writing journals
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Chapter 8
Judgment and Decision-Making Based on High Effort
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Learning Objectives
1. Distinguish between judgment and decision- making, and indicate why both processes are important to marketers
2. Describe the types of decisions consumers face in situations where motivation, ability, and opportunity to process are high
3. Identify two types of cognitive decision-making models and understand how consumers make decisions based on brands, product attributes, and gains and losses
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Learning Objectives (continued)
4. Explain how affective decision-making models differ from cognitive decision-making models, and discuss the role of appraisals and feelings, affective forecasting, and imagery in high-effort decisions
5. Discuss why, in a high-effort situation, consumers may delay a decision, and show how they make decisions when alternatives cannot be compared
6. Outline the ways that consumer characteristics, decision characteristics, and other people can influence high-effort decisions
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High-Effort Judgment Processes
Judgment: Evaluation of an object or estimation of likelihood of an outcome or event Decision-making: Making a selection among options or activities – Estimation of likelihood – Judgment of goodness or badness
• Anchoring and adjustment: Starting with initial evaluation and adjusting it with additional information
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High-Effort Judgment Processes (continued)
• Imagery: Imagining an event in order to make judgments
– Mental accounting: Categorizing spending and saving decisions into accounts mentally designated for specific consumption transactions, goal, or situations
– Emotional accounting: Intensity of positive or negative feelings associated with each mental account for saving or spending
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Biases in Judgment Processes
Confirmation
Self-positivity
Negativity
Mood
Prior brand evaluations
Prior experience
Difficulty of mental calculations
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High-Effort Consumer Decisions
Deciding which brands to consider – Options fall under inept set, inert set, and
consideration set • Attraction effect: Addition of inferior brands to a
consideration set increases the attractiveness of dominant brands
Deciding what is important to the choice – Goals – Time – Decision framing
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High-Effort Consumer Decisions (continued)
Deciding what brand to choose – Cognitive decision-making model
• Consumers combine items of information about attributes to reach a decision
– Affective decision-making model • Consumers base their decision on feelings and
emotions Deciding whether to make a decision now Deciding when alternatives cannot be compared
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Exhibit 8.5 – Types of Cognitive Choice Models
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Brand versus Attribute Models
Brand processing Attribute processing
Multiattribute expectancy-value model: Type of brand-based compensatory model
Additive difference model: Brands are compared by attribute, two brands at a time
Conjunctive model: Sets minimum cutoffs to reject bad options
Lexicographic model: Compares brands by attributes, one at a time in order of importance
Disjunctive model: Sets acceptable cutoffs to find options that are good
Elimination-by-aspects model: Similar to lexicographic model but adds the notion of acceptable cutoffs
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Decisions Based on Gains and Losses
Prospect theory – Losses have more influence than gains – Endowment effect: Ownership increases the
value of an item – Consumers have stronger reaction to price
increases than price decreases
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High-Effort Feeling-Based Decisions
Consumers tend to be more satisfied after making a feeling-based decision Emotions aid thought-based decisions Brands can be associated with positive or negative emotions
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Affective Decision-Making
Appraisal theory explains: – How one’s emotions are determined by how one
appraises the situation – How and why certain emotions can affect future
judgments and choices Affective forecasting: Predicts how one will feel in the future Imagery: Consumer imagines consuming a product or service – Plays a key role in emotional decision-making
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Additional High-Effort Decisions
Decision delay occurs if the decision is risky, uncertain, or involves an unpleasant task Noncomparable decision: Making decisions about products or services from different categories – Alternative-based strategy: Choice based on
overall evaluation – Attribute-based strategy: Choice based on
abstract representations of comparable attributes
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Consumer Characteristics and Decisions
Expertise – Detailed consumption vocabularies
Good mood – Allows one to process information and more
time to make a decision Time pressure – Leads to consumers’ failure to make intended
purchases
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Consumer Characteristics and Decisions (continued)
Extremeness aversion: Options extreme on some attributes are less attractive than those with a moderate level of those attributes
• Compromise effect: Brand gains share as it is an intermediate than an extreme option
• Attribute balancing: Picking a brand because it scores equally well on certain attributes
Metacognitive experiences: How information is processed beyond content of the decision
© 2017 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part.
Decision Characteristics Affecting Decision Making
Information availability
Information format
Trivial attributes
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Group Decision Making
Individual-alone goals - Goals attained by an individual’s action alone Individual-group goals - Goals achieved based on actions of an individual and a group
- Chapter 8
- Learning Objectives
- Learning Objectives (continued)
- High-Effort Judgment Processes
- High-Effort Judgment Processes (continued)
- Biases in Judgment Processes
- High-Effort Consumer Decisions
- High-Effort Consumer Decisions (continued)
- Exhibit 8.5 – Types of Cognitive �Choice Models
- Brand versus Attribute Models
- Decisions Based on Gains and Losses
- High-Effort �Feeling-Based Decisions
- Affective Decision-Making
- Additional� High-Effort Decisions
- Consumer Characteristics and Decisions
- Consumer Characteristics and Decisions (continued)
- Decision Characteristics �Affecting Decision Making
- Group Decision Making