Qualitative Market Research: An International Journal Emerald Article: Are voters‚ consumers?: A qualitative exploration of the voter-consumer analogy in political marketing Norman Peng‚ Chris Hackley Article information: To cite this document: Norman Peng‚ Chris Hackley‚ (2009)‚"Are voters‚ consumers?: A qualitative exploration of the voter-consumer analogy in political marketing"‚ Qualitative Market Research: An International Journal‚ Vol. 12 Iss: 2 pp. 171 186 Permanent link to this document:
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Lesson No. 5 Consumer Rights Rights of Consumers : Rights which are provided by law : - Right to safety - Right to be informed - Right to choose - Right to be heard Right to seek redressal - Right to consumer education. Factors causing exploitation of Consumers : - Limited information - Limited supplies - Limited competition - Low literacy Duties of Consumers : - To purchase quality marked products such as ISI‚ AGMARK etc. - To ask for cash memo for the items purchased whenever possible. - To make
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Remember Maurice Sendak’s Where the Wild Things Are and Roald Dahl’s James and the Giant Peach? Or the Japanese folktale about Momotaro‚ the Peach Boy who battles monstrous creatures on a distant island? Who knew that Sendak and Dahl may have plundered Japanese folklore to construct their stories about boys who set sail in search of adventure? We will never know why Dahl changed his title from James and the Giant Cherry and gave James Trotter a "great big beautiful peach" to navigate the waters‚
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3 – LEARNING AND MEMORY • Marketers understand that long-standing‚ learned connections between products and memories are a potent way to build and keep brand loyalty. • Learning is a relatively permanent change in behavior caused by experience (not always directly‚ but by observation of events that affect others). - An ongoing process - Ranges from simple association between a stimulus (product logo - Coke) to a response (“refreshing soft drink”) – to a complex series of cognitive activities
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CONSUMER BEHAVIOR 1.Consumer Orientation: A group of actions taken by a business to support its sales and service staff in considering client needs and satisfaction their major priorities. Business strategies that tend to reflect a customer orientation might include: developing a quality product appreciate by consumers; responding promptly and respectfully to consumer complaints and queries; and dealing sensitively with community issues 2.Learning: Measurable and relatively permanent change in behavior through experience
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Ladner Building Products Issues. Gordon Stephens‚ logistics analyst for Ladner Building Products (Ladner)‚ a building materials distributor‚ has to prepare for the next two weeks a report analysing the company’s logistic practices for Doug Turner‚ vice president‚ logistics and materials management. Moreover‚ the report had to present recommendations for Doug that would reduce costs‚ improve company performance‚ or accomplish both simultaneously. The main immediate issue that Gordon has to deal
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they buy‚ where they buy‚ and how they buy‚ but not so much on why they buy. This question of “why” brings us to a micro-level analysis tourism development. In this context among other things‚ the literature explains the self concept literature in consumer research which helps to explain the psychological underpinnings of travel self-congruity that involves a process of matching a tourist’s self-concept to a destination visitor image. Traditional research methods‚ which assume a piecemeal process
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Part 2 Essay "What is consumer culture?" In the late 19th‚ early 20th century a new phenomenon arose. Along with the development of industrial advances and urbanization of the emerging American culture was the growth and subsequent domination of the "consumer culture". Consumer culture is a term that goes hand and hand with the American way of life today‚ but in those days it was a new and unique experience. Along with the development of the mail order catalogue‚ advertising became a focal point
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Product Appearance and Consumer Product Evaluation: A Literature Review This section describes the roles of product appearance in the process of consumer evaluation and choice. For this aim‚ literature in the fields of product development‚ product design‚ consumer behavior‚ marketing‚ and human factors has been searched. The literature shows that the visual appearance of a product can influence consumer product evaluations and choice in several ways. Several authors considered the role of product
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and mission is captured in this acronym‚ which when bifurcated means the following: - Consumers: For they are the reason we exist. The primary focus of our efforts will be to not only understand what adds greatest value to the consumer but also change and reinvent ourselves if need be. We will translate the consumer’s needs and desires into marketable products and an ever-expanding base of loyal consumers‚ with speed and a quality of response that surpasses the competition. Membership: For
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