CHAPTER 08
Perception
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2013 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
PART III: INTERNAL INFLUENCES
8-2
Learning Objectives
L01 Describe the nature of perception and its relationship
to consumer memory and decisions
Explain exposure, the types of exposure, and the
L02 resulting marketing implications
Explain attention, the factors that affect it, and the
L03 resulting marketing implications
L04 Explain interpretation, the factors that affect it, and the
resulting marketing implications
L05 Discuss how perception can enhance strategies for
retailing, branding, advertising, and packaging
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Consumer Behavior In The News…
Now THAT’S Heavy!
Can you guess which part of a product package
is perceived as suggesting “heavier” versus
“lighter”?
First – Bottom versus Top?
Second – Left versus Right?
Source: X. Deng and B. Kahn, “Is Your Product on the Right Side?” Journal of Marketing Research, December 2009, 725-738.
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Consumer Behavior In The News…
Now THAT’S Heavy!
Can you guess which part of a product package
is perceived as suggesting “heavier” versus
“lighter”?
Bottom-right – is correct…these are considered
“heavy” locations…
Implication - when weight is positive (cookies = more
is better), putting a product picture in heavy package
locations creates highest attitude.
Source: X. Deng and B. Kahn, “Is Your Product on the Right Side?” Journal of Marketing Research, December 2009, 725-738.
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The Nature of Perception
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Exposure
Types of Exposure
1. Selective Exposure
• The highly selective nature of consumer exposure is a
major concern for marketers, since failure to gain
exposure results in lost communication and sales
opportunities.
2. Voluntary Exposure
• Although consumers often avoid commercials and other
marketing stimuli, sometimes they actively seek them
out for various reasons including purchase goals,
entertainment, and information.
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Exposure
Selective Exposure and DVRs
DVRs in 40% of U.S. Households
DVR may increase ad avoidance although evidence
is mixed
Strategies to adapt in a DVR world
Ad compression
Still-frame ads
Hybrid ads
Interactive ads
Dynamic ad placement
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Attention
Attention is determined by three factors:
1. Stimulus Factors
• Are physical characteristics of the stimulus itself
2. Individual Factors
• Are characteristics which distinguish one individual from
another
3. Situational Factors
• Include stimuli in the environment other than the focal
stimulus and temporary characteristics of the individual
that are induced by the environment
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Attention
Stimulus Factors
Size
Intensity
Attractive Visuals
Color and Movement
Position
Isolation
Format
Contrast and Expectations
Interestingness
Information Quantity
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Attention
Stimulus Factors: A Closer Look
Color and Movement Color and Size Impact on
Attention1
Color and movement attract
attention.
A brightly colored package
or display is more likely to
received attention.
Color and movement are
also important in ads.
Source: 1”How Important is Color to an Ad?” Starch Tested Copy. February 1989,
p.1. Roper Starch Worldwide, Inc.
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Attention
Stimulus Factors: A Closer Look
Position
Position is the placement of an
object in physical space or
time.
In retail stores, items that are
easy to find or stand out are
more likely to attract attention,
such as end-caps and kiosks.
High impact zones in print ads
in the U.S. tend to be toward End-caps provide a way to
capture the shopper’s attention
the top left portion of the ad.
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Attention
Stimulus Factors: A Closer Look
Contrast and Expectations
Consumers pay more attention to
stimuli that contrast with their
background.
Expectations drive perceptions of
contrast. Ads that differ from
expectations for a product category
often motivate more attention.
Adaptation level theory suggests
that if a stimulus doesn’t change This billboard ad provides
contrast for enhanced attention.
over time we habituate to it and
begin to notice it less.
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Attention
Individual Factors
Motivation
Ability
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Attention
Situational Factors
Clutter
Program Involvement
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Attention
Situational Factors: A Closer Look
Program Involvement
Program involvement
refers to interest in the
program or editorial
content surrounding the
ads.
Program involvement has
a positive influence on
attention (see graph).
Source: 1”Cahners Advertising Research Report 120.1 and 120.12 (Boston: Cahners Publishing, undated).
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Attention
Nonfocused Attention
Hemispheric lateralization
Subliminal Stimuli
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Attention
Nonfocused Attention
Hemispheric Lateralization refers to activities that take place on
each side of the brain.
The left side of the The right side
brain controls of the brain
activities related to deals with
rational thought. images and
impressions.
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Attention
Nonfocused Attention
Subliminal Stimuli
A message presented so fast, softly or masked by other messages
that one is not aware of seeing or hearing it is call a subliminal
stimulus.
A subliminal ad “hides” key persuasive information within the ad by
making it so weak that it is difficult or impossible for someone to
physically detect.
Subliminal advertising has been the focus of intense study and
public concern.
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Interpretation
Three aspects of interpretation:
1. It is generally a relative process rather than absolute,
referred to as perceptual relativity.
2. It tends to be subjective and open to a host of psychological
biases.
3. It can be a cognitive “thinking” process or an affective
“emotional” process.
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Interpretation
• Cognitive interpretation is a process whereby stimuli
are placed into existing categories of meaning.
• Affective interpretation is the emotional or feeling
response triggered by a stimulus such as an ad.
Jack Link’s Uses Affective Interpretation
YouTube Spotlight
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Interpretation
Interpretation is determined by three Characteristics :
1. Individual Characteristics
2. Situational Characteristics
3. Stimulus Characteristics
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Interpretation
Individual Characteristics
Traits
Learning and Knowledge
Expectations
8-23
Interpretation
Individual Characteristics
Traits
Physiological and psychological
traits drive our needs and
desires. These traits influence
how a stimulus is interpreted.
Psychologically
Physiologically Consumers have natural
Consumers differ in their cognitive, emotional, and
sensitivity to stimuli, e.g., taste. behavioral predispositions, e.g.,
affect intensity.
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Interpretation
Individual Characteristics
Learning and Knowledge
The meanings attached to
such “natural” things as time,
space, relationships, and
colors are learned and vary
widely across cultures.
Consumers also learn about
marketer-created stimuli like
brands and promotions Color is used in the Wrigley’s ad
through their experiences to mean “icy and cool.”
with them.
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Interpretation
Individual Characteristics
Expectations
Interpretations tend to be consistent
with expectations, an effect referred
to as the expectation bias.
Consumers often evaluate the
performance of a well-known brand
as higher than that of an identical
Brands create expectations and
product with an unknown brand
can thus bias perceptions.
name.
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Interpretation
Situational Characteristics
The situation provides a context within which the focal
stimulus is interpreted.
The contextual cues present in the situation play a
role in consumer interpretation independent of the
actual stimulus.
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Interpretation
Stimulus Characteristics
Traits
Organization
Proximity
Closure
Figure-Ground
Changes
Sensory Discrimination
JND
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Applications in Consumer Behavior
Stimulus Characteristics: A Closer Look
Traits
This McDonald’s
billboard is designed
like a clock and is
“interpreted” as telling
consumers when it is
“time” for various
McDonald’s products.
©Christopher Kerrigan
8-29
Interpretation
Consumer Inferences
Quality Signals
Interpreting Images
Missing Information and Ethical Concerns
8-30
Perception and Marketing Strategy
Retail Strategy
Brand Name and Logo Development
• Linguistic Consideration
• Branding Strategies
• Logo Design and Typographics
Media Strategy
Advertisements
Package Design and Labeling
8-31
Video Application
The following Video Clip demonstrates
how UPS considered the use of color,
along with creating a new logo design,
to better define what UPS does!
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