Lecture 5

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Consumer Perception

Chapter 4
The Elements of Perception

• Perception is the process by which individuals select, organize, and interpret stimuli into a meaningful and
coherent picture of the world. It can be described as “how we see the world around us.”
• Nevertheless, changing a brand image, or repositioning, is necessary. For example, for decades, Chevrolet
was positioned as an American icon, with such slogans as “See the USA in Your Chevrolet,” Heartbeat of
America,” and “Baseball, Hot Dogs, Apple Pie and Chevrolet.”
• Sensory Input
• Sensation is the immediate and direct response of the sensory organs to stimuli. A stimulus is any unit of
input to any of the senses. Examples of stimuli (i.e., sensory inputs) include products, packages, brand
names, advertisements, and commercials. Sensory receptors are the human organs (the eyes, ears, nose,
mouth, and skin) that receive sensory inputs. Their sensory functions are to see, hear, smell, taste, and
touch
• The Absolute Threshold
• The lowest level at which an individual can experience a sensation is called the absolute threshold. The
point at which a person can detect a difference between “something” and “nothing” is that person’s
absolute threshold for that stimulus
The Elements of Perception
The Absolute Threshold
• The lowest level at which an individual can experience a sensation is called the absolute threshold. The point at
which a person can detect a difference between “something” and “nothing” is that person’s absolute threshold for
that stimulus
• Ambush Marketing
• Ambush marketing consists of placing ads in places where consumers do not expect to see them and cannot readily
avoid them.11 Examples include brand names stamped on eggs in a supermarket, featured on video screens in taxis,
placed in subway tunnels between stations, or featured on doctors’ examination tables
• Experiential Marketing
• Experiential marketing allows customers to engage and interact with brands, products, and services in sensory ways
in order to create emotional bonds between consumers and marketing offerings
• The Differential Threshold
• The minimal difference that can be detected between two similar stimuli is called the differential threshold or the
just noticeable difference (JND).
• Subliminal Perception
• They can perceive stimuli without being consciously aware that they are doing so. Stimuli that are too weak or too
brief to be consciously seen or heard may nevertheless be strong enough to be perceived by one or more receptor
cells. This process is called subliminal perception, because the stimulus is beneath the threshold, or “limen,” of
conscious awareness, though obviously not beneath the absolute threshold of the receptors involved.
Perceptual Selection

• The Stimulus
• Physical stimuli that affect consumers’ perceptions of products and evoke attention include the product itself, its
attributes, package design, brand name, advertisements, and commercials (including copy claims, choice and sex of
model, positioning of model, size of ad, and typography), and placement of promotional messages within the
advertising space. Ads that contrast with their environments are very likely to be noticed
• Expectations
• People usually see what they expect to see, and what they expect to see is usually based on familiarity, previous
experience, or a set of expectations. In a marketing context, a person tends to perceive products and product
attributes according to his or her own expectations.
• Motives
• People tend to perceive the things they need or want: The stronger the need, the greater the tendency to ignore
unrelated stimuli in the environment
• Selective Perception
• Consumers exercise a great deal of selectivity in terms of the attention they give to commercial stimuli. Selective
attention is consumers’ heightened awareness of stimuli that meet their needs or interests and minimal awareness
of stimuli irrelevant to their needs.
Perceptual Organization

• Figure and Ground


• The term figure and ground refers to the interrelationship between the stimulus itself (i.e., figure) and the
environment or context within which it appears (i.e., ground). As noted earlier, stimuli that contrast with
their environment are more likely to be noticed. A sound must be louder or softer, a color brighter or pale
• Obscuring the Distinction Between Figure and Ground
• A marketing technique based on the principle of figure-and-ground consists of inserting advertisements
into entertainment content. Product placement takes place when the advertised product (i.e., the figure)
is deliberately integrated into the TV show or film (i.e., the ground) in one or more of the following ways:1.
The product is used by the cast (e.g., in such shows as Survivor and American Idol). 2. The product is
integrated into the plot. 3. The product is associated with a character (e.g., the character is also the
product’s advertising spokesperson).
• Grouping
• Grouping refers to people’s instinctive tendency to group stimuli together so that they become a unified
picture or impression
• Closure
• Closure is people’s instinct to organize pieces of sensory input into a complete image or feeling. Individuals
need closure, which means that if they perceive a stimulus as incomplete, they are compelled to figure out
its complete meaning

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