Deck 7: Consumer Motivation

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Question
While there are some differences between consumers, they are basically all alike in their motivations from a marketing perspective.
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Question
What motivates one person to buy is not necessarily what leads the next person to do so.
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Demographics are defined as the size, structure, and distribution of a population.
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Demographics are used mostly as market segment descriptors since they are not very accurate for trend analysis.
Question
Consumer analysts have discovered that demographic trends are not useful for predicting changes in product demand.
Question
Macromarketing refers to the aggregate performance of marketing in a particular industry.
Question
Macromarketing refers to the aggregate performance of marketing in society.
Question
Consumer demand is ultimately derived from industrial demand.
Question
Economic demographics are the study of the economic characteristics of a nation's population.
Question
Birthrate is the number of live births per 10,000 population in a given year.
Question
Birthrate is the number of live births per 1,000 population in a given year.
Question
The terms "natural increase" and "birthrate" refer to the same thing.
Question
Forecasting the number of births in future decades is easy to do.
Question
One of the variables that determine birthrates is the age distribution of the population.
Question
TFR stands for total fertility reduction.
Question
The importance of young children to business will decline during the 2000s.
Question
Population momentum recognizes that the future growth of any population will be influenced by its present age distribution.
Question
Teen consumers are very brand loyal and do not change their brand preferences easily.
Question
A cohort is any group of individuals linked as a group in some way.
Question
Baby boomers refers to the cohort of people born before World War II.
Question
Baby boomers hold relatively little power in the marketplace because of their small numbers.
Question
The "young again" segment includes the mature market, seniors, and the elderly.
Question
The "young again" market consists of older consumers who feel, think, and buy young.
Question
Cognitive age is the number of years a person believes he or she will live.
Question
Children are rarely involved in family purchase decisions.
Question
Market segmentation is less important in dealing with the mature market, which tends to be far more homogeneous than other age segments.
Question
The populations of the U.S., Japan, Canada, and Europe are growing older.
Question
Geodemography refers to where people live, how they earn and spend their money, and other socioeconomic factors.
Question
Exurbs are areas within the suburbs that are sectioned off into private living communities.
Question
Geographically speaking, states are the most important unit of analysis in most marketing plans.
Question
Market trends are pretty much the same from one state to the next.
Question
Age and income are the most frequently used demographic variables for defining market segments.
Question
Income is defined as money from wages and salaries only.
Question
Although income determines what consumers can buy, it does not determine what consumers want to buy.
Question
Consumption is heavily influenced by what consumers think will happen in the future.
Question
Wealth is a measure of a family's net worth or assets.
Question
The "up market" or "superaffluents" represent the top quintile of consumers in terms of income.
Question
The fastest growing country in the world is China.
Question
The most attractive markets are countries that are growing both in population and in economic resources.
Question
India has a larger middle class than France.
Question
Other than the United States, Japan consumes more goods and services than any other country in the world.
Question
The European Union is a market larger than the United States.
Question
Personality is defined as an individual's unique psychological makeup, but has little influence on how the person responds to her or his environment.
Question
Psychoanalytic theory recognizes that the human personality is made up of the id, the ego and the alter ego.
Question
The CAD scale measures people on three traits: compliance, anxiety, and depression.
Question
A trait is any distinguishable, relatively enduring way in which one individual differs from another.
Question
Unlike human beings, brands are not capable of having personalities.
Question
Social values define "normal" behavior for a society or a group.
Question
Personal values define "normal" behavior for an individual.
Question
Laddering is a technique by which companies try to move consumers "up"
the purchase ladder.
Question
Laddering seeks to uncover the linkages between product attributes, personal outcomes (consequences), and values that serve to structure components of the cognitive network in a consumer's mind.
Question
Lifestyle is a summary construct representing the patterns that characterize how people live and spend time and money.
Question
Psychographics is an operational technique to measure lifestyles.
Question
AIO measures assess consumers' attitudes, income and occupation.
Question
A widely used approach to lifestyle marketing is the Values and Lifestyle System (VALS).
Question
Consumer motivation represents the drive to satisfy both physiological and psychological needs through product purchase and consumption.
Question
Physiological needs are the most fundamental type of consumer needs.
Question
Physiological needs involve just what we eat and drink.
Question
Phishing refers to the marketing practice of sending out mass numbers of e-mails in search of new customers.
Question
There has long been a myth in the automobile industry that safety doesn't sell.
Question
The population of the United States is, on average, getting older. This aging of the population is good news for industries and products that cater to consumers' health needs.
Question
Products are often used as symbols of love and caring.
Question
The insurance companies have been so successful in appealing to American consumers' need for financial security that there is now an "overinsurance" problem, with many Americans having far more life insurance coverage than they really need.
Question
A person's social image depends on many things, but not on the products that the person buys and consumes.
Question
The term conspicuous consumption describes purchases motivated to some extent by the desire to keep hidden one's financial success.
Question
Consumers may sometimes differ in their opinions about how a product impacts their social image.
Question
The entertainment industry is built on consumers' need for pleasure.
Question
The need to possess is a characteristic of our consumer society.
Question
The average American household has more cars than drivers.
Question
That we are what we have is one of the most common myths about consumer behavior.
Question
A sudden surge in the need to possess may lead to impulse buying.
Question
Self-gifts are things that we buy or do as a way of rewarding ourselves.
Question
Companies respond to consumers' need for variety in several ways, such as the food manufacturer that offers different versions of the same basic product.
Question
Approach-approach conflict occurs when the person must decide between two or more undesirable alternatives.
Question
Avoidance-avoidance conflict involves deciding between two or more undesirable alternatives.
Question
Approach-avoidance conflict exists when a chosen course of action has only negative consequences.
Question
In order to resolve motivational conflict, people must treat all of their needs as equally important.
Question
One important implication of Maslow's need hierarchy is that people usually assign the same importance to most of their needs.
Question
Differences in the importance consumers attach to various needs ultimately affect how they evaluate products being considered for purchase and consumption.
Question
Benefit segmentation involves dividing consumers into different market segments based on the benefits a company receives for successfully recruiting customers from a given segment.
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Deck 7: Consumer Motivation
1
While there are some differences between consumers, they are basically all alike in their motivations from a marketing perspective.
False
2
What motivates one person to buy is not necessarily what leads the next person to do so.
True
3
Demographics are defined as the size, structure, and distribution of a population.
True
4
Demographics are used mostly as market segment descriptors since they are not very accurate for trend analysis.
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5
Consumer analysts have discovered that demographic trends are not useful for predicting changes in product demand.
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6
Macromarketing refers to the aggregate performance of marketing in a particular industry.
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7
Macromarketing refers to the aggregate performance of marketing in society.
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8
Consumer demand is ultimately derived from industrial demand.
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9
Economic demographics are the study of the economic characteristics of a nation's population.
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10
Birthrate is the number of live births per 10,000 population in a given year.
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11
Birthrate is the number of live births per 1,000 population in a given year.
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12
The terms "natural increase" and "birthrate" refer to the same thing.
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13
Forecasting the number of births in future decades is easy to do.
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14
One of the variables that determine birthrates is the age distribution of the population.
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15
TFR stands for total fertility reduction.
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16
The importance of young children to business will decline during the 2000s.
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17
Population momentum recognizes that the future growth of any population will be influenced by its present age distribution.
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18
Teen consumers are very brand loyal and do not change their brand preferences easily.
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19
A cohort is any group of individuals linked as a group in some way.
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20
Baby boomers refers to the cohort of people born before World War II.
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21
Baby boomers hold relatively little power in the marketplace because of their small numbers.
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22
The "young again" segment includes the mature market, seniors, and the elderly.
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23
The "young again" market consists of older consumers who feel, think, and buy young.
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24
Cognitive age is the number of years a person believes he or she will live.
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25
Children are rarely involved in family purchase decisions.
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26
Market segmentation is less important in dealing with the mature market, which tends to be far more homogeneous than other age segments.
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27
The populations of the U.S., Japan, Canada, and Europe are growing older.
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28
Geodemography refers to where people live, how they earn and spend their money, and other socioeconomic factors.
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29
Exurbs are areas within the suburbs that are sectioned off into private living communities.
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30
Geographically speaking, states are the most important unit of analysis in most marketing plans.
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31
Market trends are pretty much the same from one state to the next.
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32
Age and income are the most frequently used demographic variables for defining market segments.
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33
Income is defined as money from wages and salaries only.
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34
Although income determines what consumers can buy, it does not determine what consumers want to buy.
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35
Consumption is heavily influenced by what consumers think will happen in the future.
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36
Wealth is a measure of a family's net worth or assets.
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37
The "up market" or "superaffluents" represent the top quintile of consumers in terms of income.
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38
The fastest growing country in the world is China.
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39
The most attractive markets are countries that are growing both in population and in economic resources.
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40
India has a larger middle class than France.
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41
Other than the United States, Japan consumes more goods and services than any other country in the world.
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42
The European Union is a market larger than the United States.
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43
Personality is defined as an individual's unique psychological makeup, but has little influence on how the person responds to her or his environment.
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44
Psychoanalytic theory recognizes that the human personality is made up of the id, the ego and the alter ego.
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45
The CAD scale measures people on three traits: compliance, anxiety, and depression.
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46
A trait is any distinguishable, relatively enduring way in which one individual differs from another.
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47
Unlike human beings, brands are not capable of having personalities.
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48
Social values define "normal" behavior for a society or a group.
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49
Personal values define "normal" behavior for an individual.
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50
Laddering is a technique by which companies try to move consumers "up"
the purchase ladder.
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k this deck
51
Laddering seeks to uncover the linkages between product attributes, personal outcomes (consequences), and values that serve to structure components of the cognitive network in a consumer's mind.
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k this deck
52
Lifestyle is a summary construct representing the patterns that characterize how people live and spend time and money.
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k this deck
53
Psychographics is an operational technique to measure lifestyles.
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k this deck
54
AIO measures assess consumers' attitudes, income and occupation.
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k this deck
55
A widely used approach to lifestyle marketing is the Values and Lifestyle System (VALS).
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k this deck
56
Consumer motivation represents the drive to satisfy both physiological and psychological needs through product purchase and consumption.
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k this deck
57
Physiological needs are the most fundamental type of consumer needs.
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58
Physiological needs involve just what we eat and drink.
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59
Phishing refers to the marketing practice of sending out mass numbers of e-mails in search of new customers.
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60
There has long been a myth in the automobile industry that safety doesn't sell.
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61
The population of the United States is, on average, getting older. This aging of the population is good news for industries and products that cater to consumers' health needs.
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k this deck
62
Products are often used as symbols of love and caring.
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63
The insurance companies have been so successful in appealing to American consumers' need for financial security that there is now an "overinsurance" problem, with many Americans having far more life insurance coverage than they really need.
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k this deck
64
A person's social image depends on many things, but not on the products that the person buys and consumes.
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k this deck
65
The term conspicuous consumption describes purchases motivated to some extent by the desire to keep hidden one's financial success.
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k this deck
66
Consumers may sometimes differ in their opinions about how a product impacts their social image.
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k this deck
67
The entertainment industry is built on consumers' need for pleasure.
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k this deck
68
The need to possess is a characteristic of our consumer society.
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k this deck
69
The average American household has more cars than drivers.
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70
That we are what we have is one of the most common myths about consumer behavior.
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k this deck
71
A sudden surge in the need to possess may lead to impulse buying.
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k this deck
72
Self-gifts are things that we buy or do as a way of rewarding ourselves.
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73
Companies respond to consumers' need for variety in several ways, such as the food manufacturer that offers different versions of the same basic product.
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74
Approach-approach conflict occurs when the person must decide between two or more undesirable alternatives.
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75
Avoidance-avoidance conflict involves deciding between two or more undesirable alternatives.
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76
Approach-avoidance conflict exists when a chosen course of action has only negative consequences.
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77
In order to resolve motivational conflict, people must treat all of their needs as equally important.
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78
One important implication of Maslow's need hierarchy is that people usually assign the same importance to most of their needs.
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k this deck
79
Differences in the importance consumers attach to various needs ultimately affect how they evaluate products being considered for purchase and consumption.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
80
Benefit segmentation involves dividing consumers into different market segments based on the benefits a company receives for successfully recruiting customers from a given segment.
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