consumers frequently have numerous choices as to where they are going to actually obtain the product. Although we are used to thinking of buying automobiles only from dealerships, for example, it is today possible to buy them through brokers or fleet sales organizations that may both (1) offer a lower price and/or (2) provide the help of a neutral third party which does not have a vested interest in the sales of one make over the other.
Retail
Evolution and Consumer Choice
For many products, consumers
frequently have numerous choices as to where
they are going to actually obtain the product. Although we are used to thinking
of buying automobiles only from dealerships, for example, it is today possible
to buy them through brokers or fleet sales organizations that may both (1)
offer a lower price and/or (2) provide the help of a neutral third party which
does not have a vested interest in the sales of one make over the other.
In general, the evolution of
diversity in the retail scene has provided consumers with more choice. In the
old days, most consumers had access only to “general” stores for most products.
Gradually, in urban environments, specialty and discount stores evolved. Today,
a consumer may generally choose to buy most products either at a relatively
high price, frequently with a significant amount of service, in a specialty
store, or with lower service in a discount store. A special case of the
discount store is the category killer--a
store that tends to specialize in some limited area (e.g., electronics),
lacking the breadth of a traditional discount store often undercutting the
traditional discount store on price (which they are able to do because of the
bargaining power that results from high buying volumes of a narrow assortment
of merchandise from the same manufacturer).
“At
Home” Shopping and Electronic Commerce
During the last several decades,
the incidence of “at home” shopping has increased. The growth of catalog sales
can be traced to advances in computer technology and subsequent list
availability (as we discussed in the section of direct marketing segmentation
methods). A more recent development is Internet based marketing. Although sales
are modest in this domain at the moment, it is too early to judge the total
potential of this medium. Although many of the concerns that consumers hold
about computer crime tend to be exaggerated and/or largely unwarranted, public
fears are a major holdback. Another problem is the demographics of computer and
Internet use--the majority of U.S. consumers, and certainly the great majority
of residents of even highly industrialized countries, are not regular Internet
users. Certain products specifically aimed at heavy Internet users (e.g.,
records, software) and products/services that require a high level of
customization (e.g., airline tickets) may find good opportunities. An
interesting problem with Internet commerce, which may well have spillover
effects outside the realm of the Net, is the relative ease with which consumers
may compare prices of different retailers, resulting in intense price
competition. Note that recent legislation has limited taxation of Internet
sales in the U.S., in a sense attempting to “jump start” this innovation.
Store
Positioning
Positioning of retail stores
is essential. In general, stores which
excel on a significant dimension seem
to perform better--for example, RPG’s food
world excels through its intense customer service, while Big Bazaar excels
through its efficiency and low prices. Stores which fall somewhere in
between—e.g., Nilgiris - tend to do less well since they get “stuck in the
middle” and have to compete against both. Obviously, there is a limit to how
strongly you can move toward one extreme. For example, if Food world were to
double its prices and even double its service, that position would be
untenable, and certain extreme discount stores that offer lower prices than Big
Bazaar tend not to be successful because they are ultimately not satisfactory
to consumers.
A grocery retail chain faces
the following consumer behavior issues:
Should there be a reduction
in number of stock keeping units (SKU) for a particular category?
How should the sale of
non-promoted categories be looked at in judging promotional effectiveness?
Is there a need to classify
variety seeking behavior?
How should one monitor
consumption rates for packaged goods?
What are the long term
effects of promotion on consumer behavior?
Consumer
Shopping Behavior
Definition of Buying Behavior:
Buying Behavior is the
decision processes and acts of people involved in buying and using products. As
Marketers we need to understand our Consumer for the following reasons:
Why consumers make the
purchases that they make?
What factors influence
consumer purchases?
The changing factors in our
society.
Consumer Buying Behavior
refers to the buying behavior of the ultimate consumer. A firm needs to analyze
buying behavior for:
Buyers reactions to a firms
marketing strategy has a great impact on the firm’s success.
The marketing concept
stresses that a firm should create a Marketing Mix (MM) that satisfies
(gives utility to) customers, therefore need to analyze the what,
where, when and how consumers buy.
Marketers can better predict
how consumers will respond to marketing strategies.
Stages
of the Consumer Buying Process
There are Six Stages to
Consumer Buying Decision Process (For complex decisions). Actual purchasing is
only one stage of the process. Not all decision processes lead to a purchase.
All consumer decisions do not always include all 6 stages, determined by the
degree of complexity.
The 6 stages are:
Problem Recognition (awareness of need) It is
actual difference between the desired state and the actual condition. The stage
where marketers help identify the deficit in assortment of products. Simple
example Hunger stimulates your need to eat. This can be stimulated by the
marketer through product information, in case the consumer did not know he was
deficient? Eg. When we see a commercial for a new pair of shoes, It can
stimulates your recognition that you need a new pair of shoes.
Information search—can be both internal and external.
Internal search, search your
memory. This basically your experience or things that affect you which is
stored in your memory.
External search if you need
more information. Friends and relatives (word of mouth), Marketer dominated
sources like magazines, catalogue ; comparison shopping; public sources etc.
A successful information
search leaves a buyer with possible alternatives. Hungry, want to go out and
eat, evoked set is
Chinese food
Indian food
McDonalds
Pizza Hut etc
Evaluation of Alternatives—This is stage when you know
that you have quite a lot of alternatives and you need to establish
criteria for evaluation, features the buyer wants or does not want. We could
Rank/weight alternatives or resume search. May decide that you want to eat
something spicy, Indian gets highest rank etc. If not satisfied with your
choice then returns to the search phase. Can you think of another restaurant,
next time? Look in the yellow pages etc. Information from different sources may
be treated differently. Marketers try to influence by “framing” alternatives.
Purchase decision—Choose buying alternative,
includes product, package, store, method of purchase etc.
Purchase—May differ from decision, time lapse between point 4
& 5, product availability. Most of the time the consumers make their
purchase decision irrational or emotional. There need not be a rational process
all the time. E.g. Ann purchased Levi Jeans just because her neighbor purchased
it and she looks good in it. Ann never wears western clothes. In this example
you can understand that Ann has been emotional when purchasing the jeans, as
she might have assumed that she will also look good or just out of sheer
jealously she has done it.
Post-Purchase Evaluation—In this stage it is the
outcome that is looked into. There are two major outcomes, they are
Satisfaction or Dissatisfaction. Have you heard people asking for suggestions
after the purchase, True a lot of them need the security of others who would
make comments? It is like all human beings to have doubts on the purchase. E.g.
A woman buys a pink color sari and comes home, though she likes it she will ask
her husband, her friends and every one close to her, their opinion about the
sari. This is called Cognitive Dissonance, a inner
feeling if she has made the right decision. This can be reduced by warranties,
after sales communication etc. Another example is after eating an Indian meal,
may think that really you wanted a Chinese meal instead.
Purchase
Timing Behavior
The economic assumption
underlying the analysis of brand switching and purchase timing for a single
product category is the reparability of consumers’ utilities across the
different product categories that constitute the basket of goods purchased by
consumers. Most grocers generally store related categories together with the assumption
that a household’s choice in one category is not independent of its choice in
the other. The decision of when to purchase one product category might depend
on the decision for a related category.
Such an understanding is
useful for the retailer because it helps in getting an idea about what kind of
promotions will click with the consumers. A critical issue when studying
household purchases of multiple categories is being able to identify the
related product categories. This requires a complete characterization of the
purchase behavior of households in several different categories. Inter-purchase
time also needs to be monitored. There are several sources of the observed
correlation in the inter-purchase times across households. One source is related
to the nature of the product categories themselves that induce the dependence.
Consumers typically consume
these products together and therefore purchase them together, for example,
dhoop sticks and camphor. Other sources of the estimated correlation across
categories are from (1) consumers visiting the store only on few occasions and
consequently making purchases in all categories at the same time, like monthly
purchase, (2) the retailer promoting ‘unrelated’ categories together, which
results in the joint purchases of products in different categories, for
example, a free toothbrush with a deodorant, or (3) the household exhausts its
supply of both products at the same time, which prompts joint purchase.
Interestingly, purchase
timing may also be affected by the variety seeking behavior observed in
consumers.
In-Store
Stimuli, Store Image and Loyalty
In-store Choice
Consumer store choice results
from a process whereby information on various alternatives is evaluated by the
consumer prior to the selection of one of these alternatives. In the
application of store choice models it is often assumed that the
information-processing strategy underlying store choice is a simultaneous one
in which all possible alternatives are evaluated by an individual. A competing assumption,
increasingly recognized in a spatial choice, is that individuals initially
evaluate clusters of alternatives and then only evaluate alternatives within a
chosen cluster.
Fierce competition has always
been a hallmark of the retail industry. In recent years, it has become even
tougher, as innovative new entrants have upset the status quo and existing
retailers have become more efficient. But perhaps the greatest challenge faced
by retailers is consumers’ rising expectations.
Today’s consumers have
evolved into elusive, finicky targets who have many shopping options and are
harder to please. Consumers are more highly informed than ever before and more
able to compare prices and products with little time, effort or interaction
with a retailer. In addition to being more informed, consumers also shop
differently than they have before—often using a combination of going to a
physical store and shopping online. It is safe to say that never before have
consumers expected more from retailers and exhibited so little loyalty to
specific brands.
“Know your customer” is one
of the most widely quoted maxims of business—and for good reason. However,
companies often talk about the importance of customer knowledge while failing
to put action behind their words. Why? Some companies remember the pain
involved in failed data warehousing projects or unsuccessful attempts to
persuade sales personnel to document customer comments. Other companies engage
in modest efforts, such as studying customer profitability or implementing
limited CRM software, which may provide some efficiency, but yield little in
the way of deep customer insight.
Behavior Basis
Leading retailers, however,
recognize that they must go beyond their historical product-focused operations
and become more customer focused if they are to remain successful. But what
does customer focused mean? First, retailers need to develop an understanding
of the customer that is based on customer behavior rather than on geography or
demographics. Second, they must learn to use this information across the entire
organization— including the C-suite—and not just in the marketing department.
The opportunity for retailers
to use customer data and information to build more profitable, lasting customer
relationships is tremendous. While gathering data can be fairly easy, making
sense of it is an entirely different matter.
One of the first steps to
mastering multi-channel customers is to have the technology needed to serve
them, learn about them and make better decisions about how to reach them. The
merchants can no longer be satisfied with simple demographics such as gender or
age group. They also cannot be content with a good picture of an in-store
shopper or an online shopper. Instead, the merchant has to have information
about what price levels a customer group reacts to, how discounts on various
items affect the impulse to shop and buy, and how a target shopper reacts to
various stimuli in all the channels they use.
The insight into how a group
of customers react to and use different channels can be the piece of
information that allows retailers to generate loyalty, improved margins and
profitability. Compiling, organizing, analyzing and using this type of complex
data takes powerful technology.
The insight into how a group
of customers react to and use different channels can be the piece of
information that allows retailers to generate loyalty, improved margins and
profitability. Compiling, organizing, analyzing and using this type of complex
data takes powerful technology.
Even more important than
computing power, however, is integration. Successful retailers cannot just
build better silos of customer information. The greater the number of channels,
brands, categories and products involved, the more difficult the task of
integrating and analyzing the data. Thus, retailers must create a single view
of the customer by combining information from different silos into one complete
snapshot of the consumer.
Once retailers have the
technology to support and propel their efforts, they must adopt an analytical
approach to customer insights. Analytics can take customer information and turn
it into information retailers can use across all channels to make effective
decisions about pricing, merchandising, advertising, promotions and customer service
levels. This approach is based on customer behavior and differs significantly
from traditional retail CRM methods. Specifically, this analytical approach
uses methods and associated tools to analyze customer behavior in three ways:
Purchasing history, such as
frequency of visits and market basket
Promotional response to
merchandising and marketing levers, such as changes in pricing, promotion and
category locations
Store (physical and on-line)
behavior, such as the stores at which they shop and the areas of the store in
which they shop.
These dynamic behavioral
insights help retailers identify and predict which merchandising and marketing
levers cause each customer group’s behavior in each store and each channel.
This approach is very different from the customer research and demographic
segmentation approaches many retailers have depended upon in the past. It is
different because it is driven by actual customer behavior—not how customers
say they will behave—and it predicts the factors that will motivate customers
to make future purchases. With this information, retailers are prioritizing
customer segments and developing detailed strategies to influence them to buy
more products, more often, and in ways that are more profitable to the
retailer.
It is worth noting, however,
that although purchasing and loyalty card data is extremely valuable in the
analysis, it is not absolutely essential. In its absence, retailers can still
take a much more fact-based approach to developing customer insights through
customer segment and attitudinal analysis using existing data and customer
observation.
With the appropriate
technology and analytics working for a retailer, what’s missing in leveraging
the multi-channel customer? What will propel the retailer to the top? Customer
insight is necessary, location is still important, ease of access is a
differentiator, but the new mantra may well be innovation, innovation,
innovation
Visual Merchandising (VM) is the art of presentation, which puts the merchandise in focus. It educates
the customers, creates desire and finally augments the selling process. This is
an area where the Indian textile and clothing industry, particularly, the SMEs
lack adequate knowledge and expertise. This inadequacy is best reflected in
poor presentation/display and communication in various national and
international exhibitions. Organization often tend not to realize that the
store image plays a very important role in communication and conveying messages
to its customers Marketers are trying to deliver greater value through adopting
shelving techniques. They follow FIFO (first in first out) techniques.
VM
Helps in
educating the customers about
the product/service in an effective and creative way.
establishing a creative
medium to present merchandise in 3D environment, thereby enabling long lasting
impact and recall value.
setting the company apart in
an exclusive position.
establishing linkage between
fashion, product design and marketing by keeping the product in prime focus.
combining the creative,
technical and operational aspects of a product and the business.
drawing the attention of the
customer to enable him to take purchase decision within shortest possible time,
and thus augmenting the selling process.
Store
Loyalty
According to American Marketing Association – Store Loyalty is defined as-In context to Consumer
Behavior “ The degree to which a consumer consistently patronizes the same
store when shopping for particular types of products.”