UNIT I - Marketing Management (KMBN 105)
UNIT I - Marketing Management (KMBN 105)
UNIT I - Marketing Management (KMBN 105)
MARKETING MANAGEMENT
(KMBN 105)
Unit: I (6 hours)
Introduction:
1. Nature and scope of marketing,
2. Various marketing orientations,
3. Need, Want, Demand,
4. Elements of Marketing mix,
5. Customer value and the value delivery process.
Understanding Consumer Behavior:
1. Buying motives,
2. factors influencing buying behavior,
3. buying habits,
4. stages in consumer buying decision process,
5. Types of consumer buying decisions.
UNIT - I
DEFINITION OF MARKETING:
According to Kotler (2000) – “A societal process by which individuals and groups obtain what
they need and want through creating, offering, and freely exchanging products and services of
value with others.”
According to American Marketing Association (2004) – “Marketing is an organisational
function and set of processes for creating, communicating and delivering value to customers
and for managing relationships in a way that benefits both the organisation and the
stakeholder.”
AMA (1960) – “Marketing is the performance of business activities that direct the flow of
goods and services from producer to consumer or user.”
According to Eldridge (1970) – “Marketing is the combination of activities designed to
produce profit through ascertaining, creating, stimulating, and satisfying the needs and/or
wants of a selected segment of the market.”
NATURE OF MARKETING:
The basic purpose of marketing management is to achieve the objectives of the business. A
business aims at earning reasonable profits by satisfying the needs of customers.
1. Creation of Demand:
The marketing management’s first objective is to create demand through various means. A
conscious attempt is made to find out the preferences and tastes of the consumers. Goods and
services are produced to satisfy the needs of the customers. Demand is also created by
informing the customers the utility of various goods and services.
2. Customer Satisfaction
The marketing manager must study the demands of customers before offering them any goods
or services. Selling the goods or services is not that important as the satisfaction of the
customers’ needs. Modern marketing is customer- oriented. It begins and ends with the
customer.
3. Market Share
Every business aims at increasing its market share, i.e., the ratio of its sales to the total sales in
the economy. For instance, both Pepsi and Coke compete with each other to increase their
market share. For this, they have adopted innovative advertising, innovative packaging, sales
promotion activities, etc.
4. Generation of Profits
The marketing department is the only department which generates revenue for the business.
Sufficient profits must be earned as a result of sale of want-satisfying products. If the firm is
not earning profits, it will not be able to survive in the market. Moreover, profits are also
needed for the growth and diversification of the firm.
5. Creation of Goodwill and Public Image
To build up the public image of a firm over a period is another objective of marketing. The
marketing department provides quality products to customers at reasonable prices and thus
creates its impact on the customers.
The marketing manager attempts to raise the goodwill of the business by initiating image-
building activities such a sales promotion, publicity and advertisement, high quality,
reasonable price, convenient distribution outlets, etc.
Thus, marketing gives employment to many people. It is estimated that about 40% of total
population is directly or indirectly dependent upon marketing. In the modern era of large scale
production and industrialization, role of marketing has widened.
This enlarged role of marketing has created many employment opportunities for people.
Converse, Huegy and Mitchell have rightly pointed out that “In order to have continuous
production, there must be continuous marketing, only then employment can be sustained and
high level of business activity can be continued”.
4. Marketing as a Source of Income and Revenue
The performance of marketing function is all important, because it is the only way through
which the concern could generate revenue or income and bring in profits. Buskirk has pointed
out that, “Any activity connected with obtaining income is a marketing action. It is all too easy
for the accountant, engineer, etc., to operate under the broad assumption that the Company will
realise many dollars in total sales volume.
However, someone must actually go into the market place and obtain dollars from society in
order to sustain the activities of the company, because without these funds the organization
will perish.”
Marketing does provide many opportunities to earn profits in the process of buying and selling
the goods, by creating time, place and possession utilities. This income and profit are
reinvested in the concern, thereby earning more profits in future. Marketing should be given
the greatest importance, since the very survival of the firm depends on the effectiveness of the
marketing function.
5. Marketing Acts as a Basis for Making Decisions
A businessman is confronted with many problems in the form of what, how, when, how much
and for whom to produce? In the past problems was less on account of local markets. There
was a direct link between producer and consumer.
In modern times marketing has become a very complex and tedious task. Marketing has
emerged as new specialized activity along with production.
As a result, producers are depending largely on the mechanism of marketing, to decide what
to produce and sell. With the help of marketing techniques a producer can regulate his
production accordingly.
6. Marketing Acts as a Source of New Ideas
The concept of marketing is a dynamic concept. It has changed altogether with the passage of
time. Such changes have far reaching effects on production and distribution. With the rapid
change in tastes and preference of people, marketing has to come up with the same.
Marketing as an instrument of measurement, gives scope for understanding this new demand
pattern and thereby produce and make available the goods accordingly.
7. Marketing Is Helpful In Development Of An Economy
Adam Smith has remarked that “nothing happens in our country until somebody sells
something”. Marketing is the kingpin that sets the economy revolving. The marketing
organization, more scientifically organized, makes the economy strong and stable, the lesser
the stress on the marketing function, the weaker will be the economy.
MARKETING ORIENTATIONS
MEANING:
Market orientation is a business philosophy where the focus is on identifying customer needs
or wants and meeting them.
When a company has a market orientation approach, it focuses on designing and selling goods
and services that satisfy customer needs in order to be profitable. The successful market
oriented company discovers and meets the desires and needs of its customers through its
product mix.
“The customer is king” philosophy has become a guiding principle for many companies who
focus their strategies. They do this to ensure that client satisfaction, rather than industry profits,
is prioritized. Each company has a different approach to achieve this due to its unique structure,
beliefs, and culture.
1. Production Orientation
This concept dominated the business landscape in the 1900s, where organizations focused
heavily on the mass production of products. Emphasis was on streamlining the production
process and concentrating on improving efficiencies, with little focus on consumers or
anything else.
The assumption was that customers valued price. For this reason, this approach focused on
maximizing efficiency while lowering production costs to meet customers’ price needs. This
business strategy dedicated its resources towards its products, and its marketing point was the
price.
The focus for the business is to reduce costs through mass production. A business orientated
around production believes that the “economies of scale” generated by mass production will
reduce costs and maximise profits. A production orientated business needs to avoid production
efficiency processes which affect product design and quality. Compromising product design
and quality for the sake of production is likely to reduce the product’s appeal to customers.
The emphasis on efficiency may affect the company’s ability to produce a product that meets
the customer’s high demands.
2. Product Orientation:
A product orientated company believes that its product’s high quality and functional features
make it a superior product. Such a company believes that if they have a superior product
customers will automatically like it as well. The problem with this approach is that superiority
alone does not sell products; superior products will not sell unless they satisfy consumer wants
and needs.
In a product orientation model, the primary concern of an organization is the quality of the
product. The business centers its approach on continually improving and refining its products.
Assuming that as long as products are of high quality, consumers will buy and use them.
This approach, which was popular during the 1950s and 1960s, mainly focused on the product
that a company intends to market. Unlike in quantity-oriented organizations where the price
was the focal point, product orientation placed emphasis on quality.
While all resources were directed towards the quality of a product (hence the production of
premium products), the approach didn’t focus on the needs of its target audience.
Advantages of Product Orientation:
Mass production of products at lower costs
Focus on quality
Improved sales due to the high quality of products
Better market research
Your business solely depends on the strength of your product. Customers expect nothing but
top-notch quality.
Making a profit on premium products may require you to set a higher price tag than the market
can accept.
The costs of developing top-quality products are steep
3. Sales Orientation:
A sales orientated company’s focus is simple; make the product, and then sell it to the target
market. This type of orientation involves the organization making what they think the customer
needs or likes without relevant research. However as we know sales usually aren’t this simple.
An effective marketing strategy requires market and marketing research, prior to product
development and finally an effective promotion strategy.
A sales-oriented business puts its energy and efforts into selling an already existing product.
In a way, this concept prioritizes customers but not in the sense that stresses their needs and
desires. Instead, priority is on promoting its products with the sole purpose of increasing sales.
A sales-oriented approach can be especially effective for a business competing for customers
in a saturated market. It can also be a valuable tool for a firm that holds dead stock and wants
to reintroduce them to the market.
The extra effort that the sales and marketing team devotes towards selling a product may tip a
consumer’s buying decision.
4. Societal Orientation:
Due to the increase in environmental awareness, the new concept of “Societal Orientation” has
emerged. Organizations are formulating marketing strategies and production processes that
recognize the impact on the environment, within and without.
Businesses that implement this idea incline towards the ethical approach in their wider
marketing and research strategies. A good example is the pharmaceutical industry and life
science sectors, which have come under scrutiny for their unethical marketing strategies.
5. Market Orientation:
A market orientated company puts the customer at the “heart” of the business; all activities in
the organization are based around the customer. The customer is truly king! A market
orientated organization endeavors to understand customer needs and wants, then implements
marketing strategy based on their market research; from product development through to
product sales. Once sales have begun further research will be conducted to find out what
consumers think about the product and whether product improvements are required. As
markets continuously change, market research and product development is an ongoing process
for a market orientation company.
Needs, wants and demands are 3 important terms in marketing. No matter how similar they
might seem, there are more differences in these terms that you might think. There are many
layers within them and they play a vital role in arriving at segmenting the TG, targeting a
particular target group and most importantly defining a sharp positioning for a brand.
NEEDS:
“Needs” is the basic human requirements like shelter, clothes, food, water, etc. which are
essential for human beings to survive. If we extend this further, other needs are education,
healthcare or even a social thing, for example, belonging to a certain society or self-expression.
One can say that the products which fall under the needs category of products do not require a
push. Instead the customer buys it themselves. But it’s actually not true. in today’s world with
thousands of brands competing in the same categories with identical offerings satisfying the
same needs, even the “needs category product” has to be pushed in the consumers’ mind.
Example of needs category products / sectors – Agriculture sector, Real Estate, Healthcare etc.
We all know about Maslow’s hierarchy of needs which categorizes needs into 5 levels starting
from physiological needs at the bottom and going up to self-actualization needs. But what’s
important as a marketer to know which level of need is your brand targeted to.
Let’s look at some of the examples of brands which are targeting different levels of needs
1. Physiological Needs – Food companies (Nestle, Pepsi, Coca Cola)
2. Safety Needs – Insurance companies (ICICI Prudential, Tata AIG, HDFC Life)
3. Social Needs – Social networking sites (Facebook, Twitter, Instagram)
4. Esteem Needs – Luxury brands (iPhone, Mercedes, Estee Lauder)
5. Self-actualization needs – Non-Profit organizations and NGOs (UNICEF, Teach for
India)
In marketing, there is another way to categorize needs. There are basically five types of
consumers’ needs:
1. Stated Needs – As the name suggests, in this case, the consumer explicitly states what
he wants. For eg. “I need a phone”.
2. Real needs – This is more specific. So when the consumer wants a phone to remain
connected to his friends, family and colleagues, the actual need be a phone with high
battery backup and not high camera resolution.
3. Unstated needs – The consumer also expects warranty and other sorts of after sales
service when buying a phone which he might not say explicitly.
4. Delight needs – The consumer would like the phone manufacturer or the dealer to
give him some free gift or a promotional item (phone case, tempered glass, free SIM
etc.), but he doesn’t clearly express that he wants something with the phone.
5. Secret Needs – These are the needs which the consumer feels reluctant to admit; for
example the consumer wants the phone for his status symbol but he feels
uncomfortable to admit that status is important to him.
WANTS:
"Wants" are a step ahead of needs Wants aren’t essential for humans to survive, but it’s
associated with needs Simply put, A want is a product desired by a customer that is not required
for us to survive. So, want is the complete opposite of need, which is essential for our survival.
Wants aren’t permanent and it regularly changes. As time passes, people and location change,
wants change accordingly.
Wants are directed by our surrounding towards reaching certain needs. Therefore, human’s
wants can be varied depending on each individual’s perception, environment, culture, and
society. For example, an Indian needs food but he may want a Dosa or Paratha while an
American may want Burger or Sandwich. Example of wants category products / sectors –
Hospitality industry, Electronics, FMCG, Consumer Durables etc.
DEMAND:
Wants turn to be Demands when a customer is willing and having the ability to buy that
needs or wants. The basic difference between wants and demands is desire. A customer may
desire something but he may not be able to fulfill his desire. Consequently, for people, who
can afford a desirable product are transforming their wants into demands. In other words, if a
customer is willing and able to buy a need or a want, it means that they have a demand for that
need or a want. You might want a BMW for a car or an iPhone for a phone. But can you
actually buy a BMW or an Iphone? You can, provided you have the ability to buy them.
Example of demands –Luxury cars, 5 star hotels etc.
Many people want a BMW, but only a few can buy one. So, it’s very crucial that one must
measure not only how many people want their product, but also how many are willing and
have the ability to buy it.
MARKETING MIX
The marketing mix refers to the set of actions, or tactics, that a company uses to promote its
brand or product in the market. The 4Ps make up a typical marketing mix – Price, Product,
Promotion and Place. However, nowadays, the marketing mix increasingly includes several
other Ps like Packaging, Positioning, People and even Politics as vital mix elements.
1) PRICE:
It refers to the value that is put for a product. It depends on costs of production, segment
targeted, ability of the market to pay, supply – demand and a host of other direct and indirect
factors. There can be several types of pricing strategies, each tied in with an overall business
plan. Pricing can also be used a demarcation, to differentiate and enhance the image of a
product.
2) PRODUCT
It refers to the item actually being sold. The product must deliver a minimum level of
performance; otherwise even the best work on the other elements of the marketing mix won’t
do any good.
3) PLACE
It refers to the point of sale. In every industry, catching the eye of the consumer and making it
easy for her to buy it is the main aim of a good distribution or ‘place’ strategy. Retailers pay a
premium for the right location. In fact, the mantra of a successful retail business is ‘location,
location, location’.
4) PROMOTION
It refers to all the activities undertaken to make the product or service known to the user and
trade. This can include advertising, word of mouth, press reports, incentives, commissions and
awards to the trade. It can also include consumer schemes, direct marketing, contests and
prizes.
IMPORTANCE OF 4Ps:
All the elements of the marketing mix influence each other. They make up the business plan
for a company and handled right, can give it great success. But handled wrong and the business
could take years to recover. The marketing mix needs a lot of understanding, market research
and consultation with several people, from users to trade to manufacturing and several others.
CUSTOMER VALUE
MEANING OF CUSTOMER VALUE:
We are living in a world that is most unstable and dynamic. World is not only changing but
the rate of change is accelerating. We are experiencing change in our daily life and in
marketplace too. Customer needs, wants, expectations are changing more rapidly; customers
are increasingly demanding better quality and reliability in products and services; new products
and services are coming to market more quickly, competition is getting more intense and
global; and technology is changing rapidly.
Businesses are operating in an uncertain, highly competitive, and highly complex environment.
Not only small but big players are also facing difficulties and challenges. Top companies are
loosing market share and new companies are taking their place. In cell-phone industry Nokia
was the market leader, but it is not so today, Samsung took its place.
Today, the leading edge companies are giving importance to customer satisfaction, loyalty,
and value. They are providing higher customer value to attract new customers and retain
existing customers and it leads to their long term profitability and growth.
Consumers buying behaviour is not only influenced by status of a consumer, but it also reflects
it. Those consumers who own luxury cars, watches and other items are considered by others
as persons of higher status.
8. Spread – Effect:
Consumer behavior has a spread effect. The buying behaviour of one person may influence
the buying behavior of another person. For instance, a customer may always prefer to buy
premium brands of clothing, watches and other items etc. This may influence some of his
friends, neighbors, colleagues. This is one of the reasons why marketers usecelebrities like
Shahrukh Khan , Sachin to endorse their brands.
9. Standard of Living:
Consumer buying behaviour may lead to higher standard of living. The more a person buys the
goods and services, the higher is the standard of living.
10. Keeps on Changing
The consumer’s behaviour undergoes a change over a period of time depending upon changes
in age, education and income level. Etc, for instance,, kids may prefer colorful dresses, but as
they grow up as teenagers and young adults, they may prefer trendy clot
Brands have to adopt different strategies for such types of consumer behavior. The market
leader will persuade habitual buying behavior by influencing the shelf space. The shelf will
display a large number of related but different product versions.
Marketers avoid out-of-stock conditions, sponsor frequent advertising, offer lower prices,
discounts, deals, coupons, and free samples to attract consumers.
BUYING MOTIVE
Buying motive is the motive to persuade the desires of people so that they buy a particular
good or service. Buying motive relates to the feelings and emotions of people which generate
a desire to purchase. Any person does not buy a product or service just because of excellent
salesman pitch but he does also due to the desire generated within him towards the product or
service.
When the buyer’s need is raised to a particular level they become the motives which mean “I
want to achieve this” which ultimately affect the consumer buying behavior. This means that
the consumers have the desire which motivate them to buy a particular product. The buying
motives of the consumer are divided into two categories:
1. PRODUCT MOTIVE:
a) Emotional motive:
it is a type of buying motive where a person is without any logic or reason emotionally attached
to a particular product. For eg. Children are emotionally attached to toys.
b) Rational motive:
it is a type of buying motive where a person thinks twice before buying the product. Like before
buying a car people generally think about its mileage, speed, looks, after sale services etc.
c) Operational motive:
it is a type of buying motive where a person feels that the product has want satisfying power.
For eg. a family buys television because they feel it has utility for them.
d) Socio-psychological motive:
it is a type of buying motive where a person buys a product due to status in the society. Like a
person buys big house to show his status in the society.
2. PATRONAGE MOTIVES:
Patronage motives are based on loyalty and encourage consumers to purchase from a particular
business or to buy a particular brand. Loyalty is influenced by positive previous experiences
or a close identification with the product or business.
these are divided into two parts:
a) Emotional Motive:
it is a type of buying motive of consumer where a person is without any logic or reason
emotionally attached to a particular product. For eg. Children are emotionally attached to toys.
b) Rational Motive:
It is a type of buying motive where a person thinks twice before buying the product. Like
before buying a car people generally think about its mileage, speed, looks, after sale services
etc.
Many different things affect how we behave. These are categorized by Kotler and Armstrong (2008)
as:
1) Psychological Factors (motivation, perception, learning and attitudes)
2) Social Factors (reference groups, family, roles and status)
3) Cultural Factors (culture, subculture, social class )
4) Personal Factors (age and life-cycle stage, occupation, economic circumstances, lifestyle,
personality and self-concept)
1) PSYCHOLOGICAL FACTORS:
These factors are difficult to measure but are powerful enough to influence a buying
decision.
The psychological factors that affect purchasing behavior are:
a) Motivation
b) Perception
c) Learning
d) Attitudes
a) Motivation:
Motives are driving forces that causes a person to take action to satisfy needs.
What motivates the consumer to purchase a product?
Basic needs, security needs that is medicines motivates the consumer to purchase a product.
b) Perception:
It is a major factor that influence the consumer behavior. Consumer makes a meaningful
image about the product. Customers perception towards products, package design, brand
name may effect their buying behavior.
Advertisements, promotions, customer reviews, social media feedback etc.
Example: Sensodyne is used for teeth sensitivity.
c) Learning:
To change consumer behavior towards your product you need to educate them or giving
away new information.
2) SOCIAL FACTORS:
Members of society have an influence on consumers buying decisons. People try to intimate
other humans also wish to be socially accepted in the society.
Due to their social nature, humans are constantly surrounded by people who can affect their
purchasing decisions. Humans attempt to mimic other people and also strive to fit in with
society. Their purchasing decisions are therefore influenced by those around them.
The social factors that affect consumer buying decision are:
a) Family:
A person develops his preferences from his childhood by watching family buy product and
continues to buy the same product.
Family has a big impact on how people behave when they go shopping. When a person is young,
their tastes are formed by observing their family purchase particular goods, and as they get
older, they continue to do so.
b) Reference Groups:
Reference groups are the groups of people with whom we associate ourselves. It includes group
of friends and colleagues.
In establishing a person’s attitudes or behaviours, reference groups can either be direct (face-
to-face) or indirect sources of comparison or reference. People frequently have influence from
reference groups to which they do not belong.
Reference groups have at least three different effects on an individual. They expose the
individual to new behaviors and ways of living. Because the person aspires to “fit in,” they have
an impact on their views and sense of self. Additionally, they generate conformity pressures
that may influence the individual’s brand and product preferences.
c) Roles and Status:
Role that a person holds in a society. If a person is in a high position his buying behavior will
be influenced by his status.
A individual has a lot of affiliations, including family, clubs, and organizations. Role and status
both play a part in defining a person’s place within each group. Each role has a status that
reflects the overall respect that society accords it.
People frequently select goods that reflect their social status.
CEO of a company and a normal employee would choose different products that would show
their status in their society.
3) CULTURAL FACTORS:
A group of people are associated with set of values that belongs to the particular community.
When a person comes from a particular community his behavior is highly influenced by the
culture relating to that particular community.
The most significant and widespread influences on consumer behavior are cultural ones. The
buyer’s culture, subculture, and social class must be understood by the marketer.
The cultural factors that affect consumer buying decision are:
a) Culture:
The most fundamental reason for someone’s wants and behavior is their culture. The majority
of human behaviour is learnt. A child learns fundamental beliefs, values, desires, and behaviors
through their family and other significant institutions as they grow up in a society.
Marketers always look for cultural shifts in order to anticipate potential demand for new
products. It includes basic values, needs, wants, preferences, perceptions and behaviors that are
observed and learned by a consumer by their near family members and important people around
them.
Example: A vast market has been established for exercise equipment and clothes, lower-calorie
and more natural meals, as well as health and fitness services, as a result of the cultural shift
toward more care about health and fitness. Due to the introduction of its “new age” iced teas
and fruit-flavored beverages, Snapple was able to completely transform the US soft drink
market.
b) Subculture:
Each culture is divided into smaller subcultures or groups of individuals who have similar value
systems based on similar conditions and experiences in life. Subcultures include nationalities,
religions, racial groups, and geographic regions. Important market sectors are made up of
numerous subcultures, and marketers frequently create goods and promotional strategies that
are suited to their requirements.
Example: Here, Burger King has been used as a simple example. The platform’s advertising
campaign wished users “Ramadan Kareem,” which implied having a generous Ramadan.
By depicting a burger that has been mostly consumed and is presented in the shape of a crescent
moon, Burger King has adapted to Muslim culture and made an advertisement in the Ramadan
style.
c) Social Class:
Every society has some form of social class. It includes income, occupation, family background,
education and residence location.
There is a social class structure in almost every civilization. Social classes are the structured,
comparatively stable divisions within society that are comprised of people who have similar
values, preferences, and behaviours.
Social class is measured as a combination of occupation, income, education, wealth, and other
characteristics rather than being determined by a single element, such as income.
4) PERSONAL FACTORS:
Other factors that affect a buyer’s choices include their age and life stage, occupation, economic
situation, lifestyle, personality, and self-concept.
Over the course of a lifetime, people modify the items and services they purchase. Age is
frequently a factor in tastes in cuisine, clothing, furnishings, and leisure activities. The family
life cycle, or the stages a family may go through as they develop over time, also has an impact
on purchasing.
Marketers frequently categorise their target markets according to the stages of the life cycle and
create products and marketing strategies that are suitable for each stage.
b) Occupation:
The goods and services that are purchased depend on a person’s occupation. White-collar
employees tend to purchase more suits and ties, whereas blue-collar employees prefer to
purchase more work attire. Marketers look for professional organisations with greater-than-
average interest in their goods and services. Even better, a business can focus on producing
goods for a specific occupational group. As a result, computer software developers will create
unique products for brand managers, accountants, engineers, lawyers, and doctors.
c) Economic Circumstances:
The purchasing habits of a customer are in some way influenced by the economy of a nation. A
country with a healthy economy has more consumer spending power, which raises the amount
of money available on the market. A country’s market is weak, its consumers have minimal
purchasing power, and those who are unemployed negatively affect it.
d) Lifestyle:
People from the same socioeconomic class, occupation, and subculture may lead very diverse
lives. A person’s hobbies, interests, and ideas serve as an expression of their lifestyle. A
person’s lifestyle encompasses more than just their socioeconomic status or personality. It
depicts a person’s entire pattern of behaviour and interaction with others.
e) Personality and Self-concept:
The distinctive personalities of each person have an impact on their shopping habits. The term
“personality” refers to the distinctive psychological traits that cause a person to react to their
immediate surroundings in a predictable and long-lasting way.
Characteristics like assertiveness, dominance, sociability, autonomy, self-defense, adaptability,
and aggression are frequently used to describe personality. The analysis of customer behavior
for specific product or brand decisions can benefit from a consideration of personality.
For instance, coffee makers have found that people who consume a lot of coffee have a high
level of sociability. Nescafe advertisements thus feature gatherings of people sharing cups of
coffee.
A personality-related term that many marketers employ is a person’s self-concept (also called
self-image). According to the fundamental self-concept concept, “we are what we have,”
people’s possessions both shape and reflect their identities. In order to comprehend consumer
behavior, a marketer must first comprehend how a consumer’s self-concept and assets are
related.
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