Table of Contents:-
- Types of Buying Behaviour
- Consumer Buying Situations
Types of Buying Behaviour
Types of buying behaviour of consumers/levels of the Consumer Decision Making Process are also known as buying situations. The decision process is used differently depending on the situation. One situation, such as buying a new home – may necessitate a thorough use of each step in the process; perceived risk will probably be high regardless of the consumer’s background.
Another situation is that buying a magazine may let the consumer skip certain steps; the perceived risk will probably be low regardless of the person’s background.
On a continuum of effort ranging from very high to low, we can distinguish four specific levels of consumer decision-making:
![Types of Buying Behaviour](https://dynamicstudyhub.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/Types-of-Buying-Behaviour-2.webp)
1) Complex Buying Behaviour/Extensive Problem-Solving/New Task
This situation occurs when a consumer makes full use of the decision process. Considerable time is spent gathering information and evaluating alternatives – what to buy and where to buy it – before making a purchase. The potential for cognitive dissonance is great. In this category, they are expensive, complex items with which the individual has little or no experience. Perceived risk of all kinds is high.
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For example, a car, a house, and a life insurance policy. Because the customers tend to use extended decision-making, such retailers as real estate brokers and auto dealers emphasise personal selling, printed materials, and other methods of communication to provide as much information as possible. A low-key approach should be enacted so customers feel comfortable and not threatened. In this way, the consumer’s perceived risk can be minimised.
2) Dissonance-Reducing Buying Behaviour/Limited Problem Solving Modified Buy
This situation occurs when a buyer uses each step in the purchase process but does not spend much time on each. It requires less time than extended decision making since the person typically has some experience with both the ‘what’ and ‘where’ of the purchase.
In this category are items that have been bought before but not regularly. The risk is moderate, and the consumer will spend some time shopping.
.For example, a second car, clothing, a vacation, and gifts.
Here, the marketer’s job is to design a communication program to help the buyer gather more information, increase his brand comprehension, and gain confidence in the brand.
3) Habitual Buying Behaviour/Routinised Response Behaviour/ Straight Rebuy/Brand Loyalty
This situation occurs when the consumer buys out of habit & skips steps in the purchase process. Customers want to spend little or no time shopping, and the same brands are usually re-purchased (often from the same retailers).
In this category, items are bought regularly. They have little risk because of buyer experience. The key step for this type of decision-making is the awareness of the problem.
For example, groceries, newspapers, and haircuts.
Marketers must understand the information evaluation and gathering activities of prospective consumers. They have to educate prospective customers about the attributes of the product class, their relative importance, and the high standing of the marketer’s brand regarding the more important brand attributes. In other words, marketing communication should aim at supplying information and helping the consumer to evaluate and feel good about their brand choice.
4) Variety-Seeking Buying Behaviour/Brand Switching
Some buying situations are involved, but there are significant brand differences; here, consumers often switch brands.
The market leader & the minor brand in this product category have different marketing strategies. The market leader will try to encourage habitual buying behaviour by avoiding out-of-stock conditions, dominating the shelf space, and sponsoring frequent reminder advertising. Challenger companies will encourage variety-seeking by offering better deals, lower prices, coupons, free samples, and advertising that presents reasons for trying something new.
Consumer Buying Situations
Types of Individual Buyer Behaviour
Types of consumer buying situations/habits are also known as levels of the consumer decision-making process. Every time a person purchases a good or service or visits a retailer, the customer uses a form of the described decision process. Often, the process is used subconsciously, and a person is unaware of its use.
Consumer decision making varies with the buying decision types. The decisions to buy shampoo, a tennis racket, a personal computer, and a new car are all very different. If all purchase decisions needed extensive effort, then consumer decision-making would be exhausting, leaving little time for anything else. On the other hand, if all purchases were regular, they would tend to be monotonous and provide novelty or slight joy.
On a continuum of effort ranging from very high to extremely low, we can distinguish four specific levels of consumer decision making:
Related Article:- Consumer Decision Making Process
![Consumer Buying Situations](https://dynamicstudyhub.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/Consumer-Buying-Situations.webp)
1) Complex Buying Behaviour/Extensive Problem Solving/New Task
This situation happens when a consumer makes full use of the decision process. Considerable time is spent gathering information and evaluating alternatives – what to buy and where to buy it – before making a purchase. The potential for cognitive dissonance is great. In this category, they are expensive, complex things with which the individual has little or no experience. All kinds of perceived risks are high.
For example- a house, a first car, and a life insurance policy. A low-key approach should be enacted so buyers feel comfortable and not threatened. In this way, the consumer’s perceived risk can be reduced.
At this level, the consumer requires a great deal of information to establish a set of criteria for judging specific brands and a large amount of information concerning each brand to be regarded.
2) Dissonance-Reducing Buying Behaviour Limited Problem Solving Modified Buy
This situation occurs when a consumer uses each step of the purchase process but does not spend much time on each. It requires less time than extended decision making since the individual typically has some experience with both the what and the where of the purchase. In this category are objects purchased before but not regularly; the risk is moderate, and the consumer will spend some time shopping.
For example – clothing, a car, a vacation, and gifts.
At this level, consumers have established the fundamental criteria for evaluating the product category and the various brands. However, they have not fully established preferences concerning a select group of brands. Their search for additional information is more like “fine-tuning”; they must collect additional brand information to differentiate among the various brands.
3) Habitual Buying Behaviour/Routinised Response Behaviour/ Straight Rebuy/Brand Loyalty
These circumstances occur when the consumer buys out of habit and skips steps in the purchase process. Customers want to spend little or no time shopping, and the same brands are often re-purchased from the same retailers). In this category, items are bought regularly. They have very little risk because of consumer experience. The key step for this type of decision making is problem awareness.
For example – groceries, newspapers, and haircuts.
At this level, customers have some experience with the product category and a well-established set of criteria to evaluate the brands they are considering. In some conditions, they may search for a small amount of additional information; in others, they simply review what they already know.
4) Variety-Seeking Buying Behaviour/Brand Switching
Some buying conditions are characterised by low involvement but important brand differences; here, consumers frequently switch brands.
This product category’s minor brand and market leader have different marketing strategies. The market leader will try to encourage habitual buying behaviour by avoiding out-of-stock conditions, dominating the shelf space, and sponsoring frequent reminder advertising. Challenger companies will encourage variety-seeking by offering lower prices, deals, free samples, coupons, and advertising that presents reasons for trying something new.
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