kAILANI IMC
kAILANI IMC
kAILANI IMC
2; April 2012
Received: February 10, 2012 Accepted: February 29, 2012 Published: April 1, 2012
doi:10.5539/ijms.v4n2p121 URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.5539/ijms.v4n2p121
Abstract
Integrated marketing communication (IMC) is one of the most controversial areas of research, the concept
marking a constant progress from the simple coordinating of promotional tools to a complex strategic process.
Further to the evolution of modern marketing, where IMC has become a major way of achievement the
objectives of a company, there is a need to identify opportunities to increase its impact on consumer behaviour.
Therefore, is of interest, the relatively recent approach found in the literature, according to which IMC works
specifically through all the four classic elements of the marketing mix: product, price, placement and marketing
communications. In this context, this paper intends to clarify some aspects regarding the effects of IMC on the
consumer behaviour, materialized in the consumer decision- making process.
Keywords: Integrated marketing communication, Consumer behaviour, Consumer decision-making process,
Influence, Model
1. Introduction
In a competitive economic system, survival and development of the companies involve the existence of accurate
and detailed information about consumers, so the concept of modern marketing highlights the need for having
detailed and founded information about the consumer needs, motivation, attitude and actions. In the
contemporary era is almost universally accepted idea that the main purpose of marketing is not finding and
persuading people to buy what a company produces, but satisfying the consumer, which is the essence of
consumer orientation. Developing effective ways by which consumers’ needs could be satisfied is one of the
main objectives of IMC. Identifying the communication pathways which influence consumer behaviour is an
essential marketing communications activity, the ultimate goal being the creation of marketing messages to reach
target audiences through the most appropriate channels. Adopting the approach according with IMC is not part
of the marketing mix, but a holistic concept using marketing mix elements to create and strengthen relationships
with consumers and to send a unified message, this paper aims to clarify some aspects of the mechanism of IMC
influence on consumer behaviour, reflected also in the buying decision process.
2. Literature Review
Communication, one of the most representatives of human activities and the basis for social interaction, is
defined as the exchange of ideas, information and feelings.
In recent decades, the phenomenon has evolved faster communication and dramatic changes due to the
increasing need for communication in all areas and technological performance.
Since communication requires converting the original concepts into symbols that can transmit the desired
message (Blythe, 2006) the individual or organization who communicates has to transform first the concepts in a
set of symbols that can be transferred to the receiver, who need to decode the symbols, in order to understand the
original message. A correct decoding can take place only if the participants in the communication share a
common experience, with at least one common language.
Communication effectiveness is determined both by understanding the message and getting the desired reaction
from the part of the receiver, in response to the message (Popescu, 2002).
Marketing communication occurred during the last decades of the twentieth century, as a result on the marketing
outstanding development during that period. Although so far, there is not unanimity of specialists’ opinion in
terms of concept content, we can talk about a consensus on the role and importance of marketing
communications.
In a global market characterized by high dynamism and fierce competition, organizations try to find the most
efficient way to get their word out so that customers understand the benefits that can be obtained by consumption
or use products or services (Clow, 2010). Consequently, marketing communications have become a fundamental
aspect of marketing, a business vision and an essential factor in successful marketing communication. Its
importance have increased dramatically in recent decades, considering that the marketing and communication
are inseparable, all organizations business areas using various forms of marketing communication to make their
offer and to meet financial or non-profit targets (Shimp,2003).
It can be concluded that marketing communications have a highly complex content, both in terms of scope and
the objectives pursued and on methods and tools for action. Considering that the primary purpose of marketing
communication is to build and strengthen the brand - while the main market competitors have become brands -
many opinions of experts converge to the idea that in the contemporary era the marketing communication will be
the only way to create and sustaining competitive advantage.
Given that marketing communication is more strongly assert that a major achievement of marketing objectives of
an organization, appears the necessity to identify ways to increase its impact, that goal can be achieved by
integrating all the specific components in an assembly unit. IMC is considered one of the most controversial
areas of research, expert’s opinions being found in a diverse range, whose amplitude includes very different
approaches. There are point of views according with this concept is the most important development of
marketing communications in the last decade of the twentieth century (Kitchen and De Pelsmacker, 2004) and
views which assume that IMC does not go beyond a collection of specific concepts traditional marketing,
presented in a new form (Spotts et al., 1998).
Academic research in IMC area has covered a long way since the emergence of the concept and its shape as a
field of study in the late '80s and early '90s, marking a gradual transition from the limited vision that is just the
coordination of promotional tools, to the broad perspective of structuring a complex strategic process. Although
aspects of the definition, theoretical grounding, understanding and developing the concept of IMC were a
constant concern of specialists over time, so far they have not reached a concrete result in a universally accepted
definition of IMC.
Synthesizing the existing literature concerns may be outlined several main areas divided in two phases:
1990-2000 and 2001 – to present (Kliatchko, 2008). First stage is characterized by research and analysis on:
a. Clarification of some aspects of definition, theoretical development and understanding of IMC concept
(Duncan and Everett, 1993; Grein, Gould and Lerman, 1996; Schultz and Kitchen, 1996; Hartley and Pickton,
1999);
b. Identification of strategic issues and treatment of IMC concept more of a business process perspective rather
than that of a simple coordination of marketing communication tools (Schultz and Schultz, 1998);
c. Analyze the interdependence of relational marketing concept and IMC, through the social nature of business in
general and marketing in particular and highlight the key role of marketing communication in maintaining
profitable relationships with customers and other stakeholders (Hutton, 1996 ; Duncan and Moriarty, 1998);
d. Measure and evaluate the effects of IMC (Pickton and Hartley, 1999, Schultz and Schultz, 1998).
In the second stage, the research is focused on:
a. Conceptual aspect of IMC, as theoretical foundation, status and goals (Cornelissen and Lock, 2000;
Cornelissen, 2001; Duncan and Mulhern, 2004; Gould, 2004; Madhavaram, 2005; Reid et al 2005; Kitchen and
Schultz, 2009), including opposite views or barriers for its implementation (Cornelissen & Lock, 2000; Ewing et
al, 2000; Gould, 2004, Fitzpatrick, 2005);
b. Measurement and effectiveness of IMC programmes (Low, 2000; Reid, 2003; Schultz, Cole and Bailey, 2004;
Belch and Belch, 2008, Ewing, 2009).
c. Managerial and organisational issues (Cornelissen, Lock and Gardner, 2001; Beverland and Luxton, 2005);
d. Relationship of IMC to internal marketing issues, relationship marketing, corporate communication, brand
equity and brand identity (Barnes, 2001; Naik and Raman, 2003; Schultz 2004; Dewhirst and Davis, 2005;
Ratnatunga and Ewing, 2005, Finne and Gronroos, 2009)
An IMC program must be structured in multiple strands, influencing all the processes of consumer behaviour
(perception, learning, attitude, motivation), not only the actual behaviour.
The literature review reveals some well structured models of consumer behaviour, the most important of them
having as main axis the buying decision process, outlined for the first time by Engel, Blackwell and Kolat (1978).
This process includes basically five main stages: need (problem) recognition, information search and evaluation
of alternatives, product choice and outcomes. The next improvements and changes of model (Schiffman and
Kanuk, 2009) refine the initial structure, including some possible options in the fourth stage, not only purchase
option and a reshaping of fifth stage, as post-purchase evaluation.
3. The Multiple Facets of Consumer Behaviour: Effects on Consumer Making-Decision Process
Research of the impact of IMC on consumer behaviour involves the analysis of the default influence exercised
by each component of IMC on the stages of buying decision process. The analysis has to be founded on the
intrinsic mechanism of purchase decision-making whose complexity is determined by the psychological
processes involved.
According to Schiffman and Kanuk (2009), four models of consumers could be identified, based on the general
view of how and why the individual behave in a specific way. The economic view presents consumer who makes
only rational decisions, this traditional decision-making perspective incorporating the economics of information
approach to the search process (Solomon, 2009).
This model was criticized by many consumer researchers, because nobody could have all the information
required by a “perfect” decision and the rational process doesn’t accurately portray many of the purchase
decision. (Olshavski and Granbois, 1989) Opposite to the rational economic view is the passive view, which
considers that consumers are objects of marketing manipulation, being not able to play an independent role in the
buying decision process.
The cognitive view is closer to the real consumer behaviour, depicting the consumer as a receptive and active
person, who is involved in information searching and attempts to make satisfactory decisions.
Even cannot fully explain the consumer behaviour, the emotional view highlights the role of feelings and
emotions in certain purchases. It reflects that sometimes the consumers act impulsive, without evaluating the
alternatives for a long time, being emotionally driven. It is obviously that a model which could describe the
buying decision process has to combine specific elements of all the four views, in order to include the variety of
reasons which generate a specific decision.
Trying to understand the thinking of consumers, it is important to take into consideration the truth that not every
time when he has to take a decision an individual completes all steps theoretically identified as consumer
decision-making process. The time, effort and attention allocated to the decision-making process mainly depend
on the importance of problem which has to be solved by purchasing something.
The approach of consumer as problem solvers (Howard and Sheth, 1969; Schiffman and Kanuk, 2009; Solomon,
2009), highlight the role of consumer involvement in decision-making process.
Researchers showed that a consumer evaluates the effort to make a particular choice, then think of the most
appropriate strategy which best suited to the level of effort it requires, so they make a constructive processing
(Bettman, Luce and Payne, 1998).
The consumer purchase behaviour may be viewed from three perspectives — the decision making, the
experiential and the behavioural influence (Mowen, 1988). In the same time, according to the approach of
consumer as problem solver (Howard, 1977), there are three levels of decision making: extensive problem
solving, limited problem solving and routinized response behaviour.
The decision-making perspective holds that buying behaviour results from consumers' engaging in a
problem-solving task in which they move through a series of stages. Decisions involving extended problem
solving correspond most closely to the decision making perspective. At this level, the consumer has no
established criteria for evaluating a product category or specific brands and needs a great amount of information
to establish a set of criteria on which to judge specific brands and a correspondingly large amount of information
concerning each of the brands to be considered (Schiffman and Kanuk, 2009). In some cases it could be also
identified the experiential perspective, because even the consumers are highly involved in a decision, they can’t
explain entirely their choices from a rational perspective, in this situation The experiential perspective argues
that in certain instances consumers make purchases in order to create feelings, experiences, and emotions rather
than to solve problems. At the level of limited problem solving, consumers have already established some
criteria for evaluating the product category and the different brands in this category, but is still undecided about
which set of brands will best serve him.
The consumers make some decisions under conditions of low involvement, the decision being determined by the
environmental cues (Solomon, 2009), which is described as behavioural influence perspective (Mowen, 1988)
The behavioural influence approach proposes that in other instances consumers act in response to environmental
characteristics.
Extended and limited problem-solving perspectives involve a certain degree of information search and need a
deliberation time, though they vary in the degree to which consumers engage in these activities. Unlike these two
approaches, the routinized decision making is accomplished with minimal effort and without conscious control,
based on automaticity (Alba and Hutchinson, 1988).
The literature review does not reveal in-depth studies which analyze the influence of marketing communication
on each stage of consumer decision-making process. Psychological processes which composed the consumer
behaviour could be affected and changed in many ways, due to the effects of integrated marketing
communication and acting further to shape a specific decision.
4. The Model of Research the Influence of IMC on Consumer Decision-Making Process
Also, modelling the research of IMC influence on consumer behaviour is important for facilitating meaningful
comparisons between different companies (in-depth analysis of competition), time etc. To create such a research
model (fig. 1), had to test several variables, in terms of matching model components and its functional
relationship with theoretical precepts accepted as defining IMC.
Block A - Integrated marketing communication - refers to the ways in which communication is found in all four
components of marketing mix namely the product, price, distribution and marketing communications. Such
influence must be founded on market research that supports appropriate market segmentation. For example, a
product is designed to meet needs of clearly defined consumers’ segment, it is brought to market at a certain
price through the appropriate distribution channels and the marketing communications are structured in a
particular way, tailored to the characteristics of the target segment. The instruments which support and organize
the integrated marketing communication activities are integrated communication strategy and integrated
communication plan. The integrated communication strategy is reflected in market positioning based on the
objectives aimed by the company and on communication axis. The integrated communication plan is focused on
choosing the specific components, taking into account their effective correlation in terms of optimizing costs.
Block B - Consumer behaviour - is composed of five dimensions through which specialists define this process,
on the conceptual. These basic processes of consumer behaviour are also used by the real marketing, through the
definition of operational endogenous or exogenous variables, as appropriate. The five basic processes of this
block, that perception, information / learning, attitude, motivation and actual behaviour of the highly
multidimensional, which is taken into account in the design and implementation of many forms of behavioural
studies.
Block C – Consumer decision-making process – consists of stages through which the consumers when deciding
to purchase goods and services generally accepted by experts in the field of marketing: need recognition,
information search, evaluation of alternatives (evoked set), evaluation result and when buying, post-purchase
evaluation. Obviously, the stages of a buying decision are determined by product specific, consumer target
segment and the particularities of the five elementary processes which composed the consumer behaviour.
The functional relations of the model are divided in three categories, as follows: main functional relations,
illustrated in the model by the horizontal block arrows, which describe graphically the essential relations
between blocks; secondary relations illustrated by lines, which describe structural links between components of
the same block or of different blocks; feedback lines ( one shows the influence of post-purchase evaluation on
the actual behaviour regarding another similar purchase and the other links the Block C with Block A, as a result
of the systemic perspective adopted for this model.
The multidimensional relationship between all the blocks’ components, illustrated by the model, is described
further.
4.1 Block A Block B
IMC (Block A) influence on consumer behaviour processes, based on results of market research and market
segmentation, is propagated by each component of marketing mix (product, price, distribution and marketing
communications), exploring its communicational potential and is reflected in integrated communication strategy
and in integrated communication plan
There are many ways in which product characteristics and attributes affect the consumers’ perception about it.
The findings indicate that consumer’s perception of products is influenced by its physical characteristics alone
and in some cases, by the product attributes which are marketing communications based, derived from brand
images and brand differentiation (Allison and Uhl, 1964; Foxall and Goldsmith, 2003). Price, as another
component of integrated marketing communication has direct implications on the perception. There is
considerable evidence that for many products consumer judges the quality by price, even consumers’ subjective
of price are not fully explained (Monroe, 1973; Kamen and Toman, 1970; Elliot and Cameron,1994). Consumer
perception is also related to the distribution, including type of distribution (direct or indirect; intensive, selective
or exclusive) and store characteristics (Berry, 1969), namely location, design, product assortment, services and
personnel. Method of distribution must be consistent with brand image and price (Arens and Schaefer, 2007).
All IMC components transmit to consumers various information, so they support the learning process by which
they acquire the purchase and consumption knowledge. Learning process permanently evolves and changes as an
effect of newly acquired knowledge gained from reading, observation, discussions and actual experience.
Forming or changing attitude is one of the most important goals of IMC, being influenced by product, price,
distribution and marketing communications, but also resulting from direct or vicarious experience that an
individual has with the attitude object (Fazio, Sanbonmatsu, Powell and Kardes, 1986).
The complex process of motivation has the force to activate behaviour, providing in the same time purpose and
direction to that behaviour (Hawkins and Mothersbaugh, 2009). IMC could globally influence motivation,
especially through marketing communications component. Discovering the motives that a product can satisfy,
determines the product, price and distribution key features.
4.2 Block B Block C
The processes that describe the Consumer Behaviour (Block B) are influenced, each one, in various proportions
and combinations by the components of mix marketing belonging to Block A and by the operational tools
(integrated communication strategy and plan). Block B has a main resultant which reflects the differentiated and
particular influence of the behavioural processes on the stages of consumer decision-making process;
The first stage of consumer decision-making process is described in the literature as problem or need recognition.
It is a result of a difference perceived by an individual between a desired state and an actual state (Foxall and
Goldsmith, 2003; Solomon,2009). Perception has an important role in evaluating the actual state, because it
drives problem recognition, not some objective reality. All the components of IMC have to be tailored for
solving consumer recognized problem. This could involve developing of a new product or altering characteristics
of an existing one, changing pricing policy, modifying channels of distribution and adapting marketing
communications structure. IMC strategy must take into account the type of consumer identified problem. If there
is an active problem (consumer is aware of it) has to focus on convincing consumer that a specific product is the
best solution. In case of an inactive problem, the strategy aims to determine consumer to recognize a problem
then offer a possibility to solve it.
The second stage of consumer decision-making, the information search is based on learning process due to
which consumer has usually previous knowledge and experience related to a product (internal search).
Information gathered from external sources (external search) are based mostly on product characteristics
(including packaging and label) and marketing communications. Consumer’s information search depends on the
importance of purchase and the easiness to obtain information (Punj and Saelin, 1983; Bettman and Park, 1980).
The evaluation of alternatives stages is conditioned by the type of consumer’s choice (Hawkins and
Mothersbaugh, 2009). The evaluation process is closely linked to learning, motivation and attitudes. In case of
affective choice, the evaluation of a product is generally focused on the way it will make the user feel as it is
used. The motivation framework in this situation is based on consumers’ motives and promotion-based
regulatory focus. IMC could affect this stage by coordinating the appropriate marketing communications tools to
highlight positive feelings resulted from product using. A similar approach is reflected in attitude-based choice.
This type of choice involves use of general attitudes and impressions or heuristics and all the components of
IMC could have a contribution to attitude forming.
The third type of choice is made on a different base, requiring the comparison of each specific attribute across all
the brands considered (Hawkins and Mothersbaugh, 2009). As a result, the choice is influenced mostly by
practical aspects as product characteristics and price and is based especially on learning and motivation.
Decision stage is a resultant of the previous four stages and it is materialized in consumer’s actual behaviour.
Consumer decision-making process is completed with post-purchase evaluation, in which consumer compares
the product real performance with his expectations. As Schiffman and Kanuk (2009) explain, an important
component of post-purchase evaluation is the reduction of any uncertainty that consumer might have about his
choice. This evaluation generates feedback which increases the experience level and is included further in
learning process, influencing future related decisions.
4.3 Block C Block A
The relationship between consumer-making decision and IMC is materialized in feedback. Based on consumer
research, all the IMC components could be revised and improved, taking into account the main aspects resulted
from consumers ‘feedback.
5. Conclusions, Implications and Further Research
The research of integrated marketing communication influence on consumer decision-making process is a
complex activity involving in-depth analysis of the relationship and instruments through which this influence is
exercised. To study the interaction between IMC components and processes that form the consumer behaviour is
necessary to validate the model created for this purpose, which can be achieved using the findings of a
qualitative research (i.e. focus-group) combined with quantitative research (i.e. survey). This model of study the
IMC impact on need recognition, information search, and evaluation of alternatives, decision and post-purchase
evaluation offers the possibility to adopt strategic marketing decisions, based on correct understanding of
consumer’s judgments and actions.
Acknowledgments
This article is a result of the project POSDRU/88/1.5./S/55287, Doctoral Programme in Economics at European
Knowledge Standards (DOESEC). This project is co-funded by the European Social Fund through The Sectorial
Operational Programme for Human Resources Development 2007-2013, coordinated by The Bucharest
Academy of Economic Studies in partnership with West University of Timisoara.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/027347539802000304
DISTRIBUTION
MOTIVATION
Decision
MK
COMMUNICATIONS
- positioning Components
- objective FEEDBACK
- communication axe Correlation
Costs
FEEDBACK
Figure 1. Model of research the IMC influence on the consumer decision-making process