毕业设计营销策略分析外文文献德芙巧克力在中国市场的营销策略分析.doc
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1、题 目 德芙巧克力在中国市场的营销策略分析 外文文献A marketers guide to behavioral economics Apirl.2010 Ned Welch McKinsey QuarterlyMarketers have been applying behavioral economics-often unknowingly for years. A more systematic approach can unlock significant value.Long before behavioral economics had a name, marketers wer
2、e using it. “Three for the price of two” offers and extended-payment layaway plans became widespread because they workednot because marketers had run scientific studies showing that people prefer a supposedly free incentive to an equivalent price discount or that people often behave irrationally whe
3、n thinking about future consequences. Yet despite marketings inadvertent leadership in using principles of behavioral economics, few companies use them in a systematic way. In this article, we highlight four practical techniques that should be part of every marketers tool kit.1. Make a products cost
4、 less painfulIn almost every purchasing decision, consumers have the option to do nothing: they can always save their money for another day. Thats why the marketers task is not just to beat competitors but also to persuade shoppers to part with their money in the first place. According to economic p
5、rinciple, the pain of payment should be identical for every dollar we spend. In marketing practice, however, many factors influence the way consumers value a dollar and how much pain they feel upon spending it.Retailers know that allowing consumers to delay payment can dramatically increase their wi
6、llingness to buy. One reason delayed payments work is perfectly logical: the time value of money makes future payments less costly than immediate ones. But there is a second, less rational basis for this phenomenon. Payments, like all losses, are viscerally unpleasant. But emotions experienced in th
7、e presentnoware especially important. Even small delays in payment can soften the immediate sting of parting with your money and remove an important barrier to purchase.Another way to minimize the pain of payment is to understand the ways “mental accounting” affects decision making. Consumers use di
8、fferent mental accounts for money they obtain from different sources rather than treating every dollar they own equally, as economists believe they do, or should. Commonly observed mental accounts include windfall gains, pocket money, income, and savings. Windfall gains and pocket money are usually
9、the easiest for consumers to spend. Income is less easy to relinquish, and savings the most difficult of all.Technology creates new frontiers for harnessing mental accounting to benefit both consumers and marketers. A credit card marketer, for instance, could offer a Web-based or mobile-device appli
10、cation that gives consumers real-time feedback on spending against predefined budget and revenue categoriesgreen, say, for below budget, red for above budget, and so on. The budget-conscious consumer is likely to find value in such accounts (although they are not strictly rational) and to concentrat
11、e spending on a card that makes use of them. This would not only increase the issuers interchange fees and financing income but also improve the issuers view of its customers overall financial situation. Finally, of course, such an application would make a genuine contribution to these consumers des
12、ire to live within their means.2. Harness the power of a default optionThe evidence is overwhelming that presenting one option as a default increases the chance it will be chosen. Defaultswhat you get if you dont actively make a choicework partly by instilling a perception of ownership before any pu
13、rchase takes place, because the pleasure we derive from gains is less intense than the pain from equivalent losses. When were “given” something by default, it becomes more valued than it would have been otherwiseand we are more loath to part with it.Savvy marketers can harness these principles. An I
14、talian telecom company, for example, increased the acceptance rate of an offer made to customers when they called to cancel their service. Originally, a script informed them that they would receive 100 free calls if they kept their plan. The script was reworded to say, “We have already credited your
15、 account with 100 callshow could you use those?” Many customers did not want to give up free talk time they felt they already owned.Defaults work best when decision makers are too indifferent, confused, or conflicted to consider their options. That principle is particularly relevant in a world thats
16、 increasingly awash with choicesa default eliminates the need to make a decision. The default, however, must also be a good choice for most people. Attempting to mislead customers will ultimately backfire by breeding distrust.3. Dont overwhelm consumers with choiceWhen a default option isnt possible
17、, marketers must be wary of generating “choice overload,” which makes consumers less likely to purchase. In a classic field experiment, some grocery store shoppers were offered the chance to taste a selection of 24 jams, while others were offered only 6. The greater variety drew more shoppers to sam
18、ple the jams, but few made a purchase. By contrast, although fewer consumers stopped to taste the 6 jams on offer, sales from this group were more than five times higher. Large in-store assortments work against marketers in at least two ways. First, these choices make consumers work harder to find t
19、heir preferred option, a potential barrier to purchase. Second, large assortments increase the likelihood that each choice will become imbued with a “negative halo”a heightened awareness that every option requires you to forgo desirable features available in some other product. Reducing the number o
20、f options makes people likelier not only to reach a decision but also to feel more satisfied with their choice.4. Position your preferred option carefullyEconomists assume that everything has a price: your willingness to pay may be higher than mine, but each of us has a maximum price wed be willing
21、to pay. How marketers position a product, though, can change the equation. Consider the experience of the jewelry store owner whose consignment of turquoise jewelry wasnt selling. Displaying it more prominently didnt achieve anything, nor did increased efforts by her sales staff. Exasperated, she ga
22、ve her sales manager instructions to mark the lot down “x” and departed on a buying trip. On her return, she found that the manager misread the note and had mistakenly doubled the price of the itemsand sold the lot.2 In this case, shoppers almost certainly didnt base their purchases on an absolute m
23、aximum price. Instead, they made inferences from the price about the jewelrys quality, which generated a context-specific willingness to pay.The power of this kind of relative positioning explains why marketers sometimes benefit from offering a few clearly inferior options. Even if they dont sell, t
24、hey may increase sales of slightly better products the store really wants to move. Similarly, many restaurants find that the second-most-expensive bottle of wine is very popularand so is the second-cheapest. Customers who buy the former feel they are getting something special but not going over the
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