Exam 1: Buying, Having, and Being: an Introduction to Consumer Behavior
Exam 1: Buying, Having, and Being: an Introduction to Consumer Behavior158 Questions
Exam 2: Consumer and Social Well-Being155 Questions
Exam 3: Perception148 Questions
Exam 4: Learning and Memory152 Questions
Exam 5: Motivation and Affect152 Questions
Exam 6: The Self and Gender Identity139 Questions
Exam 7: Personality, Lifestyles, and Values149 Questions
Exam 8: Attitudes and Persuasive Communications148 Questions
Exam 9: Decision Making151 Questions
Exam 10: Buying, Using, and Disposing153 Questions
Exam 11: Group Influences and Social Media147 Questions
Exam 12: Income and Social Class143 Questions
Exam 13: Subcultures144 Questions
Exam 14: Culture143 Questions
Exam 15: Careers in Consumer Research149 Questions
Exam 16: Research Methods151 Questions
Exam 17: Sources of Secondary Data157 Questions
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Distinguish between green marketing and social marketing. Use an example for each.
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(Essay)
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Correct Answer:
Green marketing is when firms choose to protect or enhance the natural environment within their business activities, such as when Proctor and Gamble introduced refillable containers for Downy Fabric Softener. Social marketing refers to using marketing techniques to encourage positive behaviours or discourage negative behaviours, such as drunk driving. Although there are examples in the text, the student should be able to bring in other examples from outside the book as there are many.
The fundamental set of assumptions which researchers make about what they are studying and how to go about studying it is termed:
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(Multiple Choice)
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Correct Answer:
E
The Jones and Smiths were born in the sixties so they tend to share a common set of cultural experiences that they carry throughout life.
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(True/False)
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Correct Answer:
True
Compulsive consumption is much like impulse buying because the shopper focuses on the process of buying, rather than on the purchases themselves.
(True/False)
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Matty loves to use her shower gel when she showers each morning. Her relationship with this product is:
(Multiple Choice)
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Billy is an avid collector of shoes. He constantly voices his opinion of new shoes on blogs and product review websites. His behaviour is consistent with the concept of:
(Multiple Choice)
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To reduce waste associated with their Downey Fabric Softener, Proctor & Gamble introduced refillable containers. This is an example of:
(Multiple Choice)
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In studying consumers like Gail, a college junior, marketers often find it useful to learn how they spend their leisure time, their interests in music or clothing, even attitudes about social issues, to be able to categorize them according to their lifestyles. This sort of information is called:
(Multiple Choice)
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Age, Gender, Ethnicity, Income, and Geography, and Purchase Frequency are all potential segmentation variables.
(True/False)
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People choose brands that have a personality consistent with their underlying needs.
(True/False)
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John is the Vice- President of marketing for a local tour guide company. He is concerned that his customers are not recommending his company to friends of theirs. For John, this problem is a:
(Multiple Choice)
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The best way to think of an "exchange" is when a consumer gives a company money for a product or service.
(True/False)
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We generally use the term "paradigm" to refer to the fundamental assumptions researchers make about what they are studying and how to go about studying it.
(True/False)
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If you listed your collection of NHL rookie cards on eBay, you would be engaging in which type of commerce:
(Multiple Choice)
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When Gail investigates sex, age, and income characteristics of her friends, she is studying psychographics.
(True/False)
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Research has shown that heavy Web users are less likely to spend time with friends and family, but they report far more offline contact with family members than nonusers. How should this be interpreted by marketers?
(Multiple Choice)
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If you were preparing a list of variables to use for research on market segmentation, one variable could be Quebec.
(True/False)
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Define demographics. Next, using information that you have learned from the text about the demographics of consumers, identify three marketing opportunities that match demographic trends. Justify your opportunities with specifics from your demographic appraisal.
(Essay)
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The key issue about market segmentation is that consumers within a segment have to be psychographically the same.
(True/False)
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