Friday 4 May 2012

Hey back again, who's missed me?

I have been looking into consumer behaviour of late and found some really interesting studies conducted and seen what the experts define as consumer behaviour.

"This is a process, early stages of development, the field was often referred to as buyer behaviour, reflecting an emphasis on the interaction between consumers and producers at the time of purchase. marketers now recognise that consumer behaviour is an ongoing process, not merely what happens at the moment a consumer hands or a credit card and in turn receives some good or service".

"A consumer is generally thought of as a person who identifies a need or desire, makes a purchase and then disposes of the product during the three stages in the consumption process. In many cases, however, different people may be involved in the process. The purchaser and user of a product may not be the same person, as when a parent chooses clothes for a teenager (and makes selections that can result in "fashion suicide' from the teenager's point of view). In other cases, another person may act as an influencer, providing recommendation for (or against) certain products without actually buying or using them".


From this extract I can ascertain that Solomon, Bamossy, Aakegaard and Hogg knew what they were talking about when it comes to consumer behaviour in particular the statement about "fashion suicide" as this is what actually happens in the real world and why teens are under such pressure to be fashion conscious and why most if not all parents will be if you like banned from shopping with their now adult like teens. It's just not what happens anymore, imagine the embarrassment for a 17 year old girl going underwear shopping with her mum and her friends happen to be in the same shop, she would literally want the ground to swallow her up, I believe we have all witnessed it in TV shows/films and this is just the norm of what occurs in the mind of the consumer.



Michael Solomon,Gary Bamossy,Soren Askegaard, Margaret K.Hogg (2006). Consumer Behaviour A European Perspective . 3rd ed. Essex: Person Education Limited. p7.

1 comment:

  1. YOu're doing well with all this. Now check the list of required tasks - there are two you haven't looked at yet

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