CONSUMER BEHAVIOUR
WEEK 2
PERSONALITY, VALUES & LIFESTYLE
Personality, a combination of specific traits or characteristics
Helps distinguish consumers based on the specific characteristics each exhibits
Interactions with situations influence behaviour
A person’s underlying characteristics are but one part of the puzzle
The importance of situational influencers
Personality as the totality of thoughts, emotions, intentions, tendencies, and behaviours that a
person exhibits consistently as he or she adapts to the environment. (Babin & Harris, 2018,
p.112)
personality is… integrated, unique, overt; consistent and enduring, and can change over time.
Marketers are interested in determining individual difference variables to determine why
consumers value different things…
Main ones: personality, lifestyle, values
Predict a person’s emotional, behavioural and cognitive patterns in addition to their
psychological health, political leanings, career choices and the quality of their
relationships
(Funder, 2001).
THE BIG FIVE
Widely recognised approach
5 factor model, set of 5 dimensions that are said to form the basis of personality
Multiple-trait perspective,
Multiple-trait approach, combinations of traits are examined and the total effect of the
collection of traits is considered
https://www.truity.com/test/big-five-personality-test
OVERARCHING APPROACHES TO PERSONALITY:
1) Psychoanalytic approach to personality, Freudian Theory, Motivational Research &
Neo Freudian theories
2) Trait approach to personality, trait theory and multi-trait theory
Psychoanalytic approach to personality
Personality results from a struggle between inner motives and societal pressures to
follow rules and expectations
Much of one’s adult personality stems from a fundamental conflict between a person’s
desire to gratify his or her physical needs and the necessity to function as a responsible
member of society.
Healthy individuals manage to balance between the superego and the ID
In terms of marketing…
Highlights the importance of unconscious mental processes in influencing behaviours/
purchases.
Ego relies on symbolism in products to compromise between the id and the superego
This is the connection between product symbolism and motivation:
A product represents a consumer’s true goal, which is socially unacceptable.
By acquiring the product, the person experiences the forbidden fruit
People channel unacceptable desires into acceptable outlets
e.g. alcohol and cigarettes
Links to hedonistic pleasure, sex, and everything the superego represents to make
products desirable
Motivational Research – Psychoanalytic
Borrowed Freudian ideas to understand the deeper meanings of products and
advertisements – with a heavy emphasis on unconscious motives
Assumed that we channel socially unacceptable needs into acceptable outlets including
product substitutes.
Depth interviews and focus groups
Based on the assumption that the respondent cannot immediately articulate his or her
latent or underlying motives
Focuses on interpretations of unconscious motives
e.g., snapchat – a temporary social outlet – you choose who to interact w/
snapchat was used for procrastination and distraction as opposed to other outlets that are
solely focused on communication
associated w/ higher feelings of jealousy than other outlets
Less expensive to conduct than large-scale, quantitative survey data collection
The knowledge may help companies develop marketing communications that appeal
to deep-seated needs
Research lacked sufficient rigor and validity because the interpretations are so
subjective
Generalisability of results to a larger market
The original motivational researchers were heavily influenced by orthodox Freudian
theory - their interpretations usually involved sexual themes
Overlook other plausible causes for behaviour
Neo Freudian Theories – grounded w/ Freud’s ideas
An individual’s personality is more influenced by interpersonal relationships with others,
than by how he or she resolves sexual conflicts.
Karen Horney - Moving toward others (compliant), away from others (detached), or
against others (aggressive)
Alfred Adler - Motivation to overcome inferiority relative to others
Harry Stack Sullivan - Personality evolves to reduce anxiety in social relationships
Trait Theory, a trait is any distinguishing, relatively enduring personality characteristic.
Trait theory is a significant departure from the earlier Freudian theories. Traits are
enduring facets of personality.
Focuses on the quantitative measurement of personality traits, the identifiable
characteristics that define a person.
Single trait theory -
criticism,
Personality traits traditionally have not been shown to be strong predictors of consumer
behaviour relative to other explanatory variables.
Many of these scales are not sufficiently valid or reliable.
Personality tests are often developed for specific populations, but they are
frequently applied to particularly any consumer group.
Researchers often make changes in the instruments to adapt them to their own situations
and needs – dilute the validity of the measures and also reduce researchers’ ability to
compare results across consumer samples
Multiple Trait Approach
Multiple-trait approach is concerned with a number of personality traits together and how
they combine to effect consumption. E.g. Big 5 Factor Structure (McCrae and Costa,
1990).
Multi-trait approaches have been used to enable prediction of behaviour, since they
offer a more detailed and complex picture of the relationships between personality and
behaviour.
The "Big Five" (also known as the Neo-Personality Inventory) of personality are five
broad dimensions/traits of personality, which have been empirically discovered. These 5
factors represent the underlying structure of all personality traits (McCrae and Costa,
1990).
BIG 5 – OCEAN, openness to
experience; conscientiousness;
extroversion; agreeableness and
neuroticism
HYPER PERSONALISATION
Item to item collaborative filtering; behavioural targeting to provide
accurate recommendations on what you’d like –
has increased Amazon sales by 35% across the board
personalised recommendations; group us w/
recommendations based on the moves we
like and watch
80% of Netflix users follow recommendations, only 20% search
up their own content.
BRAND PERSONALITY
Brand personality – human personality traits that are applicable
to and relevant for brands
Brand personality is stronger if these elements are deliberately co-ordinated and if the
personality is kept consistent over time
Aaker (1997)
Brand Personality Scale (BPS) which covers 44 personality types
FIVE broad personality dimensions
1. Sincerity (agreeableness)
2. Excitement (extraversion)
3. Competence (conscientiousness)
4. Sophistication (openness)
5. Ruggedness (neuroticism?)
Links to the OCEAN traits…
Doesn’t
have to be mutually
exclusive
Most
brands would range
from 2-3 to avoid
being too complex.
World’s most
powerful brands (Interbrand, 2021) – in order,
e.g. Apple says they are: friendly,
easy-going, stylish, cool, intuitive,
innovative and casual.
In terms of Aaker’s model –
excitement, sophistication, and
competence
BRAND ANTHROPOMORPHISM
Trying to humanise the brand in any way
BRAND PERSONALITY
Presents opportunities for companies to differentiate their products
Creates and communicates a distinctive brand personality stands out from its competition
Provide marketers with opportunities to build strong brand relationships with consumers -
brand loyalty
Have strong degrees of favourability, originality, and clarity
Understand their customer’s personality
LIFESTYLE
“A pattern of consumption that reflects a person’s choices of how to spend his or her time
and money, and these choices are essential to define consumer identity” (Solomon, 2020, p.
262)
Lifestyle and personality are interlinked
Lifestyle is a result of our personality and experiences
Great example of a lifestyle brand: Harley Davidson
Lifestyle Marketing Perspective
Identify the set of products and services that consumers associate with a specific
lifestyle
We must look at patterns of behaviour to understand consumers
We must see how customers make choices in a variety of product categories
Many products and services seem to go together - the same
types of people tend to select them
Meshing of products from different categories to express a
single lifestyle
Co-Branding
AIOs
Psychographic techniques
use quantitative methods
that can be used in
developing lifestyle profiles
Group consumers according to
some combination of three
categories of variables: Activities,
Interests, and Opinions.
Leads to development of
Customer Persona
Marketing tool to help marketers segment their
audiences
VALUES
A belief that some condition is preferable to its opposite
Universal values (e.g. health, wisdom, world peace)
The relative importance, or ranking, of these universal values sets cultures apart
This set of rankings constitutes a culture’s value system
A general set of core values uniquely define a culture
Values evolve over time
a lot of brands start off w/ specific
values
e.g., innocent smoothies,
successful brand based around
doing good.
identifies 9 consumer segments based on the
values members endorse
VALS
Groups divided based on personality traits
and key demographics
Segmentation system based on responses to
a questionnaire featuring 4 demographic and
35 attitudinal questions, continually updated
with 80,000 surveys a year
Often customised by culture