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New Focus: Transformative Consumer Research MAR 3503 April 12, 2012.

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Presentation on theme: "New Focus: Transformative Consumer Research MAR 3503 April 12, 2012."— Presentation transcript:

1 New Focus: Transformative Consumer Research MAR 3503 April 12, 2012

2 Transformative Consumer Research – Research framed by a fundamental problem or opportunity Strives to respect, uphold, and improve life in relation to the conditions, demands, potential, and effects of consumption Corporate Social Responsibility – Corporate self-regulation as part of business model Helps company take responsibility for actions and strive to make positive impact on the world What is TCR? Mick, 2006

3 Consumer problems Obesity – Soon to be the number one cause of death in the country and then the world

4 Consumer problems Smoking – 20% of the adult population in the US smokes 50 years ago, 50% of men smoked, 30% of women – 1000 new smokers every day (90% start in high school) – 60% of smokers will die due to smoking-related causes – The current number one cause of preventable death in the world

5 Consumer problems Charitable giving – 89% of households give something – $1600 is average donation per year – Accounts for 2.2% of GDP

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7 Consumer problems

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9 Nutrition – School lunch programs, prepackaged food, affordable food Medical decision making – Pharmaceutical marketing, end of life decisions Energy consumption – Dependence on foreign oil, dependence on fossil fuels Financial decision making – Credit cards, retirement, savings Poverty – Children in poverty, welfare, food stamps, homelessness Addiction – Gambling, drugs, alcohol Violence in the media – Children and video games, movies, TV shows And more… – Product safety, organ donation, sweatshops, developing markets, allocation of resources…

10 Approaches to dealing with problems Educating and informing – Let people know there is a problem and how it can be fixed Reframing the problem or the solution – Change the way we think about the problem or its solution Make good behavior seem desirable – Change onerous into enjoyable Choice architecture – Make good choices easier

11 EDUCATING AND INFORMING

12 Does calorie posting help? Yes? One study found a 6% drop in calories ordered at Starbucks after calorie posting (ends up being about 14 calories) No? One study of low-income NYC residents found a slight increase after posting, even though people believed otherwise

13 Can information help? Only r =.30 correlation between knowledge about recycling and recycling behavior Everyone is aware of the risks of smoking, yet people still start and continue to smoke

14 The best information is… Accurate Vivid Direct Immediate

15 Give people accurate information

16 “It will take 50 minutes of jogging to burn off the calories in a bottle of soda” This sign reduced the odds of a soda purchase in Baltimore corner stores by half Give people vivid information

17 Give people direct information Stores that gave out these receipts saw increases in the number of smoothies over milkshakes, increases in no mayo orders, and increase in no cheese orders over other stores without these receipts

18 Give people immediate information

19 Feedback as information

20 Feedback information Schulz et al., 2007

21 Reframing work

22 The cost of safety School buses used to occasionally catch on fire Safety features could have been added to newly built buses that would help prevent this from happening These features would cost about $1000 per bus

23 The cost of safety Some people were not in favor of adding these features Their math: 30,000 new buses per year X $1000 = an extra $30 million a year school districts would have to spend Only about 30 schoolchildren died this way per year, so each saved life cost $1 million

24 The cost of safety Fans of not burning children alive had different math Buses usually last 10 years, so the cost per year per bus is only $100 The cost per school day per bus is 56¢ The cost per pupil per day is less than half of 1¢

25 Use reframing to make things stick

26 $2 million per year spend on advertising$750 million per year spent on advertising

27 Suppose your kid watches 3 hours of TV a week, and sees a McDonald’s commercial 2x an hour: That’s 6 McD’s commercials a week How often would she see a commercial advocating fruits and veggies? Once every 14 months; she would see as many McD’s commercials in two weeks as she would see fruit and veggie commercials in 14 years Use reframing to make things stick

28 Reframing temptation Mischel & Baker, 1975

29 Reframing

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31 Green status

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33 People like you…

34 Reuse their towels

35 Make bad behavior unfun Economic disincentives

36 Use reciprocity Which is more effective? If you reuse your towel, the hotel will make a donation in your name to an environmental protection organization Please reuse your towel; the hotel has made a donation in your name to an environmental protection organization Goldstein, Griskevicius, & Cialdini 2008

37 Change the order Downs et al., 2009

38 Change the default Madrian & Shea, 2001

39 Change how things work

40 Change the rules Frieden et al., 2005

41 Change the rules Khuder et al., 2007

42 Change the rules Bartecchi et al., 2006

43 Change the Rules

44 Wansink and portion size People eat more stale popcorn out of bigger buckets They eat more soup out of self-refilling bowls They serve more ice cream with bigger scoops and eat more out of bigger bowls They eat more chips out of containers without suggested stopping points

45 Summary Many of the world’s biggest problems are consumer problems We as consumers and marketers are in a position to help solve them – We can educate and inform – We can reframe the problem or the solution – We can make good behavior desirable – We can change the choice architecture Next time: Group projects!


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