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CONSUMERS RULE
CHAPTER OBJECTIVES
When students finish this chapter they should understand why:
Consumers use products to help them define their identities in different settings.
Marketers need to understand the wants and needs of different consumer segments.
There are two major perspectives on understanding and studying consumer behavior.
CHAPTER SUMMARY
As students will soon see, the field of consumer behavior covers a lot of ground. Whether the
consumer is on a shopping trip to the mall or surfing on the Internet, general principles and
theories of consumer behavior apply. The formal definition of consumer behavior used in the text
is the study of the processes involved when individuals or groups select, purchase, use, or
dispose of products, services, ideas, or experiences to satisfy needs and desires.
Consumers can be seen as actors on the marketplace stage. As in a play, each consumer has lines,
props, and costumes that are necessary to put on a good performance. The roles that consumers
perform are among the most important elements to be studied in consumer behavior. Consumer
behavior is also an economic process where exchanges take place. These exchanges often
involve many players. In fact, consumers may even take the form of organizations or groups.
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Whatever the composition, the decisions made by the consumer and these other players are
critical to an exchange being carried out successfully to the benefit of all concerned parties.
Understanding the consumer is paramount to developing good marketing strategy. An excellent
approach to understanding consumer is market segmentation. . Consumers can be segmented
along various demographic and psychographic dimensions. One of the important reasons for
segmenting markets is to be able to build lasting relationships (relationship marketing) with the
customers. Marketers are currently implementing many practices that seek to aid in forming a
lasting bond with the often fickle consumer. One of the most promising of these practices is
database marketing wherein consumers buying habits are tracked very closely. The result of this
practice is that products and messages can be tailored to peoples wants and needs.
For better or for worse, we all live in a world that is significantly influenced by the actions of
marketers. Marketers filter much of what we learn. Therefore, consumer behavior is affected by
the actions of marketers. Domestic and global consumption practices are examined in this
chapter with an eye toward the role of the marketer and the influence of such social variables as
culture.
The field of consumer behavior and its application is not, however, without its critics. Ethical
practices toward the consumer are often difficult to measure and achieve. Do marketers
manipulate consumers? is a serious question. Perhaps the answer may be found by examining
several secondary questions such as: Do marketers create artificial needs? Are advertising and
marketing necessary? or Do marketers promise miracles? The responses to these questions
are formulated in this chapter.
As with many aspects of business and life, consumer behavior may also have a dark side.
Excesses, illegal activities, consumer terrorism, and even theft are not uncommon. Ethical
practices do offer positive solutions, however, to most of these problems.
The chapter concludes by providing a glimpse of consumer behavior as a field of study and
provides a plan for study of the field. Simple decisions (buying a carton of milk) versus complex
decisions (selection of a complex networked computer system) can all be explained if consumer
behavior is studied carefully and creatively. Strategic focus and sound consumer research seem
to be among several tools that can provide the guiding light that is probably necessary in our
complex and ever-changing world.
CHAPTER OUTLINE
1. Consumer Behavior: People in the Marketplace
a. The average consumer can be classified and characterized on the basis of:
1) Demographicsage, sex, income, or occupation.
2) Psychographicsrefers to a persons lifestyle and personality.
b. The average consumers purchase decisions are heavily influenced by the opinions
and behaviors of their family, peers, and acquaintances.
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This box examines the controversial issue of the widespread availability of consumers personal
information online. Discussed are the consumer trends of paying for privacy as well as selling
ones personal information. This feature supports the section Business Ethics.
2.
Marketing Pitfalls
This box describes harsh reactions to a General Motors commercial that invoked images of
suicide. Mental health advocates including the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention
objected to making light of a serious topic.
REVIEW QUESTIONS
1. Provide a definition of consumer behavior. It is the study of the processes involved when
individuals or groups select, purchase, use, or dispose of products, services, ideas, or
experiences to satisfy needs and desires.
2. What are demographics? Give three examples of demographic characteristics. Demographics
are statistics that measure observable aspects of a population, such as birthrate, age
distribution, and income.
3. What is the difference between a culture and a subculture? People of large populations share
certain cultural values or strongly held beliefs about the way the world should be
structured. Members of subcultures, or smaller groups within the culture, also share
values.
4. Define market segmentation. The use of market segmentation strategies means targeting a
brand only to specific groups of consumers rather than to everybodyeven if it means
that other consumers who dont belong to this target market arent attracted to that
product.
5. What is role theory, and how does it help us to understand consumer behavior? The
perspective of role theory takes the view that much of consumer behavior resembles
actions in a play. As in a play, each consumer has lines, props, and costumes necessary
to put on a good performance. Because people act out many different roles, they
sometimes alter their consumption decisions depending on the particular play they are
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in at the time. The criteria they use to evaluate products and services in one of their roles
may be quite different from those used in another role.
6. What do we mean by an exchange? A transaction in which two or more organizations or
people give and receive something of value.
7. Why is it important for businesses to learn about their heavy users? Because they account for
such a substantial proportion of revenues. They are the customers that are more likely to
be loyal. These customers represent the best opportunity to cross-sell and up-sell.
8. What is database marketing? Give an example of a company that uses this technique.
Database marketing involves tracking specific consumers buying habits very closely and
crafting products and messages tailored precisely to peoples wants and needs based on
this information. Wal-Mart is the example given in the book. Online companies such as
Dell that require customer information in order to complete transactions and deliver
products have an advantage in database marketing as well.
9. What is popular culture, and how does this concept relate to marketing and consumer
behavior? Popular culture, consisting of the music, movies, sports, books, celebrities, and
other forms of entertainment consumed by the mass market, is both a product of and an
inspiration for marketers. Our lives are also affected in more far-reaching ways, ranging
from how we acknowledge cultural events such as marriage, death, or holidays to how
we view social issues such as air pollution, gambling, and addictions.
10. The chapter states that people often buy products not for what they do, but for what they
mean. Explain the meaning of this statement and provide an example. The core
functional benefits provided by products are only the bare minimum. Because most all
brand options provide these, consumers go beyond the basics. All things being equal,
people will choose the brand that has an image (or even a personality!) consistent with
their underlying needs. Almost any product can be used as an example. Focus on the
clothing brands that students wear.
11. Describe two types of relationships a consumer can have with a product.
12. What is meant by the term global consumer culture? A culture in which people around the
world are united by their common devotion to brand name consumer goods, movie stars,
celebrities, and leisure activities.
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13. What is the difference between B2B and B2C e-commerce? Simply put, B2B is businessconducting transactions with other businesses, B2C is businesses conducting
transactions with consumers.
14. The economics of information perspective argues that advertising is important. Why? This
view emphasizes the economic cost of the time spent searching for products. Accordingly,
advertising is a service for which consumers are willing to pay, because the information
it provides reduces search time.
15. Provide two examples of important legislation that relates to American consumers. The Pure
Food and Drug Act in 1906 and the Federal Meat Inspection Act in 1907 are the
examples given in the text. The list is endless now.
16. Define social marketing and give an example of this technique. Social marketing uses
marketing techniques normally employed to sell beer or detergent to encourage positive
behaviors such as increased literacy and to discourage negative activities such as drunk
driving.
17. Define consumer addiction and give two examples. Consumer addiction is a physiological or
psychological dependency on products or services. These problems of course include
alcoholism, drug addiction, and cigarettesand many companies profit from addictive
products or by selling solutions.
18. What is an example of a consumed consumer? Consumed consumers are people who are
used or exploited, willingly or not, for commercial gain in the marketplace. Examples
include prostitutes and organ donors.
19. What is shrinkage, and why is it a problem? Shrinkage is the industry term for inventory and
cash losses from shoplifting and employee theft. This is a massive problem for businesses
that is passed on to consumers in the form of higher prices (about 40 percent of the
losses can be attributed to employees rather than shoppers). Shopping malls spend $6
million annually on security, and a family of four spends about $300 extra per year
because of markups to cover shrinkage.
20. Define anticonsumption, and provide two examples of it. Anticonsumption is defined by
events in which products and services are deliberately defaced or mutilated.
Anticonsumption can range from relatively mild acts like spray-painting graffiti on
buildings and subways to serious incidences of product tampering or even the release of
computer viruses that can bring large corporations to their knees.
21. Name two different disciplines that study consumer behavior. How would their approaches to
the same issue differ? Two disciplines that study consumer behavior are psychology and
sociology. Psychologists study consumer behavior from a mental / brain information
processing perspective while sociologists study consumer behavior from a group
behavior perspective.
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22. What are the major differences between the positivist and interpretivist paradigms in
consumer research? Positivism (or sometimes modernism) has significantly influenced
Western art and science since the late sixteenth century. It emphasizes that human reason
is supreme, and that there is a single, objective truth that can be discovered by science.
Positivism encourages us to stress the function of objects, to celebrate technology, and to
regard the world as a rational, ordered place with a clearly defined past, present, and
future.
The paradigm of interpretivism (or postmodernism) questions these assumptions.
Proponents of this perspective argue that there is too much emphasis on science and
technology in our society, and that this ordered, rational view of behavior denies the
complex social and cultural world in which we live. Others feel that positivism puts too
much emphasis on material well-being, and that its logical outlook is directed by an
ideology that stresses the homogenous views of a culture dominated by (dead) white
males. Interpretivists instead stress the importance of symbolic, subjective experience,
and the idea that meaning is in the mind of the personthat is, we each construct our
own meanings based on our unique and shared cultural experiences, so there are no
right or wrong answers.
The chapter states that people play different roles and that their consumption behaviors
may differ depending on the particular role they are playing. State whether you agree or
disagree with this perspective, giving examples from your personal life. Try to construct a
stage set for a role you playspecify the props, costumes, and script that you use to
play a role (e.g., job interviewee, conscientious student, party animal).
Most students will be able to identify the different roles that individuals play at different
times, so agreement should be almost universal. After agreeing with this notion, the
student will be more likely to accept the idea that consumption behavior is intimately tied
with the role itself. The goal of this exercise is to make the student aware that
consumption helps to define the roles consumers play and is a central part of those roles.
For example, many family social occasions are accompanied by food and drink, and the
consumption of these goods act as a shared bond that the group uses to define
membership in that group. Another example is the styles of clothing worn by young
people to define their group membership.
Each students stage set will be unique to their own role. Each student should also
relate these roles to consumer behavior.
2.
A company recently introduced a teddy bear for Valentines Day called Crazy for You.
This toy aroused the ire of mental health advocates because the cuddly bears cuddly
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The chapter discussed a computer game called JFK Reloaded that lets players reenact
President Kennedys assassination. Have the games developers gone too far, or is any
historical event fair game to be adapted into an entertainment vehicle?
In a manner similar to question 2, this is another ethics-oriented question that will
prompt responses on both ends of the morally right/morally wrong spectrum. However,
where question 2 deals only with issues of offensiveness, this question additionally deals
with criminal and legal issues. Among the critics of this video game was Senator Joseph
Lieberman, a leader of many U.S. Senate decency campaigns. He highlighted the fact
that making threats or conspiring to commit violence against elected officials is a crime,
and that the line between the fantasy version in this game and reality is too close. Legal
critics suggest that this argument holds no water, as the subject in question in not a living
person.
Additionally, an argument may arise about the link between violent media and the
commission of violence. The scientific community has produced evidence that individuals
who view violent media programming or play violent video games are more likely to
become aggressive and even commit violent acts. However, the flip side of this argument
is that there is not a one-to-one correlation between the two, and that a person cannot be
prosecuted unless there is actually a commission of violence.
Ultimately, a discussion of this question should bring out the difference between ethical
and legal issues. In other words, even if this video game company has done nothing
illegal, has it done something immoral?
4.
Some researchers believe that the field of consumer behavior should be a pure, rather
than an applied science. That is, research issues should be framed in terms of their
scientific interest rather than their applicability to immediate marketing problems. Give
your views on this issue.
Instead of viewing research in an either/or framework (i.e., consumer behavior research
must be either pure scientific research or applied knowledge), the student should be
encouraged to view it as both. Much research is done on a knowledge for knowledge
sake basis, but the field of consumer behavior has the potential to make a significant
contribution to how the makers of goods and services can best reach the consumer. For
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example, business firms are able to take the knowledge developed in a pure science
research setting and apply it to their marketing efforts by utilizing the results of studies
that investigate how consumers process advertising messages. Areas such as space
exploration have been able to use pure science research and apply their findings to
immediate problems. Consumer behavior knowledge has this same quality.
5.
Name some products or services that are widely used by your social group. State whether
you agree or disagree with the notion that these products help to form group bonds,
supporting your argument with examples from your list of products used by the group.
Discussion of this question is similar to that pertaining to the first question. In both
cases, the focus is on whether consumption behavior has a wider meaningthat of group
bonding or identification. The actual products used are not the most important aspect of
this discussion. Instead, the focus should be on consumption behavior as more than the
satisfying of primary (basic/physiological) needs. It is assumed that most students will
agree that consumption has meaning beyond satisfying primary needs. Differences will
be found, however, in 1) the situations in which consumption takes on this additional
meaning, 2) the products that do so, and 3) the form of the broadened meaning.
Encourage students to examine the products that bring forth meaning, as well as their
consideration as to why this phenomenon occurs.
6.
7.
List the three stages in the consumption process. Describe the issues that you consider in
each of these stages when you made a recent important purchase.
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Students can use the material presented in Figure 1.1. The three stages in the
consumption process shown are:1) prepurchase, 2) purchase, and 3) post purchase. The
student selected should develop fairly unique sets of issues related to each of these
phases based on the different products and purchase situations. Figure 1.1 provides a list
of issues for each stage from both the consumers and marketers perspectives.
8.
9.
Critics of targeted marketing strategies argue that this practice is discriminatory and
unfair, especially if such a strategy encourages a group of people to buy a product that
may be injurious to them or that they cannot afford. For example, community leaders in
largely minority neighborhoods have staged protests against billboards promoting beer or
cigarettes in these areas. On the other hand, the Association of National Advertisers
argues that banning targeted marketing constitutes censorship and is thus a violation of
the First Amendment. What are your views regarding both sides of this issue?
Discussion of this question closely parallels discussion of question 4. It is important to
guide discussion to the legitimate interests on both sides. In this situation, however, the
discussion should also examine the legitimacy of each sides basic point. For what
groups should target marketing not be allowed? Or under what specific circumstances
should target marketing be allowed? Is the argument that target marketing unduly
influences those who cannot resist its appeal reasonable? Is the counterargument that
banishing target marketing amounts to censorship and is unconstitutional equally
specious? Discussion should initially focus on the validity of each argument and then
evolve toward a compromise that will protect target-marketing efforts while recognizing
the needs of society.
10.
Do marketers have the ability to control our desires or the power to create needs? Is this
situation changing as the Internet creates new ways to interact with companies? If so,
how?
For better or worse, we live in a world that is significantly influenced by the actions of
marketers. As indicated in the text, marketers supply vast amounts of stimuli in the form
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of advertisements, and much of what we learn (especially younger consumers who watch
a great deal of television) about the world is filtered by marketers. Marketers are always
on top of popular culture and, therefore, close to the heart of our society. The boundary
between marketing and reality is often blurred. The chapter identifies several issues that
might be pertinent with respect to this question (and supplies a response to each
indictment): Do marketers create artificial needs? Are advertising and marketing
necessary? Do marketers promise miracles?
With respect to the influence of the Internet, students should give illustrations of new
connections that arise from using the Internet for marketing purposes. Consider when
the consumer contacts a marketer, when a marketer contacts a consumer, and when a
consumer contacts another consumer.
The honest answer is that only the consumer has the ability to control his or her own
desiresmarketers do not create needs. Addictive behavior shows that the picture is not
black and white, however, but a rather dull gray. This question will test the students
depth of understanding and should provide for an interesting discussion. Save this
question until the end of the chapter for discussion.
11.
An entrepreneur made international news when he set up a Web site to auction the egg
cells of fashion models to the highest bidder (minimum bid: $15,000). He wrote, Just
watch television and you will see that we are only interested in looking at beautiful
people. This site simply mirrors our current society, in that beauty usually goes to the
highest bidder . . . Any gift such as beauty, intelligence, or social skills will help your
children in their quest for happiness and success. If you could increase the chance of
reproducing beautiful children, and thus giving them an advantage in society, would
you? Is the buying and selling of humans just another example of consumer behavior at
work? Do you agree that this service is simply a more efficient way to maximize the
chance of having happy, successful children? Should this kind of marketing activity be
allowed? Would you sell your eggs or sperm on a Web site?
This question should spark discussion revolving around various ethical issues. One issue
is that of the consumed consumer. Is the selling of all or part of a human being an
acceptable practice if that person has given their consent? In such a case, is the person
truly being exploited for commercial gain? Both sides of this issue will emerge as some
students will adamantly profess that such practices are morally wrong while others will
view this as a perfectly acceptable way for consumers to become suppliers, thereby
exercising their rights as participants in the free enterprise system.
Another issue that should emerge is that of the emphasis that society places on physical
beauty. Again, some will contend that this is simply a cultural value that has come about
naturally and that there is nothing wrong with it. Others will focus more on the role that
marketing has played in artificially increasing the importance of physical
characteristics as a value.
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A third issue that students may identify is somewhat related to the previous. Does
marketing foster incorrect perceptions of how to achieve happiness? Numerous examples
might arise such as owning products with a high-status image, engaging in leisure
activities, or even consuming various food and beverage items. Although numerous
promotions may imply that purchasing such products leads to happiness, the example
given in this question is much more blatant.
12.
A recent book bemoans the new wave of consumer generated content, labeling it, the
cult of the amateur. It compares the social networking phenomenon to the old story
about the monkeys: If you put an infinite number of monkeys in a room with an infinite
number of typewriters, eventually they will (by hitting keys randomly) reproduce all the
major works of literature. In other words, the large majority of user-generated content is
about the same level and the future of professionally produced, quality work, is in doubt.
Do you agree with this assertion?
Students who are members of a social networking community or those who actively blog,
might strongly defend the practice and might be offended by the monkey reference. Even
though they might agree that there are a lot of sites with ramblings, rants and raves, they
might also point out to serious sites where user generated content is thought provoking.
They might also mention instances where blogs check facts when the traditional media
fails to do so. An example of this was a blogger proving that documents used by CBS
News to discredit President Bush were forgeries.
Some students might also mention that not all professional produced work can be
labeled as quality work. Either students or the instructor could provide examples. It
might also be beneficial to briefly discuss what quality means, who judges quality, and
if this is a classic bias against the new by the older generation who prefers the
traditional.
Application Questions
13. To what degree will consumers trade lower prices for less privacy? Car owners now can
let insurance companies monitor their driving using a new technology in exchange for
lower rates. Customers who sign up for Progressives TripSense program get a device the
size of a Tic Tac box to plug into their cars. The device will track speed and how many
miles are driven at what times of day. Every few months, customers unplug the device
from the car, plug it into a computer, download the data and send it to the company.
Depending on results, discounts will range from 5 percent to 25 percent. In Great Britain,
a major insurer is testing a program called Pay as You Drive. Volunteers will get a device
the size of a Palm computer installed in their cars. The gadget will use global positioning
satellite technology to track where the car goes, constantly sending information back to
the insurance company. Cars that spend more time in safer areas will qualify for bigger
discounts. Of course, the potential downside to these efforts is that the insurance
companies may be able to collect data on where you have driven, how long you stayed in
one location, and so on. Conduct a poll of 10 drivers of various ages where you describe
these programs and ask respondents if they would participate in order to receive a
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discount on their insurance premiums. What reasons do they give pro and con? Do you
find any differences in attitudes based on demographic characteristics such as age or
gender?
This question of exchanging privacy for lower prices (or convenience, or any of a
number of other benefits) can be applied in many contexts these days, particularly in ecommerce. As the student reports are discussed, the instructor can relate this issue to
various topics. These include value (what benefits are people gaining and what cost are
they paying?), ethics (what are the implications of companies having such a depth of
information on consumers?), public policy (should there be attempts to regulate such
business activities?), and demographic segmentation. Probe students as to what types of
trade-offs they have made (providing personal, credit card, bank account, and other
information in order to conduct business online).
14. While youre talking to car owners, probe to see what (if any) relationships they have with
their vehicles. Do these feelings correspond to the types of consumer/product attachments
we discussed in the chapter? How do these relationships get acted upon (hint: see if any
of the respondents have nicknames for their car, or if they decorate them with personal
items).
The types of relationships referred to in the text are the following:
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many people wear daily lotions and moisturizers that contain sunscreens.
The same can be said for the new UVA blockers. If consumers do not develop the perception
UVA blockers are far more important than UVB blockers, such products will never have
mass market appeal and success. Whether or not this perception develops depends on a
number of factors. The following are just a few:
The degree to which the medical field communicates the importance of UVB blockers
to patients and the public.
The degree to which sunscreen manufacturers can convince customers of the
importance of UVB blockers.
Any changes in the rates of skin cancers.
Demographic shifts such as the increasing average age of the public as a whole.
The availability of effective UVB blockers across multiple manufacturers.
2. Considering the implications of a product like Mexoryl on human health, what obligations
does LOreal have to educate the public? To make it available in all its sunscreen products?
To license it for use by other manufacturers? What obligations to consumers do companies
like Neutrogena and Johnson & Johnson have?
One of the basic tenets of the American Marketing Associations code of ethics is, To do no
harm knowingly. If what this case is saying about the effectiveness of UVB blockers versus
UVA blockers in preventing deadly diseases, then the marketing of UVA blockers takes on
very serious ethical issues. There may not be any clear answers to such, and student
responses to each of the questions posed here will certainly vary widely. This may be a good
place to lead a discussion or even a debate of such issues. For each of these questions, the
instructor may wish to bring up the issue of doing harm knowingly. For example, if
LOreal does not include UVB blockers in ALL of its products, is it knowingly harming
individuals? Because the other manufacturers do not have effective UVB blockers, is LOreal
knowingly harming people if they do not in some way make Mexoryl available to them?
Another interesting twist that might be placed here is to discuss whether or not the
government should become involved in regulating or mandating such activities.
Ask students about their involvement with social networking sites and or blogs. Ask
them to explain why they are using it? What benefits do they derive from it? Who are
the target audiences for their information? Have them explain their concerns about
privacy, if any?
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2.
Have students explain what it means to be a green consumer. They could report on what
they have done to be green and how their behaviors have changed. Have they tried to
influence anybody else to go green and how?
3.
This assignment can really be fun for the class and the presenter. Have a student wear or
bring to class a recent clothes purchase. Have them explain how his or her purchase
decision was influenced by different economic, social, cultural, and/or psychological
variables.
4.
5.
Assign students to identify at least five instances where a specific marketing tactic
employed by an organization (for profit or non-profit) has had an impact on popular
culture. Examples may include such things as an actual product, product icon,
promotional campaign, celebrity endorsers, corporate sponsorship, product placement, or
others. This impact may be short term (the public temporarily adopting catch-phrases
such as Donald Trumps Youre fired! or Budweisers Whaaaaazup!) or long term
(the influence of anti-smoking campaigns in reducing the number of smokers).
6.
7.
Have students attend an entertainment event (such as a movie or play, concert or other
musical performance, or a sporting event). Have them observe the behavior of others
present. Have them identify how such experiences provide meaning to those in
attendance by analyzing peoples behavior according to each of the following
consumption activities: consuming as experience, consuming as integration, consuming
as classification, consuming as play.
8.
Ask students to consider their own consumption practices over the past decade. Have
them list the ways that online consumption activities have replaced or modified their realworld consumption activities.
9.
Have each student describe a situation in which he or she (or someone they know) has
exhibited compulsive consumption or consumer addiction. Was this consumption or
addiction harmful? Discuss.
10.
Students should visit a tattoo parlor and observe the business activities that occur there.
Can consumers who patronize these establishments be classified as consumed
consumers? Discuss.
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11.
Have each student locate an example of a marketing activity (a promotion itself or a news
article about the actions of a company) that they find ethically questionable. Have them
either write about or come to class prepared to discuss why they find it questionable.
What moral principle does it violate?
12.
Have students identify a time when they or someone they know defrauded a company.
Examples could include employee theft, shoplifting, abusing return/exchange policies, or
otherwise taking advantage of the company. What was the reasoning behind the activity?
Was the activity justified?
Group Projects
1.
Have groups select a product of interest (e.g., a car, mp3 player, vacation spot, movie,
sporting event, etc.). Have each person in the group make a list of what they consider to
be the products main attributes (both physical and psychological). Compare and contrast
the attributes listed by the women and by the men to see how they may vary. Next, if
there are any age or ethnic differences within the group see if differences appear. Based
on these differences formulate strategies for appealing to the various subgroups within
your group.
2.
Have groups collect information on at least three companies that have recently expanded
into countries where they have not previously marketed their products. What kind of
success/failure have they met with? Has each had any kind of impact on the society or
culture entered?
3.
Have groups of students find an example of a recent product, service, or program that
was a failure. Business Week, U.S.A. Today, the Wall Street Journal, Fortune, Forbes or
some other marketing publications are excellent sources. Have students explain to the
class how knowledge of consumer behavior, or the lack of it, could have contributed to
the success or failure of the effort.
4.
Have your group go online to three Web pages of your choice. Demonstrate how the Web
pages segment markets, collect information from the consumer (after the person has
come to the Web page), and might be used to build a database.
5.
Have the members of each group find and present examples of the blurred boundaries
between promotional activities and programming or real life. These examples should be
of activities where the program or event cannot be viewed without attending to the
promotional content.
6.
Each group should locate an example of a company that is heavily involved in social or
green marketing. Make a report on the activities of the company. Compare this company
to a direct competitor that is not so extensively involved in such activities. What are the
advantages/disadvantages that the social/green approach has over the other?
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7.
Have each group discuss what the members feel is the most unethical practice being
employed on the Internet by marketers. Have them reach a consensus on this matter. Each
group should comment on how to remedy the situation and be prepared to share their
findings with others.
8.
Have the members (individually or in pairs) of each group interview the manager or
owner of multiple retail stores. They should include at least two examples of both
national chain retail stores, as well as independent retail stores. Inquire as to the
return/exchange policies of the store. What methods does management employ to prevent
customers from abusing these policies? Have the group compile their findings and report
on them.
eLAB
Individual Assignments
1. Visit www.facebook.com or www.myspace.com or www.orkut.com and determine who they
are trying appeal to. Are these sites appealing to the same target audience or to different
segments? If the audience is the same, what is each site doing different to market
themselves? If the audience is different, who are they? Are their privacy policies raising
any concerns for you?
2.
3.
4.
Go to www.zilo.com. This recent addition to a growing list of youth marketing Web sites
takes an MTV spin to presenting issues and potential products to teens and early
twentysomethings. If you were the marketing manager for a new bottled water product
that was seeking a national youth audience, plan a strategy for your new product
introduction using this Web site as one of your primary promotional springboards. List
what you would do, why you would do it, and what results you might expect. What does
a Web site such as this teach you about consumer behavior?
5.
Go to www.moveon.org. What is the main variable that this site uses to segment the
American public? What is the resulting segment that this site is attempting to appeal to?
Extensively, describe this segment in terms of demographic and psychographic variables.
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What issues seem to be raised on this site? If you were an advertiser, would it be a good
idea to sponsor a message on this site? Explain.
Group Assignment
Go to www.casino.com. Take some time as a group to become familiar with the various sections
of this site. What are the ways that this site has been designed to encourage new users to sign up,
and existing users to increase their level of online gambling? Is this Web site encouraging
addictive consumption? Is this unethical? After having completed this portion of the assignment,
Visit www.ballygaming.com. What is the product being sold by this company? In what ways
could this company be contributing to unethical behaviors? Contrast their activities to that of
www.lostbet.com in terms of ethics.
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