of learning in which consumers learn through thinking, reasoning, and mental problem solving without direct experience.

 

Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-13 Learning

 

  1. In the first chapter of this text, the authors describe how marketing is not something alien to you like Shakespeare or physics – it is something you are already very familiar with because you observe marketing throughout many different facets of life. The authors hoped you would use _____ to conclude marketing is an interesting subject and worthy of your time and effort.
    A.cognitive learning
    B. cognitive dissonance
    C. behavioural learning
    D. functional adaptation

Cognitive learning involves making the connections between two or more ideas or simply observing the outcomes of others’ behaviour and adjusting your own accordingly.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-13 Learning

  1. When Betty Crocker advertises that baking a cake from one of its mixes tastes just like homemade, it is influencing which type of learning?
    A.stimulus discrimination
    B. cognitive learning
    C. brand loyalty
    D. stimulus generalization

Marketers attempt to influence cognitive learning by linking a brand with an idea. In this case, Betty Crocker is linking a box mix to home cooking.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-13 Learning

 

  1. The back of a box of Hinode Harvest Blend rice mix suggests cooking with chicken broth for added flavour. Which of the following methods will work best in educating potential consumers?
    A.using behavioural learning techniques
    B. creating habit-forming behaviour
    C. attempting to create stimulus generalization
    D. using cognitive learning techniques

Cognitive learning requires thinking, reasoning, and mental problem solving without direct experience. This happens when connections are made between two or more ideas, or when the outcomes of others’ behaviours are observed. The proposed new method of rice preparation can be linked to the products in advertising messages, highlighted on packages, or observed among current users.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-13 Learning

  1. Families of the PRIZM5 lifestyle segment, Lunch at Tim’s, are ______________ and ___________ families living in older homes (built before 1980) in second-tier Canadian cities.
    A.singles; dual-parent
    B. dual-parent; solo-parent
    C. singles; extended
    D. singles; solo-parent

See Marketing Matters box.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-15 Lifestyle

  1. Which of the following statements about brand loyalty is NOT true?
    A.Learning is closely connected to brand loyalty because habits are learned.
    B. Brand loyalty can reduce the perceived risk associated with the buying of certain products.
    C. The incidence of brand loyalty is declining in North America.
    D. The incidence of brand loyalty appears to be increasing in North America and the European Union.

Brand loyalty appears to be decreasing in North America, Mexico, European Union nations, and Japan.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-13 Learning

 

  1. Considerable research has documented that in many product categories, consumers are unable to distinguish among brands when given blind tests (i.e. taste or use of the products without labels). Such products include cigarettes, beer, liquors, and cosmetics. Nonetheless, even when prices are similar, consumers have strong preferences for specific brands of these products. This strong brand preference is the result of:
    A.extended problem solving.
    B. limited problem solving.
    C. routine problem solving.
    D. high-involvement problem solving.

Habit formation is the basis of routine problem solving, and there is a close link between habits and brand loyalty.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Hard
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-13 Learning

  1. A learned predisposition to be thrifty or patriotic reflects a(n):
    A.belief.
    B. value.
    C. attitude.
    D. motivation.

A learned predisposition to respond to an object or class of objects in a consistently favourable or unfavourable way is called an attitude.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-14 Values, Beliefs, and Attitudes

  1. Canadians who fit in the PRIZM5 lifestyle segment “Lunch at Tim’s” span all age groups, and are best known for the shopping characteristic:
    A.techno gurus.
    B. experiential spenders.
    C. cautious spenders.
    D. big bargain hunters.

See Marketing Matters box.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-15 Lifestyle

 

  1. When an individual purchases a Rolls Royce, they perceive the product will be very well made and have no maintenance issues for several years. This subjective perception is known as a(n):
    A.Belief
    B. Value
    C. Attitude
    D. Predisposition

A consumer’s subjective perception of how well a product or brand performs on different attributes is called a belief.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-14 Values, Beliefs, and Attitudes

  1. All of the following statements about changing consumer attitudes are true except?
    A.Marketers attempt to change attitudes by changing beliefs about the extent to which a brand has certain attributes.
    B. Marketers attempt to change attitudes by changing the perceived importance of attributes.
    C. Marketers attempt to change attitudes by adding new attributes to a product.
    D. Attitudes can be changed by marketers.

A learned predisposition to respond to an object or class of objects in a consistently favourable or unfavourable way is called an attitude.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-14 Values, Beliefs, and Attitudes

 

  1. Smartphones have been available for quite a while and Samsung is a recognized brand name of cell phones. Smartphones that can use touchscreens are commonplace. Samsung newest phone (the S4) uses eye-tracking, so users do not have to use the touchscreen. Promoting a new benefit of eye-tracking should lead to a favourable attitude toward the smartphone by:
    A.changing beliefs about a specific attribute.
    B. changing the importance of a specific attribute.
    C. adding of a new important attribute.
    D. reducing perceived risk.

Adding a new attribute-always-on feature-one of three methods of attitude change available to marketers.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-14 Values, Beliefs, and Attitudes

  1. Tums antacid stresses the fact that it is a calcium supplement in its advertisements, and has the health benefits of calcium. Most people already know Tums contains calcium. The new promotion is trying to change the attitude toward Tums by:
    A.changing the perceived importance of the attribute.
    B. adding a new attribute to the product.
    C. changing the basic product.
    D. adding a new attribute and re-positioning the product.

Tums is trying to change the perceived importance of consuming calcium. By focusing on this attribute, it is hoping consumers will have a more favourable attitude towards Tums. Since consumers know Tums already contains calcium, a new attribute had not been added.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Hard
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-14 Values, Beliefs, and Attitudes

 

  1. Febreeze is an odour-controlling spray manufactured by P&G. When Febreeze was introduced, it was tagged as a pet killer. P&G had to spend lots of money debunking the false claim and request help from the ASPCA before consumers would purchase the product in the numbers expected. This promotion to debunk a false claim changed consumers’ attitudes by:
    A.changing beliefs about the extent to which a brand has certain attributes.
    B. adding a new attribute to the product.
    C. changing the basic product.
    D. adding a new attribute and re-positioning the product.

P&G had to change consumers’ beliefs that the spray was deadly to their pets before consumers could see the value of its odour-controlling capabilities.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Hard
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-14 Values, Beliefs, and Attitudes

  1. The PRIZM Program:
    A.was developed by the U.S. Marketing Association.
    B. identifies six interconnected adult lifestyle categories.
    C. identifies four interconnected children lifestyle categories.
    D. is used in lifestyle analysis.

Lifestyle analysis has proven useful in segmenting and targeting consumers for new and existing products and services. PRIZM is an example of one of the tools used in this analysis.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Hard
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-15 Lifestyle

  1. A mode of living that is identified by how people spend their time and resources; what they consider important in their environment; and what they think of themselves and the world around them is known as a(n):
    A.culture
    B. subculture
    C. social class
    D. lifestyle

A mode of living that is identified by how people spend their time and resources, what they consider important in their environment, and what they think of themselves and the world around them.

 

Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-15 Lifestyle

 

  1. The Marketing Manager asks her new employee to conduct an analysis of the target market’s lifestyle. Puzzled, the new employee thinks for a moment and then remembers that essentially, the Marketing Manager is asking for a(n) ____________ analysis.
    A.demographics
    B. psychographics
    C. social statistics
    D. physiological needs

The practice of combining psychology and demographics to uncover consumer motivations for buying and using products and services is called psychographics.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-15 Lifestyle

  1. Which of the following is NOT a good measure of consumer lifestyle, or psychographics?
    A.interests
    B. activities
    C. opinions
    D. norms

Lifestyle is a mode of living that is identified by how people spend their time and resources (activities, including hobbies), what they consider important (interests, including hobbies, too), and what they think of themselves and the world around them (opinions).

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-15 Lifestyle

  1. Ads depicting happy families in Red Lobster restaurants are segmenting the market based on:
    A.family life cycle.
    B. stage of the decision process.
    C. cognitive learning level.
    D. lifestyles.

One aspect of lifestyle is mode of living which is identified by how people spend their time, including eating out.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-15 Lifestyle

 

  1. The SRI’s VALS Program is one of the most prominent examples of:
    A.purchasing behaviour studies.
    B. learning theories studies.
    C. studies on the hierarchy of effects.
    D. lifestyle analysis programs.

The most prominent example of lifestyle (or psychographic) analysis is the VALS program developed by SRI International and currently run by SRI Consulting Business Intelligence.

 

Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-15 Lifestyle

  1. Which of the following statements about the VALS program is true?
    A.The acronym VALS stands for Very Awesome Life Style.
    B. The VALS program seeks to explain when consumers make purchase decisions.
    C. The VALS program is used globally.
    D. The VALS and PRIZM programs are both lifestyle analysis tools.

Both VALS and PRIZM are lifestyle analysis tools.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-15 Lifestyle

  1. All of the following describe PRIZM’s lifestyle group called “Lunch at Tim’s” except:
    A.play video games
    B. high-school educated
    C. live in older homes
    D. like to gamble

See GOING ONLINE (www.environicsanalytics.ca) box.

 

Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-14 Values, Beliefs, and Attitudes

 

  1. PRIZM research suggests that those of the “Lunch at Tim’s” have which view on social media?
    A.are very interested in social media
    B. provide frequent status updates
    C. are somewhat interested in social media
    D. are not that interested in social media

See Marketing Matters box.

 

Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-15 Lifestyle

  1. PRIZM categories help marketers to understand consumers better. For example, residents of the “Lunch at Tim’s” category are more likely to:
    A.produce social media content
    B. follow social media content
    C. not understand social media
    D. be slow to adopt to social media

See Marketing Matters box.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-15 Lifestyle

  1. When it comes to “buzz marketing,” Matchstick Inc. will hire individuals who are close in age or lifestyle to a relevant product category’s target consumer. Matchstick refers to these individuals as:
    A.brand seeders
    B. leaders
    C. influencers
    D. deciders

If a company hires Matchstick, a typical buzz marketing campaign is constructed as follows: Matchstick will hire “brand seeders” on a freelance basis. These seeders are close in age or lifestyle to the relevant product category’s target consumer. Seeders are paid by Matchstick to identify potential influencers, or “influentials”-individuals who are naturally enthusiastic toward the brand and who will gladly spread the word about the brand.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Hard
Learning Objective: 05-04 Identify the major socio-cultural influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-17 Personal Influence

 

  1. James is brand loyal to Sony. He always tells his friends at his part-time job about the Sony products he buys. He also mentions Sony whenever he goes shopping with friends. He subscribes online to Sony’s newsletters and press releases. Sony is happy about James because he helping them with ______________ marketing.
    A.buzz
    B. online
    C. consumer
    D. influential

Increasingly, companies are working hard to stimulate positive consumer word of mouth about their products or services. This is called buzz marketing-popularity created by consumer word of mouth. Although he subscribes online, his messages to his friends about Sony are face-to-face.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Hard
Learning Objective: 05-04 Identify the major socio-cultural influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-17 Personal Influence

  1. The online version of word of mouth, involving the use of messages “infectious” enough that consumers wish to pass them along to others through online communication is accurately described as:
    A.infectious marketing
    B. viral marketing
    C. buzz marketing
    D. Internet marketing

The online version of word of mouth, involving the use of messages “infectious” enough that consumers wish to pass them along to others through online communication.

 

Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-04 Identify the major socio-cultural influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-17 Personal Influence

 

  1. All of the following would be effective for viral marketing except:
    A.phoning a friend
    B. instant messaging
    C. Facebook
    D. blogs

Viral marketing involves the use of messages “infectious” enough that consumer wish to pass along to others through online forums, social networks, chat rooms, bulletin boards, blogs, message board threads, instant messages, and e-mails.

 

Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 05-04 Identify the major socio-cultural influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-17 Personal Influence

  1. A consumer’s purchases are often influenced by the views, opinions, or behaviours of others. Two important aspects of personal influence are:
    A.lifestyle and motivation.
    B. personality and lifestyle.
    C. opinion leadership and word-of-mouth activity.
    D. word-of-mouth activity and psychographics.

Opinion leaders exert direct or indirect influence over others and word-of-mouth activity influences others through conversation.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-04 Identify the major socio-cultural influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-17 Personal Influence

  1. After Paris Hilton wore big-shaped oval sunglasses, more and more individuals began wearing these sunglasses. Paris Hilton would be referred to as a:
    A.decision maker
    B. achiever
    C. brand setter
    D. opinion leader

Those knowledgeable about users of particular products and services, and so their opinions influence others’ choices are opinion leaders.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-04 Identify the major socio-cultural influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-17 Personal Influence

 

  1. A consumer’s purchases are often influenced by the views, opinions, or behaviours of others. Two aspects of personal influence that are important to marketing are _____ and word-of-mouth activity.
    A.parental guidance
    B. peer pressure
    C. opinion leadership
    D. government regulation

Those knowledgeable about users of particular products and services, and so their opinions influence others’ choices are opinion leaders.

 

Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 05-04 Identify the major socio-cultural influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-17 Personal Influence

  1. Your company is introducing a new line of active wear for teenagers and invites the members of the cheerleading squad to a private display of the line. This group consists of _____ for active wear clothing.
    A.syncratic decision makers
    B. aspirational leaders
    C. opinion leaders
    D. autonomous leaders

Opinion leaders are individuals who exert direct or indirect social influence over others. They are more likely to be important for products that provide a form of self-expression.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-04 Identify the major socio-cultural influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-17 Personal Influence

 

  1. While waiting to catch the school bus, you observe several friends discussing about why they like their smartphone versus their friend’s phone, which happened to be different. These individuals are attempting to influence others by:
    A.opinion making.
    B. publicity.
    C. personal selling.
    D. word of mouth.

The influencing of people during conversations is known as word of mouth.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-04 Identify the major socio-cultural influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-17 Personal Influence

  1. Rumours that circulated throughout Russia that Snickers candy bars caused diabetes is an example of:
    A.negative word of mouth.
    B. a lack of back translation.
    C. cultural insensitivity.
    D. consumer ethnocentrism.

This was a rumour that resulted in negative word of mouth.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-04 Identify the major socio-cultural influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-17 Personal Influence

  1. Brands must be cognizant of what rumours are being shared on social media. For example, rumours that McDonald’s hamburgers contained horsemeat is an example of:
    A.negative viral marketing.
    B. a lack of back translation.
    C. cultural insensitivity.
    D. consumer ethnocentrism.

This was a rumour that resulted in negative viral marketing.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-04 Identify the major socio-cultural influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-17 Personal Influence

 

  1. As an aspiring tennis player, you frequently copy and mimic the top players at your local club and look towards them for self-appraisal or as a source of personal standards. These individuals would be referred as:
    A.action-oriented consumers
    B. principle-oriented consumers
    C. reference groups
    D. social classes

People to whom an individual looks as a basis for self-appraisal or as a source of personal standards are called reference groups.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-04 Identify the major socio-cultural influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-18 Reference Groups

  1. Negative word of mouth:
    A.is a powerful information source in developing countries.
    B. is less harmful for products that are new to an area or a country.
    C. has been shown to increase the credibility of a company’s advertising.
    D. has been shown to increase consumers’ intentions to buy products.

Negative word of mouth is particularly damaging for a product that has just been introduced in a new country or area. It has been shown to reduce the credibility of a company’s advertising. It also reduces consumers’ buying intentions.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-04 Identify the major socio-cultural influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-17 Personal Influence

  1. A reference group to which a person actually belongs is called a(n) _____ group.
    A.primary reference
    B. membership
    C. aspiration
    D. dissociative

A membership group is one to which a person actually belongs, including fraternities and sororities, social clubs, and the family.

 

Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 05-04 Identify the major socio-cultural influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-18 Reference Groups

 

  1. Students who wear sweatshirts displaying the Greek letters for fraternities or sororities to which they belong are demonstrating pride in a(n) _____ group.
    A.dissociative
    B. aspiration
    C. membership
    D. identification

A membership group is one to which a person actually belongs, including fraternities and sororities, social clubs, and the family.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-04 Identify the major socio-cultural influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-18 Reference Groups

  1. To attract new members, a golf club would focus its marketing efforts on people who view the current members as a (n) _____ group.
    A.achieving
    B. aspiration
    C. dissociative
    D. pressure

An aspiration group is one that a person wishes to be a member of or wishes to be identified with. Besides wanting the chance to play, new members should view the golf club members as an aspiration group.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-04 Identify the major socio-cultural influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-18 Reference Groups

  1. A reference group which a person wishes to be a member of or wishes to be associated with is called a(n): _____ group.
    A.preference
    B. membership
    C. aspiration
    D. dissociative

An aspiration group is one that a person wishes to be a member of or wishes to be identified with, such as a professional society.

 

Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 05-04 Identify the major socio-cultural influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-18 Reference Groups

 

  1. An aspiration group is one:
    A.to which a person belongs, including fraternities and social clubs.
    B. that a person wishes to be a member of or wishes to be identified with.
    C. that a person wishes to maintain a distance from because of differences in values or behaviours.
    D. that a person knows he or she can never really fit into because of basic cultural differences.

An aspiration group is one that a person wishes to be a member of or wishes to be identified with, such as a professional society.

 

Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 05-04 Identify the major socio-cultural influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-18 Reference Groups

  1. A reference group that a person wishes to maintain distance from because of differences in values or behaviours is called a(n) _____ group.
    A.primary reference
    B. membership
    C. aspiration
    D. dissociative

A dissociative group is one that a person wishes to maintain a distance from because of differences in values or behaviours.

 

Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 05-04 Identify the major socio-cultural influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-18 Reference Groups

  1. The American Express advertising claim that “membership has its privileges” creates which type of reference group?
    A.aspiration group
    B. dissociative group
    C. secondary reference group
    D. integrated group

An aspiration group is one that a person wishes to be a member of or wishes to be identified with.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Hard
Learning Objective: 05-04 Identify the major socio-cultural influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-18 Reference Groups

 

  1. Frank Wright is a stereo buff who will go to great lengths when making stereo equipment purchases. He believes having the right equipment is important because many people will see the stereo when they visit his home. If you were the marketing VP for Quality Electronics Inc., and your market was primarily made up of people just like Wright, which influence source would you most likely build into your promotional messages?
    A.situational influences
    B. perceptual risk influences
    C. self-concept influences
    D. reference group influences

Reference groups have an important influence on the purchase of luxury products but not of necessities-groups exert a strong influence on the brand chosen when its use and consumption is highly visible to others.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-04 Identify the major socio-cultural influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-18 Reference Groups

  1. If a fraternity wanted to attract new members, it should focus on people who viewed the current members as a(n) _____ group.
    A.membership
    B. aspiration
    C. dissociative
    D. reference

Since a fraternity is a membership group, potential new members should view the fraternity as an aspiration group.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-04 Identify the major socio-cultural influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-18 Reference Groups

 

  1. Influences on consumer behaviour that result from consumer socialization, passage through the family life cycle, and decision making within the family are referred to as _________________ influence.
    A.functional
    B. demographic
    C. family
    D. social

Family influence on consumer behaviour results from three sources: consumer socialization, passage through the family life cycle, and decision making within the family.

 

Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 05-04 Identify the major socio-cultural influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-19 Family Influence

  1. Once you enter university, you likely have to learn how to shop, keep up an apartment, and maintain an organized life, if you have not learned already. This process by which people acquire the skills, knowledge, and attitudes necessary to function as consumers is known as
    A.Consumer acclamation
    B. Consumer socialization
    C. Consumer enculturation
    D. Purchasing socialization

The process by which people acquire the skills, knowledge, and attitudes necessary to function as consumers.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-04 Identify the major socio-cultural influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-19 Family Influence

  1. Consumer socialization is the process by which people acquire the skills, knowledge, and attitudes:
    A.required to get along with other consumers at the supermarket and in other retail outlets.
    B. important to being able to know a good deal at the point of sale when they go shopping.
    C. necessary to be able to return merchandise to a store for a full refund.
    D. necessary to function as consumers.

The process by which people acquire the skills, knowledge, and attitudes necessary to function as consumers.

 

Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 05-04 Identify the major socio-cultural influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-19 Family Influence

 

  1. Beth gives Megan $10 allowance a week. Then Megan is taken shopping to select what she wants to buy. If the item desired costs more than $10, Megan’s mother suggests she save her money until she has enough to pay for the desired item. When Megan purchases the item, she is allowed to make her own selection, pay for it herself, and engage in interaction necessary with the sales clerk. In this way, Megan’s mother encourages the development of:
    A.consumer acclamation.
    B. consumer socialization.
    C. consumer enculturation.
    D. purchasing socialization.

Consumer socialization is the process by which people acquire the skills, knowledge, and attitudes necessary to function as consumers.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Hard
Learning Objective: 05-04 Identify the major socio-cultural influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-19 Family Influence

  1. The family life cycle concept describes the distinct phases a family progresses through, each bringing identifiable purchasing behaviours, from _________.
    A.birth to death
    B. formation to retirement
    C. the birth of children to retirement
    D. the birth of children until children leave home

The distinct phases that a family progresses through, from formation to retirement, each phase bringing with it identifiable purchasing behaviours is called family life cycle.

 

Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 05-04 Identify the major socio-cultural influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-19 Family Influence

 

  1. Which of the following statements about the family life cycle is true?
    A.The family life cycle concept describes a continuum along which developing families can be arbitrarily placed.
    B. Young singles represent a target market for recreational travel, automobiles, and consumer electronics.
    C. The majority of households today are composed of traditional families.
    D. Young singles are more likely to buy life insurance than any other group.

The family life cycle concept describes the distinct phases a family progresses through from formation to retirement. Only 23.5 percent of all households today are composed of traditional families. Young marrieds with children are the most likely group to buy life insurance. Singles with children are the least financially secure of households with children.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Hard
Learning Objective: 05-04 Identify the major socio-cultural influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-19 Family Influence

  1. The two major styles of family decision making are:
    A.joint and judgmental.
    B. spouse-dominant and spouse-submissive.
    C. joint and spouse-dominant.
    D. democratic and autocratic.

Two decision-making styles exist: spouse dominant and joint decision making. Spouse-dominant decisions are those for which either the husband or wife is responsible. With a joint decision-making style, both the husband and the wife make most decisions.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-04 Identify the major socio-cultural influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-19 Family Influence

 

  1. Which of the following statements about family decision making tends to be true?
    A.The use of joint decision making is directly related to the educational levels achieved by the spouses.
    B. Husbands tend to make all decisions about cars, vacation, and homes.
    C. The two types of family decision making are joint and autonomous.
    D. With autonomous decision making, the husband would make all the decisions about groceries, medicine, and car maintenance.

Decisions about cars, vacation, and homes are typically made jointly. The two types of family decision making are joint and spouse-dominant. Wives typically make decisions about food and medicine.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Hard
Learning Objective: 05-04 Identify the major socio-cultural influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-19 Family Influence

  1. The five roles of individual family members in the purchase process of family decision making are:
    A.membership group, aspiration group, opinion leader, decision maker, and user.
    B. sustainer, experiential, belonger, emulator, and achiever.
    C. opinion leader, influencer, decision maker, purchaser, and user.
    D. information gatherer, influencer, decision maker, purchaser, and user.

The five roles are information gatherer, influencer, decision maker, purchaser, and user. Family members assume different roles for different products and services and this knowledge is important to firms.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-04 Identify the major socio-cultural influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-19 Family Influence

  1. Which type of purchase is most likely to be the result of joint family decision making?
    A.car tires
    B. children’s toys
    C. family vacations
    D. medicine

Family vacations are typically selected jointly.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-04 Identify the major socio-cultural influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-19 Family Influence

 

  1. When Keith Monroe told his father the family needed a new computer, the father told Keith to determine what features were needed and some costs. Mrs. Monroe suggested the new computer needed an ergonomic keyboard because she was having some problems with her wrists. Wenda Monroe asked that the new computer have a faster modem for her chat room visits. Mr. Monroe said what they bought would depend on what Keith learned. Which of the following sentences BEST describes the roles the individual family members played in making this decision?
    A.Mrs. Monroe and Wenda acted as information gatherers, users, and decision makers.
    B. Keith took on all the roles except that of purchaser.
    C. Mr. Monroe took on all of the roles.
    D. Wenda acted as a user and an influencer.

Mrs. Monroe and Wenda acted as users and influencers. Keith did not take on the role of decision maker. As the father Mr. Monroe did not engage in information gathering; he told Keith to do that. Gatekeeper is not one of the five roles listed in the text.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-04 Identify the major socio-cultural influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-19 Family Influence

  1. It is time for the Ramirez family to plan its annual vacation. The father wants to stay home this year and use the vacation money to work on the house. The paternal grandmother who lives with them wants to visit relatives in New York. The father asks his mother to determine how much a trip to New York would cost the family and if they could stay with relatives while they were there. The mother and the daughter Mary want to go to the beach. Which of the following sentences BEST describes the roles the individual family members played in making this decision?
    A.There is no family member serving as information gatherer.
    B. The only role played by the mother and the grandmother is influencer.
    C. The females in the family only play two roles – users and influencers.
    D. The grandmother plays the roles of user, influencer, and information gatherer.

The father is not acting as an information gatherer; the grandmother is.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Hard
Learning Objective: 05-04 Identify the major socio-cultural influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-19 Family Influence

 

  1. The Lee family is composed of five children, a mother, a father, and one set of grandparents. The family has to decide whether to move the grandparents to an assisted living facility. In terms of the roles played by individual family members, the grandparents are the only family members who will have the role of:
    A.user.
    B. influencer.
    C. gatekeeper.
    D. decision maker.

According to the way the question is worded, the grandparents will be the ones living in the facility. They have decided to play no other role besides user.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-04 Identify the major socio-cultural influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-19 Family Influence

  1. According to PRIZM results, Quebec Canadians are more likely to “live in the moment” and are more prone to seek _________.
    A.instant gratification
    B. friends on Facebook
    C. opinions of others
    D. future growth over present day concerns

According to the text on French Canadian subculture, Quebeckers enjoy living in the moment and are prone to seek instant gratification.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-04 Identify the major socio-cultural influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-21 Culture and Subculture

  1. The relatively permanent, homogeneous divisions in a society into which people sharing similar values, interests, and behaviour can be grouped is referred to as a(n)
    A.socioeconomic stratum
    B. seller segmentation
    C. social class
    D. value and lifestyle group

The relatively permanent, homogeneous divisions in a society into which people sharing similar values, lifestyles, interests, and behaviour can be grouped is called social class.

 

Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 05-04 Identify the major socio-cultural influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-20 Social Class

 

  1. The most frequently used measures of social class are:
    A.lifestyle, behaviour patterns, and values.
    B. lifestyle, education, and income.
    C. education, ancestry, and income.
    D. occupation, education, and source of income.

A person’s occupation, source of income, and education determine his or her social class.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-04 Identify the major socio-cultural influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-20 Social Class

  1. When marketing to Quebec Canadians, in comparison to the rest of Canada, all of the following are true, except:
    A.commercial advertising to children is prohibited
    B. marketers must be sensitive to the needs and wants of Quebecois consumers and appreciate the inherent differences between them and other Canadians.
    C. Quebec Canadians have a greater appreciation for the senses
    D. more than 60% of Quebec Canadians bank at two financial institutions

In the end, to be successful in marketing to French Canadians living in Quebec, marketers must be sensitive to the wants and needs of Quebecois consumers and appreciate the inherent differences between them and other Canadians.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-04 Identify the major socio-cultural influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-21 Culture and Subculture

  1. Which of the following statements about social class is true?
    A.Social class is purely a U.S. phenomenon.
    B. Persons within the same social class do not exhibit common attitudes, lifestyles, and buying behaviours.
    C. Companies use social class as a basis for describing a target market.
    D. A person’s lifestyle, income level, and occupation determine his or her social class.

Social class structure has been observed in Canada, Great Britain, Western Europe, and Latin America. To some degree, persons within the same social class exhibit common attitudes, lifestyles, and buying behaviours. The text lists several examples where the company has chosen a social class to target. A person’s social class is determined by income source, education, and occupation.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-04 Identify the major socio-cultural influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-20 Social Class

 

  1. Although Quebec Canadians say they are more likely to follow their own instincts than listen to experts, Quebecers like advertising _____________ than do other Canadians.
    A.more
    B. less
    C. the same
    D. completely differently because you cannot compare the two

Quebecers are more likely to say they follow their instincts than listen to experts. Yet, Quebecers like advertising more than do other Canadians. But they are no more likely to believe its claims than are English Canadians, and they are more likely than other Canadians to say that they have been offended by an ad.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-04 Identify the major socio-cultural influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-21 Culture and Subculture

  1. Subgroups within the larger, or national, culture with unique values, ideas, and attitudes are referred to as:
    A.reference groups.
    B. family life-cycle stages.
    C. dissociative groups.
    D. subcultures.

Subgroups within the larger, or national, culture with unique values, ideas, and attitudes are called as subcultures.

 

Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: 05-04 Identify the major socio-cultural influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-21 Culture and Subculture

  1. Which of the following statements about French Quebecois’ buying patterns is FALSE?
    A.French Quebecois link price to perceived value, but will pass on a buy rather than buy on credit.
    B. They are more willing to pay higher prices for convenience and brand names.
    C. They give less credence to advertising than the average Canadian.
    D. They are cautious of new products and often postpone trial until the product has proven itself.

French Quebecois buyers give more credence to advertising than the average Canadian.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Hard
Learning Objective: 05-04 Identify the major socio-cultural influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-21 Culture and Subculture

 

  1. Which of the following statements about French Quebecois’ buying patterns is FALSE?
    A.French Quebecois follow others rather than listen to their instincts.
    B. French Quebecois use coupons more than do other Canadians.
    C. French Quebecois buy things that pleasure the senses.
    D. French Quebecois women are very fashion conscious.

Quebecers are more likely to say they follow their instincts than listen to experts.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Hard
Learning Objective: 05-04 Identify the major socio-cultural influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-21 Culture and Subculture

  1. Which of the following statements about the Acadian subculture is FALSE?
    A.The Acadians are English-speaking Canadians that live outside of Quebec.
    B. The Acadians are similar in buying patterns to the French Quebecois.
    C. The Acadians are very fashion oriented.
    D. The Acadians are often referred to as “the forgotten French.”

Acadians are very different than their Quebec counterparts.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Hard
Learning Objective: 05-04 Identify the major socio-cultural influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-21 Culture and Subculture

  1. Which of the following statements about Chinese Canadians is true?
    A.The Chinese-Canadian market is the slowest growing subculture in Canada.
    B. The Chinese-Canadian market is distributed equally across Canada.
    C. The average Chinese Canadian is significantly older than the general Canadian population.
    D. The average Chinese Canadian is less likely to be unemployed.

The Chinese Canadian market is concentrated predominately in Toronto and Vancouver, and is the fastest growing subculture in Canada. They are significantly younger than the general Canadian population and are more likely to be employed.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Hard
Learning Objective: 05-04 Identify the major socio-cultural influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-21 Culture and Subculture

 

  1. An example of a marketer-dominated source of information for an external information search is:
    A.advertising.
    B. Consumer Reports magazine.
    C. consumer programs on talk radio stations.
    D. friends and relatives.

Marketer-dominated sources of information originate with the sellers of products and services, and include advertising, salespeople, and point-of-purchase displays in stores.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-01 Describe the stages in the consumer purchase decision process.
Topic: 05-05 Information Search

  1. An example of a marketer-dominated source of information for an external information search is:
    A.salespeople.
    B. Consumer Reports magazine.
    C. consumer programs on talk radio stations.
    D. friends and relatives.

Marketer-dominated sources of information originate with the sellers of products and services, and include advertising, salespeople, and point-of-purchase displays in stores.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-01 Describe the stages in the consumer purchase decision process.
Topic: 05-05 Information Search

  1. An example of a marketer-dominated source of information for an external information search is:
    A.websites.
    B. Consumer Reports magazine.
    C. consumer programs on talk radio stations.
    D. friends and relatives.

Marketer-dominated sources of information originate with the sellers of products and services, and include advertising, company websites, salespeople, and point-of-purchase displays in stores.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-01 Describe the stages in the consumer purchase decision process.
Topic: 05-05 Information Search

 

  1. A consumer is looking to purchase a new laptop and is considering a product only from Apple, Samsung, Dell, and Acer. These brands are known as the consumer’s _______.
    A.evaluative set
    B. evolved set
    C. consideration set
    D. alternative selection group

The group of brands that a consumer would consider acceptable from among all the brands of which he or she is aware is called consideration set.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-01 Describe the stages in the consumer purchase decision process.
Topic: 05-06 Alternative Evaluation

 

Short Answer Questions

  1. You will be graduating soon and have been offered “the job of your dreams.” The new position, however, requires some traveling so you will need a car. You currently do not have one. What decision process will you go through to purchase an automobile?

Answers will vary.

Feedback: (1) This purchase would require five purchase decision stages:
(2) Problem recognition: the car is needed for the new job.
(3) Information search: Check internal and external sources.
(4) Alternative evaluation: objective and subjective attributes considered from evoked set.
(5) Purchase decision: decision made after judging the alternatives.
(6) Post-purchase evaluation: evaluate car in terms of expectations.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-01 Describe the stages in the consumer purchase decision process.
Topic: 05-03 Consumer Purchase Decision Process

 

  1. From the discussion in the text, would you agree or disagree with the following statement: “It’s a lot cheaper and easier to keep existing customers than to try to find new ones.” Explain your answer.

Answers will vary

Feedback: Students should agree. Firms have begun to put a financial value on good customer relationships. Firms try to put a dollar value on what satisfied loyal, repeat customers spend on the firm’s product during a year or a lifetime. These calculations have focused marketer attention on customer retention. Examples in the book include Frito-Lay, Exxon, Kimberly-Clark and Ford Motor Company. Firms have learned that it’s a lot cheaper and easier to keep existing customers than to try to find new ones.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Hard
Learning Objective: 05-01 Describe the stages in the consumer purchase decision process.
Topic: 05-01 Consumer Behaviour

  1. Compare and contrast routine problem solving, limited problem solving, and extended problem solving. Give an example of when each might be used.

Answers will vary

Feedback: Routine, limited, and extended problem solving are three general variations in the consumer purchase decision process. Routine problem solving is used for low-priced, frequently purchased products such as toothpaste or milk. Little effort is made to seek information or evaluate alternatives. In limited problem solving, consumers typically seek some information or rely on a friend to help evaluate alternatives. This process may apply to the purchase of a toaster or a decision on a restaurant, or situations where little time or effort is possible. Extended problem solving uses each of the five stages of the consumer purchase decision process because the item to be purchased is expensive, has social consequences, or could reflect on the consumer’s image. Products such as stereo equipment, automobiles, and investments typically require extended problem solving. Students may have other examples.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-02 Distinguish among three variations of the consumer purchase decision process: routine, limited, and extended problem solving.
Topic: 05-09 Situational Influences

 

  1. Name the five situational influences that affect our purchase decision processes.

Answers will vary

Feedback: Situational influences are:

(1) the purchase task
(2) social surroundings
(3) physical surroundings
(4) temporal effects
(5) antecedent states.

 

Blooms: Remember
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-02 Distinguish among three variations of the consumer purchase decision process: routine, limited, and extended problem solving.
Topic: 05-09 Situational Influences

  1. Ruth, who has no children, wants to buy a special baby gift for her best friend’s baby shower, which is this evening. Since she won’t have any time between work and the shower, she must go today during her lunch break. She is planning on taking her sister with her to help make the selection. Ruth knows she will be ready to buy everything baby thing she sees because she wishes so much that she were pregnant too. Identify each of the situational influences that are described in this question. Which situational influence was not described?

Answers will vary.

Feedback: The purchase of a special baby gift for a best friend is the purchase task. The fact that she has limited shopping time is the temporal effect. Having her sister with her while she is shopping relates to the social surroundings. Her desire to have a baby of her own is an antecedent state. The only situational influence not mentioned is physical surroundings.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-02 Distinguish among three variations of the consumer purchase decision process: routine, limited, and extended problem solving.
Topic: 05-09 Situational Influences

 

  1. How do selective perception, selective exposure, selective comprehension, and selective retention differ?

Answers will vary.

Feedback: The human brain employs a process called selective perception to organize and interpret information. Selective exposure occurs when people pay attention to messages that are consistent with their attitudes and beliefs and ignore messages that are inconsistent. This might occur when a radio talk show had a caller whose political views were contrary to those of the listener; when the caller finished the listener might say that the caller made no sense at all, however cogent the message had actually been. Selective comprehension involves interpreting information so it is consistent with one’s attitudes and beliefs. For example, a person who was trying to lose weight might interpret a “low fat” mayonnaise as “no fat,” and therefore as having no effect on gaining weight. Selective retention means consumers do not remember all the information they see, read, or hear, even minutes after exposure to it. For example, a loud and intrusive television commercial for a used car lot might attract the attention of a viewer, but shortly after it was over, the viewer might be unable to name the advertiser.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Hard
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-12 Perception

  1. Why is learning important to marketing?

Answers will vary.

Feedback: Learning is important to marketing because much consumer behaviour is learned. Consumers learn which information sources to use, which evaluative criteria to use when assessing alternatives, and, in general, how to make purchase decisions. Learning is also important because it relates to habit formation which is the basis of routine problem solving.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-13 Learning

 

  1. How does the definition of attitudes highlight its important dimensions?

Answers will vary.

Feedback: Attitudes are learned predispositions to respond to an object or class of objects in a consistently favourable or unfavourable way. This definition highlights several important dimensions of attitudes. First, attitudes are learned. Attitudes are shaped by our values and beliefs, which are learned. Second, attitudes affect a person’s behaviour. Third, because attitudes are consistently favourable or unfavourable, they have a tendency to be stable over time and are difficult to change.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Hard
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-14 Values, Beliefs, and Attitudes

  1. How might Ford Motor Company apply the three methods of attitude change in its marketing activities?

Answers will vary.

Feedback: (1) Change beliefs: Ford may emphasize quality control in its ads to reduce consumers’ concerns about reliability.
(2) Change perceived importance of attributes: Ford might try to increase the perceived importance of pollution control in automobiles and then create awareness of Ford’s pollution control characteristics.
(3) Adding new attributes: Ford might add a new attribute, such as a video tape player for people in back seat, and hope consumers will perceive this new attribute favourably.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Hard
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-14 Values, Beliefs, and Attitudes

 

  1. What does lifestyle mean, and why is it important to marketers?

Answers will vary

Feedback: Lifestyle is a mode of living that is identifiable by how people spend their time (activities); what they consider important in their environment (interests); and what they think of themselves and the world around them (opinions). The analysis of consumer lifestyles (also called psychographics) has produced many insights into consumer’s behaviour. For example, lifestyle analysis has proven useful in segmenting and targeting consumers for new and existing products.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-15 Lifestyle

  1. Why would Dr. Pepper select country music performer Garth Brooks to appear in an ad campaign? How would he be a sociocultural influence on consumer behaviour?

Answers will vary.

Feedback: Garth Brooks is a famous country music performer, and he would have a personal influence. He was selected for the Dr. Pepper ads with the hope he would act as an opinion leader. Because he drank Dr. Pepper, it was hoped other people would want to emulate his behaviour.

 

Blooms: Apply
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-04 Identify the major socio-cultural influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-17 Personal Influence

 

  1. What is consumer socialization?

Answers will vary.

Feedback: Consumer socialization is a process by which people acquire the skills, knowledge, and attitudes necessary to function as consumers. Children learn how to purchase by:

(1) interacting with adults in purchase situations,
(2) their own purchasing and product usage experiences.

As children mature into adults, they develop brand preferences which may last a lifetime.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-04 Identify the major socio-cultural influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-19 Family Influence

  1. Of what significance to marketing is the family life cycle?

Answers will vary.

Feedback: Consumers act and purchase differently as they go through life. From this observation comes the family life cycle concept, which holds that each family progresses through a number of distinct phases from point of formation to retirement, each phase bringing with it identifiable purchasing behaviours. For example, young singles’ buying preferences are for nondurable items, while young married couples without children typically purchase home furnishings and gifts for each other.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-04 Identify the major socio-cultural influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-19 Family Influence

 

  1. What is a subculture? What are some examples of products or promotional strategies targeted at Canadian subcultures?

Answers will vary

Feedback: Subculture refers to a subgroup with unique values, ideas, and attitudes within the larger, or national, culture. Three important Canadian subcultures are French Canadians, Acadians, and Chinese Canadians. Each subculture has different buying behaviours. For example, knowing that French Canadians are more likely to respond to specials and price discounts, Metro-Richelieu Inc. has responded by offering more discount coupons and weekly specials.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-04 Identify the major socio-cultural influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-21 Culture and Subculture

  1. From your own experience, or from what you have heard from a friend or relative, describe how the values, ideas, and attitudes of a particular Canadian subculture can affect the marketing of a product.

Answers will vary.

Feedback: Answers can vary widely, and can include the observation that a subculture made up of people of English ancestry may like creamed fish, and minced beef in a cup of Yorkshire pudding, whereas people of Hungarian ancestry may prefer carp soup, and lots of paprika in their stews. These differences can be observed on the menus of restaurants and in the product inventories of grocery stores where such subcultures represent a significant portion of the local population. Variations in Canadian subcultures also involve styles of dress, types of music enjoyed, and home decor, among many other factors, all of which affect consumer marketing significantly.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-04 Identify the major socio-cultural influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-21 Culture and Subculture

 

  1. How can marketers use the PRIZM analysis tool to better the market for Canadians?

Answers will vary.

Feedback: Marketing Matters provides the “Lunch at Tim’s” example lifestyle segment from PRIZM5 to discuss the characteristics of this group. Marketers can use the information of the segment to better develop their communication message to meet the interests and needs of this segment; for example, Lunch at Tim’s consumers are bargain hunters and that means creating regular promotions will appeal to this customer target market.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-15 Lifestyle

  1. As the communications manager for a new home builder in town, how would you use the PRIZM5 analysis tool to effectively target your market?

Answers will vary.

Feedback: Marketing Matters discusses PRIZM5’s 68 lifestyle segments and discusses “Lunch at Tim’s.” Marketers can use the information of the segment to better develop their communication message to meet the interests and needs of this segment; for example, Lunch at Tim’s consumers are bargain hunters and that means creating regular promotions will appeal to this customer target market.

 

Blooms: Understand
Difficulty: Medium
Learning Objective: 05-03 Identify the major psychological influences on consumer behaviour.
Topic: 05-15 Lifestyle

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