3BM090 Consumer Behavior Assignment 1: Perception Student Number: 129095855 Student Name: Lee Xiao Xiang Module Leader: Keith Brighty Table of Content Page 1. Introduction 3 2. Perception 3 3. The positioning map 4 4. Sensory systems 5 5.1. Vision 5 5.2. Sound 7 5.3. Touch 8 5.4. Smell 9 5.5. Taste 10 5. Sensory Thresholds 11 6.6. Absolute Thresholds 11 6.7. Differential Thresholds 12 6. Subliminal
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1.0 SECTION A 1.1 PRODUCT INFORMATION Original Brand Name of Product: Billabong International Product Class: Surf Brand Description: Created by two avid surfers‚ Billabong is a brand designed by surfers‚ for surfers. In 1973‚ Billabong offered little more than a small range of surf wear: mainly surfboards and board shorts. But today‚ Billabong is a brand that encompasses the Australian surf culture by offering products that cater not only for the surfer inside many of us‚ but for fashion and
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Consumer Behavior Models in Tourism Analysis Study Muhannad M.A Abdallat‚ Ph.D. Assistant Professor Hesham El –Sayed El - Emam‚ Ph.D. Assistant Professor Department of Tourism and Hospitality‚ Faculty of Tourism and Archeology King Saud University ABSTRACT The theories of consumer decision-making process assume that the consumer’s purchase decision process consists of steps through which the buyer passes in purchasing a product or service. However‚ this might not be the case. Not every consumer
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TRAVEL BEHAVIOUR *TASK 1: Identify and analyse the decision-making units (DMU’s) for the two decisions made in the Case Study (Richard’s travel to Paris and Richard and Heather’s holiday plans): A) Work: Richard usually travel from Paris to England and vice versa by plane and when he arrives at both airports he take a taxi to arrive at his destination. His friends are not in accordance with it because of the pollution. Heather‚ his girlfriend makes a purpose that consists in supersede the
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BRIEF OVERVIEW ON THE INDIAN SMALL CAR INDUSTRY If there is one big market that is forcing the global auto majors to think small‚ it is India. Until yesterday‚ all the world’s auto-manufacturers expected to create success out of their midsize products. There were as many as five players in the mid car segment and just one--the Rs 7‚956-crore Maruti Udyog Ltd (MUL)--in the small car segment. Suddenly Daewoo Motors India and Hyundai Motors India--are changing lanes midway‚ making the small car
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Consumer Motivation All 8 of them agreed that what motivates them to possess an item from Chanel is because owning an item from Chanel puts them in the limelight and makes them the object of jealously. This gives them the feeling of authority. According to Rachel (the youngest in the group)‚ whenever I carry my 2.55 (Chanel quilted bag)‚ my peers will all look up to me and tell me how much they envy me. It gives me a sense of power. Shay Chua seconded Rachel opinion adding that her Chanel
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Section – A: Attempt all FIVE questions. Each question carries 06 marks. [30 Marks] Q1. What is consumer behavior? Why is it important to study consumer behavior? Q2. Discuss the concept of marketing. How is marketing orientation relevant to business? Q3. Discuss the difference between microenvironment and macro environment? Q4. Explain the influence of the internal factors on the consumer decision making process? Q5. Write short notes on:‐ a) b) Marketing Information System Marketing research
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operating in the areas of Outsourcing‚ Market Research‚ Brand & financial management. They are currently working across 6 locations across India viz. Ahmadabad‚ Bangalore‚ Chennai‚ Kolkata‚ and Patna with head office at Pune. Vision future contribute towards the growth of an organization and an individual by creating better ways of supporting business through an understanding of functional as well as industry specific expertise. They consistently work hard to add value to their clients and thereby thriving
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Prediction of Consumer Behavior by Experts and Novices J. Scott Armstrong University of Pennsylvania‚ armstrong@wharton.upenn.edu Postprint version. Published in Journal of Consumer Research‚ Volume 18‚ Issue 2‚ September 1991‚ pages 251-256. Publisher URL: http://www.jstor.org/browse/00935301?config=jstor This paper is posted at ScholarlyCommons. http://repository.upenn.edu/marketing_papers/46 For more information‚ please contact repository@pobox.upenn.edu. Reprinted from Journal of Consumer Research
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technology intensity in production‚ pressures for cost reduction‚ universal needs‚ presence of multinational competitors‚ and access to localized resources. But that matrix does not take into account the inherent characteristic of the industry’s principal product‚ namely low-value-to-weight ratio of cement. Therefore‚ the move from the fragmented localized markets to formation of the MNCs spanning the globe was caused not by the intrinsic universal need for cement itself or by the opportunities for labor
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