Consumer Behavior
Consider decision making
Rational consumer behavior: What can organizations learn?
The consumer decision-making process can be conceptualized as a rational, economic model or a subjective, psychological model. The first stage involves the recognition of a need, followed by a search for information, evaluation of alternatives, the purchase, and is concluded by the post-purchase evaluation (Buyer behavior, 2012, tutor2u). This process can be long and laborious or relatively short in duration, depending on the nature of the good or service. For example, a consumer buying a hamburger recognizes a need of hunger; compares the selections on the menu at McDonald's; compares the prices, nutrition and taste of various types of burgers; makes the purchase, and then decides whether he likes the burger and would buy another. A consumer buying a refrigerator notes that his refrigerator is broken, surfs the net for product reviews and looks locally for deals; makes the purchase, and then decides if the purchase was worthy over a much longer period of time.
Depending upon the type of item, the consumer hardly realizes it is a process at all. In very routine purchases, the consumer may skip parts of the process, such as when he or she grabs his or her usual brand off the supermarket shelf, rather than researching the price or quality. There are, in general, two categories of purchases when consumers make decisions, that of "high-involvement purchases" which "include those involving high expenditure or personal risk -- for example buying a house, a car or making investments" versus "low involvement purchases (e.g. buying a soft drink, choosing...
Our semester plans gives you unlimited, unrestricted access to our entire library of resources —writing tools, guides, example essays, tutorials, class notes, and more.
Get Started Now