Deck 6: Consumer Buying Behavior

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Question
If a person's interest in the product category is ongoing and long term, it is referred to as situational involvement.
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Question
Dissatisfaction may occur shortly after a purchase; this is called cognitive dissatisfaction.
Question
The terms of sale (price, delivery, credit arrangements) are negotiated during the evaluation of alternatives stage of the consumer decision-making process.
Question
Limited decision making is used when purchasing frequently bought, low-cost items needing very little decision effort.
Question
Involvement that is temporary and results from a specific set of circumstances is called situational involvement.
Question
Han is looking for new sneakers but cannot find her favorite brand. She then notices another brand of shoes that she has never purchased and has no experience with. She remembers she heard the name of the brand in a commercial yesterday. Because she remembers the name from the commercial, Han is more likely to ascribe value to that pair of sneakers.
Question
During the evaluation of alternatives stage of the consumer buying decision process, the buyer selects the seller from whom he or she will purchase the product.
Question
A marketer's use of framing can make a product characteristic seem more important to a consumer and can facilitate its recall from memory.
Question
When evaluating the alternatives, the buyer rates and eventually ranks the brands in the consideration set.
Question
The actual act of purchase is the second stage of the consumer buying decision process.
Question
The evaluative criteria are objective but not subjective product characteristics that are important to a specific buyer when purchasing a product.
Question
The choice of a seller may actually affect the final product selection during the purchase stage of the consumer buying decision process.
Question
Involvement level is one factor that affects a consumer's selection of a type of decision-making process.
Question
High involvement products tend to be those that are expensive and visible to others.
Question
Buying behavior refers to the decision processes and actions of people involved in buying and using products.
Question
Once initiated, the consumer buying decision process always leads to a purchase.
Question
An information search, once completed, should identify for the buyer the one brand that he or she views as the best alternative.
Question
Amber is getting ready for her wedding. She is obsessed with buying the perfect wedding dress. Her involvement with the dress is an example of enduring involvement.
Question
Product availability plays a major role in the purchase stage. If the highest-ranked product is unavailable, the consumer will most likely purchase the brand ranked second.
Question
Problem recognition speed can vary from quite rapid to very slow.
Question
Situational influences can be classified into five different categories including physical surroundings, social surroundings, personality, purchase reason, and time perspective.
Question
Situational influences generally have the greatest influence during the initial stage of the consumer buying decision process.
Question
An information input is less likely to reach perceptual awareness if it is related to an event that the person is anticipating.
Question
Time dimensions on the buying decision include how long it may take to become knowledgeable about a product.
Question
Situational influences would likely not affect a high school senior searching for a college or university to attend.
Question
Psychological influences operate within individuals to determine, in part, their behavior as consumers.
Question
When a buyer receives information that is inconsistent with his or her beliefs, the buyer may distort the information to bring it more in line with those beliefs.
Question
The phenomenon of selective exposure is associated with perception.
Question
Extended problem solving is used when unfamiliar, expensive, or infrequently purchased products are bought.
Question
Esteem needs are the highest level in Maslow's hierarchy of needs.
Question
Perception is a process in which an individual selects, organizes, and interprets information received through the sense organs.
Question
Information inputs that reach perceptual awareness are received in an organized form.
Question
The time that a buyer has to make a purchase decision is a situational influence.
Question
There are situational influences that cannot be controlled.
Question
A person receives information inputs through the senses.
Question
Sehun was flying to France for vacation when he realized he forgot his sunglasses. He purchased some at an airport shop even though they were more expensive than she would normally have paid. Sehun was influenced by situational influences.
Question
A major part of perception involves information processing.
Question
Social surroundings during the purchase decision do not include the presence of a salesperson.
Question
When buying frequently purchased, low-cost items, a consumer uses extensive decision making.
Question
If an information input is useful in satisfying a person's current needs, it is more likely to reach perceptual awareness.
Question
A consumer may receive a marketer's information and perceive it differently from the way the marketer intended.
Question
Although marketers may attempt to influence what a consumer learns, their attempts are seldom fully successful.
Question
Motives can affect the direction and intensity of behavior.
Question
Just as attitudes are learned, they can be changed.
Question
Ads for beauty products often suggest that purchasing these products will bring love, helping to fulfill one's social needs.
Question
Motives include knowledge and positive or negative feelings about an object.
Question
An attitude scale is useful in helping to measure the intensity of feelings toward an object.
Question
Patronage motives influence where one purchases products on a regular basis.
Question
Marketers can control the perception of potential buyers.
Question
At a single point in time, a person's motives are all of equal strength.
Question
A person's self-concept may affect whether the person buys a product in a particular product category, but it has little impact on brand selection.
Question
Marketers may try to change consumers' attitudes toward a product if they feel that a significant number of consumers have strong negative attitudes toward it.
Question
By giving out free samples, marketers help customers learn about their products by helping them gain experience with them, which makes customers feel more comfortable.
Question
One's personality is a set of internal traits and distinct behavioral tendencies that result in consistent patterns of behavior in certain situations.
Question
Maslow's hierarchy of needs is an explanation of how motives operate.
Question
Learning associated with purchase behavior is not particularly affected by reinforcement.
Question
A buyer's actions at any point in time are affected by one major motive.
Question
Motives always operate at a conscious level.
Question
An attitude consists of one's evaluation of his or her feelings and behavioral tendencies toward an object or idea.
Question
In Maslow's hierarchy of needs, the most fundamental need is safety.
Question
The criteria used to group people into classes are basically the same in all societies.
Question
An opinion leader is likely to be most influential when consumers have high product involvement and high product knowledge.
Question
Consumer socialization is the process through which a person acquires the knowledge and skills to function as a consumer.
Question
The values, needs, interests, shopping patterns, and buying habits of various subcultures must be considered if a business wants to succeed.
Question
Expecting ethical business behavior reflects our culture.
Question
A role consists of a set of actions and activities that a person in a particular position is expected to perform.
Question
A person may perform more than one role related to making buying decisions.
Question
An opinion leader provides information and is viewed as an authority on many spheres of interest for reference-group participants.
Question
Marketers must consider the different nationalities represented within the Hispanic and Asian-American subcultures because of the unique culture, history, and buying patterns of each ethnic group.
Question
Family influences are not directly related to purchasing decisions.
Question
Consumers' buying decisions are not affected by other people.
Question
Consumers' purchasing decisions and brand decisions may be influenced strongly by reference groups.
Question
When a product is a conspicuous one, reference-group influence is more likely to affect the brand decision.
Question
A reference group acts as a point of comparison and as a source of information for an individual.
Question
A consumer belongs to only one subculture.
Question
The values, knowledge, beliefs, customs, objects, and concepts of a society affect how people make purchasing decisions.
Question
A social class is a closed aggregate of individuals with similar social ranking.
Question
Changes in culture do not affect product development.
Question
Not all the behavioral patterns and values attributed to specific subcultures apply to every member of that specific subculture.
Question
Social classes are referred to as open aggregates of individuals because people can move into and out of them.
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Deck 6: Consumer Buying Behavior
1
If a person's interest in the product category is ongoing and long term, it is referred to as situational involvement.
False
2
Dissatisfaction may occur shortly after a purchase; this is called cognitive dissatisfaction.
False
3
The terms of sale (price, delivery, credit arrangements) are negotiated during the evaluation of alternatives stage of the consumer decision-making process.
False
4
Limited decision making is used when purchasing frequently bought, low-cost items needing very little decision effort.
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5
Involvement that is temporary and results from a specific set of circumstances is called situational involvement.
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6
Han is looking for new sneakers but cannot find her favorite brand. She then notices another brand of shoes that she has never purchased and has no experience with. She remembers she heard the name of the brand in a commercial yesterday. Because she remembers the name from the commercial, Han is more likely to ascribe value to that pair of sneakers.
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7
During the evaluation of alternatives stage of the consumer buying decision process, the buyer selects the seller from whom he or she will purchase the product.
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8
A marketer's use of framing can make a product characteristic seem more important to a consumer and can facilitate its recall from memory.
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9
When evaluating the alternatives, the buyer rates and eventually ranks the brands in the consideration set.
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10
The actual act of purchase is the second stage of the consumer buying decision process.
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11
The evaluative criteria are objective but not subjective product characteristics that are important to a specific buyer when purchasing a product.
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12
The choice of a seller may actually affect the final product selection during the purchase stage of the consumer buying decision process.
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13
Involvement level is one factor that affects a consumer's selection of a type of decision-making process.
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14
High involvement products tend to be those that are expensive and visible to others.
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15
Buying behavior refers to the decision processes and actions of people involved in buying and using products.
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16
Once initiated, the consumer buying decision process always leads to a purchase.
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17
An information search, once completed, should identify for the buyer the one brand that he or she views as the best alternative.
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18
Amber is getting ready for her wedding. She is obsessed with buying the perfect wedding dress. Her involvement with the dress is an example of enduring involvement.
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19
Product availability plays a major role in the purchase stage. If the highest-ranked product is unavailable, the consumer will most likely purchase the brand ranked second.
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20
Problem recognition speed can vary from quite rapid to very slow.
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21
Situational influences can be classified into five different categories including physical surroundings, social surroundings, personality, purchase reason, and time perspective.
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22
Situational influences generally have the greatest influence during the initial stage of the consumer buying decision process.
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23
An information input is less likely to reach perceptual awareness if it is related to an event that the person is anticipating.
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24
Time dimensions on the buying decision include how long it may take to become knowledgeable about a product.
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25
Situational influences would likely not affect a high school senior searching for a college or university to attend.
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26
Psychological influences operate within individuals to determine, in part, their behavior as consumers.
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27
When a buyer receives information that is inconsistent with his or her beliefs, the buyer may distort the information to bring it more in line with those beliefs.
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28
The phenomenon of selective exposure is associated with perception.
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29
Extended problem solving is used when unfamiliar, expensive, or infrequently purchased products are bought.
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30
Esteem needs are the highest level in Maslow's hierarchy of needs.
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31
Perception is a process in which an individual selects, organizes, and interprets information received through the sense organs.
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32
Information inputs that reach perceptual awareness are received in an organized form.
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33
The time that a buyer has to make a purchase decision is a situational influence.
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34
There are situational influences that cannot be controlled.
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35
A person receives information inputs through the senses.
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36
Sehun was flying to France for vacation when he realized he forgot his sunglasses. He purchased some at an airport shop even though they were more expensive than she would normally have paid. Sehun was influenced by situational influences.
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37
A major part of perception involves information processing.
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38
Social surroundings during the purchase decision do not include the presence of a salesperson.
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39
When buying frequently purchased, low-cost items, a consumer uses extensive decision making.
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40
If an information input is useful in satisfying a person's current needs, it is more likely to reach perceptual awareness.
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41
A consumer may receive a marketer's information and perceive it differently from the way the marketer intended.
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42
Although marketers may attempt to influence what a consumer learns, their attempts are seldom fully successful.
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43
Motives can affect the direction and intensity of behavior.
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44
Just as attitudes are learned, they can be changed.
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45
Ads for beauty products often suggest that purchasing these products will bring love, helping to fulfill one's social needs.
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46
Motives include knowledge and positive or negative feelings about an object.
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47
An attitude scale is useful in helping to measure the intensity of feelings toward an object.
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48
Patronage motives influence where one purchases products on a regular basis.
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49
Marketers can control the perception of potential buyers.
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50
At a single point in time, a person's motives are all of equal strength.
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51
A person's self-concept may affect whether the person buys a product in a particular product category, but it has little impact on brand selection.
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52
Marketers may try to change consumers' attitudes toward a product if they feel that a significant number of consumers have strong negative attitudes toward it.
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53
By giving out free samples, marketers help customers learn about their products by helping them gain experience with them, which makes customers feel more comfortable.
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54
One's personality is a set of internal traits and distinct behavioral tendencies that result in consistent patterns of behavior in certain situations.
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55
Maslow's hierarchy of needs is an explanation of how motives operate.
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56
Learning associated with purchase behavior is not particularly affected by reinforcement.
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57
A buyer's actions at any point in time are affected by one major motive.
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58
Motives always operate at a conscious level.
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59
An attitude consists of one's evaluation of his or her feelings and behavioral tendencies toward an object or idea.
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60
In Maslow's hierarchy of needs, the most fundamental need is safety.
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61
The criteria used to group people into classes are basically the same in all societies.
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62
An opinion leader is likely to be most influential when consumers have high product involvement and high product knowledge.
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63
Consumer socialization is the process through which a person acquires the knowledge and skills to function as a consumer.
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64
The values, needs, interests, shopping patterns, and buying habits of various subcultures must be considered if a business wants to succeed.
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Unlock for access to all 229 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
65
Expecting ethical business behavior reflects our culture.
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66
A role consists of a set of actions and activities that a person in a particular position is expected to perform.
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67
A person may perform more than one role related to making buying decisions.
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68
An opinion leader provides information and is viewed as an authority on many spheres of interest for reference-group participants.
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69
Marketers must consider the different nationalities represented within the Hispanic and Asian-American subcultures because of the unique culture, history, and buying patterns of each ethnic group.
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70
Family influences are not directly related to purchasing decisions.
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71
Consumers' buying decisions are not affected by other people.
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72
Consumers' purchasing decisions and brand decisions may be influenced strongly by reference groups.
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73
When a product is a conspicuous one, reference-group influence is more likely to affect the brand decision.
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74
A reference group acts as a point of comparison and as a source of information for an individual.
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75
A consumer belongs to only one subculture.
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76
The values, knowledge, beliefs, customs, objects, and concepts of a society affect how people make purchasing decisions.
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77
A social class is a closed aggregate of individuals with similar social ranking.
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78
Changes in culture do not affect product development.
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79
Not all the behavioral patterns and values attributed to specific subcultures apply to every member of that specific subculture.
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80
Social classes are referred to as open aggregates of individuals because people can move into and out of them.
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