paper essay
3 Perception
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CONSUMER BEHAVIOR, 12e Michael R. Solomon
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Learning Objectives
The design of a product today is a key driver of its success or failure.
Products and commercial messages often appeal to our senses, but we won’t be influenced by most of them.
Perception is a three-stage process that translates raw stimuli into meaning.
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Learning Objectives (Cont.)
Subliminal advertising is a controversial—but largely ineffective—way to talk to consumers.
We interpret the stimuli to which we do pay attention according to learned patterns and expectations.
The field of semiotics helps us to understand how marketers use symbols to create meaning.
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Learning Objective 1
The design of a product is now a key driver of its success or failure.
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Hedonic consumption
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Sensation and Perception
Sensation refers to the immediate response of our sensory receptors (eyes, ears, nose, mouth, fingers, skin) to basic stimuli such as light, color, sound, odor, and texture.
Perception is the process by which people select, organize, and interpret these sensations. The study of perception, then, focuses on what we add to these raw sensations in order to give them meaning.
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Sensory Systems
Vision
Scent
Sound
Touch
Taste
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Sensory Marketing
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Companies think carefully about the impact of sensations on our product experiences.
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Vision
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Trade dress
Color forecasts
Marketers communicate meaning on a visual channel using a product’s color, size, and styling.
Gender, age, culture
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Colors
Culture and colors
Marketing and colors
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Vision
Table 3.1 Marketing Applications of Colors
| Color | Associations | Marketing Applications |
| Yellow | Optimistic and youthful | Used to grab window shoppers’ attention |
| Red | Energy | Often seen in clearance sales |
| Blue | Trust and security | Banks |
| Green | Wealth | Used to create relaxation in stores |
| Orange | Aggressive | Call to action: subscribe, buy or sell |
| Black | Powerful and sleek | Luxury products |
| Purple | Soothing | Beauty or anti-aging products |
Source: Adapted from Leo Widrich, “Why Is Facebook Blue? The Science Behind Colors in Marketing,” Fast Company (May 6, 2013), fastcompany.com accessed February 23, 2015.
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Scent
Like color, odor can also stir emotions and memory.
Scent Marketing is a form of sensory marketing that we may see in lingerie, detergents, and more.
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Learning Objective 2
Products and commercial messages often appeal to our senses, but because of the profusion of these messages, most won’t influence us.
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Key Concepts in Use of Sound
Audio watermarking
Sound symbolism
Hard consonant like a K (Kellogg’s) or P (Pepsi)
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Key Concepts in the Use of Touch
Touch matters.
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Taste
Flavor houses
Electronic tongue
Cultural factors and taste
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Learning Objective 3
Perception is a three-stage process that translates raw stimuli into meaning.
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Sensation and Perception
Perception is the process by which sensations are selected, organized, and interpreted.
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Figure 5.1 Perceptual Process
We receive external
stimuli through
our five senses
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Stage 1: Key Concepts in Exposure
Sensory threshold
Psychophysics
Absolute threshold
Differential threshold
JND (Just noticeable difference)
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The Pepsi Logo Evolves
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Learning Objective
Subliminal advertising is a controversial but largely ineffective way to talk to consumers
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Subliminal advertising
Subliminal perception refers to a stimulus below the level of the consumer’s awareness.
Some research by clinical psychologists suggests that subliminal messages can influence people under very specific conditions, though it is doubtful that these techniques would be of much use in most marketing contexts.
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Subliminal Techniques
Embeds: figures that are inserted into magazine advertising by using high-speed photography or airbrushing.
Subliminal auditory perception: sounds, music, or voice text inserted into advertising.
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Attention
Attention is the extent to which processing activity is devoted to a particular stimulus
Consumers experience sensory overload
Marketers need to break through the clutter
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MultiTasking
Multitaskers have more trouble focusing, and they experience more stress
More efficient
Technology is rewiring our brains
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Golden Triangle
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How Do Marketers Get Attention?
Personal Selection
Experience
Perceptual filters
Perceptual vigilance
Perceptual defense
Adaptation
Stimulus Selection
Contrast
Size
Color
Position
Novelty
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Factors Leading to Adaptation
Intensity
Duration
Discrimination
Exposure
Relevance
Adaptation is the degree to which consumers continue to notice a stimulus over time
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Learning Objective 6
We interpret the stimuli to which we do pay attention according to learned patterns and expectations.
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Interpretation
Interpretation refers to the meaning we assign to sensory stimuli, which is based on a schema
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Perceptual Organization
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Learning Objective 6
The field of semiotics helps us to understand how marketers use symbols to create meaning
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To help them understand how consumers interpret the meanings of symbols, some marketers turn to semiotics. Semiotics is the study of correspondence between signs and symbols and their roles in how we assign meanings. This figure illustrates the meaning of the three semiotic parts of a marketing message: 1) the object, 2) the sign, and 3) the interpretant. For Marlboro cigarettes, the cigarettes are the product. The symbol is the cowboy which can be interpreted to mean rugged American.
What is the relationship between signs and marketing communications? Why do certain symbols and icons work more effectively in reaching consumers than others?
Semiotics: The study of signs and symbols as elements of communicative behavior. This also includes the analysis of the systems of communication, as language, gestures, or clothing.
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Hyperreality
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Augmented Reality
Refers to media that superimpose one or more digital layers of data, images, or video over a physical object.
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Examples of Brand Positioning
| Lifestyle | Grey Poupon is “high class” |
| Price leadership | Southwest Airlines is “no frills” |
| Attributes | Bounty is “quicker picker upper” |
| Product class | Mazda Miata is sporty convertible |
| Competitors | Northwestern Insurance is the quiet company |
| Occasions | Use Wrigley’s gum when you can’t smoke |
| Users | Levi’s Dockers targeted to young men |
| Quality | At Ford, “Quality is Job 1” |
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Chapter Summary
The design of a product affects our perception of it.
Products and messages may appeal to our senses.
Perception is a three-stage process that translates raw stimuli into meaning.
Subliminal advertising is controversial.
We interpret stimuli using learned patterns.
Marketers use symbols to create meaning.
We’ve covered several key concepts in this chapter including perception, our perception is affected by our senses, subliminal advertising, and the factors which affect how we process symbols.
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