Deck 16: Consumer and Marketing Misbehavior

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Question
Sociologists use attribution theory to explain why groups of people replace one set of acceptable norms with another set that others view as unacceptable.
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Consumer misbehavior may be viewed as a subset of a more general topic, human deviance.
Question
Relativism refers to beliefs about the violation of written or unwritten laws.
Question
A consumer's moral beliefs are comprised of two components: norms and relativism.
Question
One motivation of consumer misbehavior is unfulfilled aspirations.
Question
Aspirational evaluations focus on specific actions.
Question
Other consumers may suffer while misbehaving consumers break societal norms and laws.
Question
Moral equity represent beliefs regarding an act's fairness or justness.
Question
Teleological evaluations focus on the consequences of the behaviors and the individual's assessment of those consequences.
Question
For some consumers, the simple thrill of the action leads them to misbehave.
Question
Situational factors, such as retail crowding, flight delays, excessive heat, or noise can provoke consumer misbehavior.
Question
Retaliatory socialization is one motivation of consumer misbehavior that states consumers may view misbehavior as a way of getting revenge against big companies.
Question
One issue taken into consideration with deontological evaluations is the desirability of the consequences of an action for the stakeholders.
Question
The focal motivation for consumer misbehavior is value.
Question
When a consumer enters into a situation that calls for an ethical decision, three sets of ethical evaluations occur: equity, contractual, and relativist.
Question
All consumer misbehavior is illegal.
Question
A relativistic evaluation occurs when a consumer asks him- or herself, "Is this action 'right'?"
Question
Consumer misbehavior is behavior that violates generally accepted norms of conduct.
Question
Equity reflects beliefs about the social acceptability of an act.
Question
Anomie is a state that occurs when there is a disconnect between cultural goals and norms and the capacities of members of society to act within societal norms in an effort to achieve those goals.
Question
Culture jamming refers to attempts to disrupt advertisements and marketing campaigns by altering the messages in some meaningful way.
Question
Cyberbullying is the attack of innocent people on the Internet.
Question
Consumer misbehavior and consumer problem behavior are synonymous.
Question
Emotions and feelings play a large role in shoplifting.
Question
Consumers who are aggressive or rude are usually not abusive.
Question
A number of consumer misbehaviors may be classified as consumer fraud.
Question
Consumers in the United States send less spam than do consumers in any other nation.
Question
Shoplifting, fraud, abusive behavior, compulsive purchasing, compulsive shopping, and binge drinking are examples of consumer problem behaviors.
Question
One way to distinguish between consumer misbehavior and consumer problem behavior is to consider the issue of what is causing the behavior.
Question
Dysfunctional fan behavior refers to abnormal or impaired functioning relating to sporting event consumption.
Question
Some consumers complain illegitimately based on a motivation for monetary gain.
Question
One study found that dysfunctional fans tend to consume more alcohol during sporting events than do other fans.
Question
One motivation for shoplifting behavior is that some consumers believe retailers can absorb the loss.
Question
The U.S. Computer Copyright Act deems the sharing of copyright music as illegal.
Question
Research reveals that dysfunctional fans at sporting events tend to be married, middle-aged males with relatively low incomes and education.
Question
Product abuse refers to consumers using products in ways that were not intended by the marketer.
Question
Identity theft is a type of consumer fraud that has grown considerably.
Question
One motivation for consumer misbehavior is that consumers may simply believe that the rewards associated with the behavior outweigh the risks involved, which is referred to as opportunism.
Question
Consumers may express a desire to stop problem behaviors but simply find quitting to be too difficult.
Question
Older consumers are more likely to shoplift than are younger consumers.
Question
The term road revenge is used to describe an extreme manifestation of aggressive driving.
Question
Compulsive consumption refers to a physiological dependency on the consumption of a product.
Question
In general, younger, less-educated males are more likely to engage in aggressive driving behavior.
Question
Marketing ethics consist of societal and professional standards of right and fair practices that are expected of marketing managers as they develop and implement marketing strategies.
Question
The marketing concept developed in the 1960s.
Question
Compulsive buying may be defined as chronic, repetitive shopping behavior.
Question
The Consumer Bill of Rights stands as a foundation of the consumerism movement.
Question
Only the product component of the marketing mix can be brought into question by consumer groups.
Question
Aggressive driving is an example of product abuse.
Question
Famed author Theodore Levitt published an article entitled, "Marketing Myopia," in which he argued that a firm's long-term health depends on its ability to exist as a consumer-satisfying entity rather than a goods-producing entity.
Question
All consumer problem behaviors break laws.
Question
Problem gambling is a serious consumer behavior issue.
Question
Misbehavior by marketers occurs even if the marker is not aware that he or she is behaving unethically.
Question
The Consumer Bill of Rights includes the right to safety, the right to be informed, the right to redress and to be heard, and the right to choice.
Question
The marketing concept proposes that all the functions of the organization should work together in satisfying its customers' wants and needs.
Question
Consumerism is used to describe the activities of various groups to protect basic consumer rights.
Question
Anorexia refers to the consumption of large amounts of food while feeling a general loss of control over intake.
Question
Drunk driving is often related to binge drinking.
Question
Studies reveal that changing radio stations is the single biggest distraction for today's driver.
Question
The term ethics refers to standards or moral codes of conduct to which a person, group, or organization adheres.
Question
A negligible product is one that has little to no potential to create value of any type.
Question
Deceptive advertising is covered under the Wheeler Lea Act, which amended the Clayton Act by including false advertising issues.
Question
The difficult issue comes with the marketing of pleasing products because they can be harmful for consumers.
Question
Morals are laws that are used to guide individual action.
Question
Individual behavior is guided not only by a sense of what members of society would believe is ethical or unethical in a particular situation but also by the individual's morals.
Question
Deceptive advertising is advertising that contains or omits information that is important in influencing a consumer's buying behavior and is likely to mislead consumers who are acting "reasonably."
Question
The term puffery describes the practice of making exaggerated claims about a product and its superiority.
Question
The Clayton Antitrust Act prohibits restraint of free trade.
Question
The Financial Lending Act requires lenders to disclose complete costs associated with loans.
Question
Deficient products are products that provide hedonic value to consumers but may be harmful in the long run.
Question
Corporate social responsibility activities fall into one of three categories: ethical duties, altruistic duties, and strategic initiatives.
Question
Self-regulatory bodies, such as the Advertising Standards Board, work to ensure that advertising practices are truthful.
Question
Two important issues to consider when discussing marketing ethics are product price and consumer vulnerability.
Question
The societal marketing concept considers not only the wants and needs of individual consumers but also the needs of society.
Question
The Consumer Product Safety Act created the Consumer Product Safety Commission.
Question
Socially responsible marketing can be beneficial to a company.
Question
A business claiming to have the "best pizza in town" is making a deceptive advertising claim.
Question
In general, subjective claims in advertisements must be substantiated.
Question
Corporate social responsibility may be defined as an organization's activities and status related to its societal obligations.
Question
The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) is the only federal regulatory body that monitors exchanges that take place between consumers and marketing organizations.
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Deck 16: Consumer and Marketing Misbehavior
1
Sociologists use attribution theory to explain why groups of people replace one set of acceptable norms with another set that others view as unacceptable.
False
Sociologists use differential association to explain this phenomenon.
2
Consumer misbehavior may be viewed as a subset of a more general topic, human deviance.
True
3
Relativism refers to beliefs about the violation of written or unwritten laws.
False
The is contractualism.
4
A consumer's moral beliefs are comprised of two components: norms and relativism.
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5
One motivation of consumer misbehavior is unfulfilled aspirations.
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6
Aspirational evaluations focus on specific actions.
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7
Other consumers may suffer while misbehaving consumers break societal norms and laws.
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8
Moral equity represent beliefs regarding an act's fairness or justness.
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9
Teleological evaluations focus on the consequences of the behaviors and the individual's assessment of those consequences.
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10
For some consumers, the simple thrill of the action leads them to misbehave.
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11
Situational factors, such as retail crowding, flight delays, excessive heat, or noise can provoke consumer misbehavior.
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12
Retaliatory socialization is one motivation of consumer misbehavior that states consumers may view misbehavior as a way of getting revenge against big companies.
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13
One issue taken into consideration with deontological evaluations is the desirability of the consequences of an action for the stakeholders.
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14
The focal motivation for consumer misbehavior is value.
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15
When a consumer enters into a situation that calls for an ethical decision, three sets of ethical evaluations occur: equity, contractual, and relativist.
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16
All consumer misbehavior is illegal.
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17
A relativistic evaluation occurs when a consumer asks him- or herself, "Is this action 'right'?"
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18
Consumer misbehavior is behavior that violates generally accepted norms of conduct.
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19
Equity reflects beliefs about the social acceptability of an act.
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20
Anomie is a state that occurs when there is a disconnect between cultural goals and norms and the capacities of members of society to act within societal norms in an effort to achieve those goals.
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21
Culture jamming refers to attempts to disrupt advertisements and marketing campaigns by altering the messages in some meaningful way.
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22
Cyberbullying is the attack of innocent people on the Internet.
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23
Consumer misbehavior and consumer problem behavior are synonymous.
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24
Emotions and feelings play a large role in shoplifting.
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25
Consumers who are aggressive or rude are usually not abusive.
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26
A number of consumer misbehaviors may be classified as consumer fraud.
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27
Consumers in the United States send less spam than do consumers in any other nation.
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28
Shoplifting, fraud, abusive behavior, compulsive purchasing, compulsive shopping, and binge drinking are examples of consumer problem behaviors.
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29
One way to distinguish between consumer misbehavior and consumer problem behavior is to consider the issue of what is causing the behavior.
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30
Dysfunctional fan behavior refers to abnormal or impaired functioning relating to sporting event consumption.
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31
Some consumers complain illegitimately based on a motivation for monetary gain.
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32
One study found that dysfunctional fans tend to consume more alcohol during sporting events than do other fans.
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33
One motivation for shoplifting behavior is that some consumers believe retailers can absorb the loss.
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34
The U.S. Computer Copyright Act deems the sharing of copyright music as illegal.
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35
Research reveals that dysfunctional fans at sporting events tend to be married, middle-aged males with relatively low incomes and education.
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36
Product abuse refers to consumers using products in ways that were not intended by the marketer.
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37
Identity theft is a type of consumer fraud that has grown considerably.
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38
One motivation for consumer misbehavior is that consumers may simply believe that the rewards associated with the behavior outweigh the risks involved, which is referred to as opportunism.
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39
Consumers may express a desire to stop problem behaviors but simply find quitting to be too difficult.
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40
Older consumers are more likely to shoplift than are younger consumers.
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41
The term road revenge is used to describe an extreme manifestation of aggressive driving.
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42
Compulsive consumption refers to a physiological dependency on the consumption of a product.
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43
In general, younger, less-educated males are more likely to engage in aggressive driving behavior.
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44
Marketing ethics consist of societal and professional standards of right and fair practices that are expected of marketing managers as they develop and implement marketing strategies.
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45
The marketing concept developed in the 1960s.
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46
Compulsive buying may be defined as chronic, repetitive shopping behavior.
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47
The Consumer Bill of Rights stands as a foundation of the consumerism movement.
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48
Only the product component of the marketing mix can be brought into question by consumer groups.
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49
Aggressive driving is an example of product abuse.
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50
Famed author Theodore Levitt published an article entitled, "Marketing Myopia," in which he argued that a firm's long-term health depends on its ability to exist as a consumer-satisfying entity rather than a goods-producing entity.
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51
All consumer problem behaviors break laws.
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52
Problem gambling is a serious consumer behavior issue.
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53
Misbehavior by marketers occurs even if the marker is not aware that he or she is behaving unethically.
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54
The Consumer Bill of Rights includes the right to safety, the right to be informed, the right to redress and to be heard, and the right to choice.
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55
The marketing concept proposes that all the functions of the organization should work together in satisfying its customers' wants and needs.
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56
Consumerism is used to describe the activities of various groups to protect basic consumer rights.
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57
Anorexia refers to the consumption of large amounts of food while feeling a general loss of control over intake.
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58
Drunk driving is often related to binge drinking.
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59
Studies reveal that changing radio stations is the single biggest distraction for today's driver.
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60
The term ethics refers to standards or moral codes of conduct to which a person, group, or organization adheres.
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61
A negligible product is one that has little to no potential to create value of any type.
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62
Deceptive advertising is covered under the Wheeler Lea Act, which amended the Clayton Act by including false advertising issues.
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63
The difficult issue comes with the marketing of pleasing products because they can be harmful for consumers.
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64
Morals are laws that are used to guide individual action.
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65
Individual behavior is guided not only by a sense of what members of society would believe is ethical or unethical in a particular situation but also by the individual's morals.
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66
Deceptive advertising is advertising that contains or omits information that is important in influencing a consumer's buying behavior and is likely to mislead consumers who are acting "reasonably."
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Unlock for access to all 198 flashcards in this deck.
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67
The term puffery describes the practice of making exaggerated claims about a product and its superiority.
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68
The Clayton Antitrust Act prohibits restraint of free trade.
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69
The Financial Lending Act requires lenders to disclose complete costs associated with loans.
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70
Deficient products are products that provide hedonic value to consumers but may be harmful in the long run.
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71
Corporate social responsibility activities fall into one of three categories: ethical duties, altruistic duties, and strategic initiatives.
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72
Self-regulatory bodies, such as the Advertising Standards Board, work to ensure that advertising practices are truthful.
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73
Two important issues to consider when discussing marketing ethics are product price and consumer vulnerability.
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74
The societal marketing concept considers not only the wants and needs of individual consumers but also the needs of society.
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75
The Consumer Product Safety Act created the Consumer Product Safety Commission.
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76
Socially responsible marketing can be beneficial to a company.
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77
A business claiming to have the "best pizza in town" is making a deceptive advertising claim.
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78
In general, subjective claims in advertisements must be substantiated.
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79
Corporate social responsibility may be defined as an organization's activities and status related to its societal obligations.
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k this deck
80
The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) is the only federal regulatory body that monitors exchanges that take place between consumers and marketing organizations.
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