CONSUMER DECISION MAKING AND DIFFUSION OF INNOVATION- SUMMARY
To understand how a consumer takes decisions regarding the brands, we need to understand
consumer's decision-making journey. Consumer Decision Making Model helps us focus on
consumer's decisions and psychology from the point of need recognition until product
consumption. It has 3 stages-
(i) Input- It consists of the Marketing mix(4Ps, strategies needed to inform, reach and
persuade customers), Socio-cultural influences(Consumers’ family, peers, social class,
reference groups, cliques culture), and communication sources(Ads, social media, word of
mouth, etc). These factors influence consumer purchases and determine how they use their
bought products.
(ii) Process- This stage focuses on how motivation, perception, learning, personality and
attitudes affect decision making.
• This stage begins when consumer faces a need recognition regarding a problem. It can
be of two types- Actual state (figure out the problem in the product they are using and
then desire for another) and Desired state (desire triggers the decision-making
process).
• Next is the decision spectrum, in which customers are engaged in either extensive or
limited problem solving or routinized purchase behaviour of their products. They have
either low or high involvement in how relevant the purchase of that product is for
them.
• After this Pre-purchase information search takes place after the need recognition is
done. It is done by consumers’ past memory/experiences or externally like by window
shopping/internet surfing. The more related the past experience is to the customer; the
less external information is required by customer to reach the purchase decision. And
the less the customer knows about a product, more does he take up external pre-
purchase search. He is also faced by task complexity, time constraint and information
organisation while reaching the purchase decision.
• Once information search is done, the consumer moves to evaluation of the alternatives
in the evoked set after considering few products from that category, and generally
ignores the inept and inert sets.
• The consumer makes decision by complying to rules such as compensatory, non-
compensatory (Conjunctive, disjunctive, lexicographic), affect referral, recognition or
majority vote rules. These rules reduce the burden and complexity of decision
making by providing guidelines/routines that simplify the task.
A marketer who is aware of this decision-making process of consumer should align its
marketing strategies accordingly to enhance the process and have the customer's
inclination towards its brand.
(iii) Output- It consists of purchase behaviours, product consumption and post purchase
evaluation of the bought and consumed products. Three types of buying decisions taken by
customers- trial, repeat & purchase. People who pass the product's trial phase and like it will
repeat their purchases and might also reflect brand loyalty and promote the brand by word of
mouth or by self-generation of social media content. Positive disconfirmation of expectation
occurs when product’s performance is greater than expected and Negative disconfirmation of
expectation occurs when performance fall below the performance. Phases like cognitive
dissonance and cabinet castaways also take place post purchase.
Above three stages help us understand consumer journey. It is different for both, high
involvement as well as low involvement products. Also, all the decisions regarding product
purchases do not involve the same degree of information search; it varies according to people
and products.