Sales Management: Products and Services. Dr Jae K Shim
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Название: Sales Management: Products and Services

Автор: Dr Jae K Shim

Издательство: Ingram

Жанр: Маркетинг, PR, реклама

Серия:

isbn: 9781908287465

isbn:

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      3.False. As with any job, selling has some disadvantages such as the discouragement of making many calls with no results, long-distance travel away from home, insecurity of earnings, and the need for persistence and personal discipline.

      4.True. There has been a tremendous increase in the number of salespeople in our economy and in the kind of work they do. The sales job varies from over-the-counter retail sales to highly complex industrial sales. Each job requires different educational and skill requirements.

       CHAPTER 4

       Motivation and Consumer Behavior

      Motivation is characteristic of all human beings to have needs and wants, which when unsatisfied lead to tensions or drives. These drives toward relief of the tensions created by unsatisfied needs furnish the motivation - the activation forces - that determine and explain consumer behavior.

      To be effective in her work, the salesperson must be able to analyze and understand consumer behavior and the motives that underlie it. What influences a particular customer to buy a particular good or service? If the salesperson understands these motivating influences, she will be in a stronger position to sell. Strictly speaking, the salesperson does not sell a product or service, but rather she changes the consumer’s mind about the product or service. The product and salesperson remain the same, and it is the buyer’s mind that must be changed. People buy products for what they will do for them, not for the product in and of itself. It is necessary, then, to study the behavior of consumers and to determine why they buy.

      A great deal has been written about consumer behavior in the past, and this vast subject can only be touched upon lightly in this brief chapter. There are also varying theories and philosophies regarding consumer behavior and researchers in this area are not in agreement.

      The first thing to recognize about consumer behavior is that no two individuals are exactly the same. People tend to have differing degrees of traits such as optimism, confidence, aggressiveness, conservatism, and so on. Not only do people differ from one another, but also the same person can be different under different circumstances. Changes in the weather, changes in time, and many other physical conditions can attract or distract a person’s attention. How a person feels will influence her behavior. Whether she is happy or unhappy, alert or sleepy, relaxed or tense will greatly affect what she perceives and does. Her use of alcohol, drugs, or medicine can produce changes in her behavior. And such incentives as praise, recognition, and reward usually will elicit a greater degree of response. Under varying conditions such as these, the salesperson should carefully analyze the total selling situation to determine the best approach to use.

      Although the terminology varies and there is no general agreement on how many basic motives there are, authors in this area generally see the consumer responding to three basic types of motives. The first of these classifications is physiological. These motives are related to the physical needs of the body and include those arising out of sex, hunger, thirst, and the desire for comfort. The second is psychological, motives are largely subjective and include such motives as pride and fear. And the third is sociological. These motives are related to a person’s social status, including motives arising from the urges or needs for conformity, recognition, and prestige.

      Some authors have pointed out that motives can be arranged as a hierarchy, with those needs the consumer regards as most important, and will try to satisfy first, at the top and the others that can wait listed in turn below. The psychologist Abraham Maslow saw five levels of needs, which he listed in ascending order as follows:

      1.Physiological needs.

      2.Need for safety.

      3.Need to belong, to love and be loved.

      4.Desire for esteem and status.

      5.Need for “self-actualization.”

      Maslow interpreted the need for self-actualization as a desire to find and fulfill the true self to the highest degree possible. He realized that this need came later in the hierarchy of needs after the others had been met.

      Motives can also be classified as primary, selective, or patronage. A primary motive is related to those particular factors which motivate a person to choose one general type of product or service over another. For example, a person may simultaneously wish to purchase a new shotgun and storm windows. However, she usually doesn’t have a sufficient amount of money to purchase both; consequently she must choose one over the other. In the case of the family person, although she wants to buy a new shotgun, she may decide that it is more important and sensible to buy storm windows for her home. Such considerations as the comfort of other family members, reduced heating bills, and increased value of her home may cause her to choose the storm windows over the shotgun and are referred to a primary buying motives. They relate to the type, kind, or class of product or service that will be purchased. Selective motives, on the other hand, are those that determine the consumer’s choice of a brand. Once she has decided to purchase storm windows, she must next decide on the particular brand. Finally, patronage motives come into play. They involve decisions regarding the particular retailer or dealer from whom the product or service will be purchased.

      Consumer choice can also be influenced by the physical qualities or psychological attractiveness of the product. Such factors as design, color, size, quality, package, or price of the product can greatly influence or motivate the purchaser. For example, in designing packages, curved lines and fancy packages are generally thought to appeal to women, while straight lines and more functional packaging is considered more appropriate for products sold to men. With reference to color, red will normally attract more attention than green. And in promoting the cool taste of a cigarette, green and blue colors are frequently used.

      The size of the container can also be an important motivating factor. Many shoppers select a larger size container because they can usually get more for their money by buying in larger quantities and it reduces the numbers of shopping trips. In addition, with our higher standard of living there is an increased emphasis on quality, but at the same time the product must be competitively priced. All of these factors can influence the purchase of a product, and they vary from one person to another. Product motives may also be thought of as economic or rational, as in the considerations of package size and price discussed in the preceding paragraph, or they may be classified as emotional. These classifications will be treated further later in the chapter.

      The type of product being sought also influences consumer behavior. For example, such products as cigarettes, bread, meat, fruits and vegetables, gasoline, and toothpaste are classified as convenience goods. These products are frequently consumed on a daily or weekly basis, are available in many stores which are located near the consumer, are competitively priced, and are generally intensively advertised - particularly national brands.

      Shopping goods, on the other hand, are such items as dresses, sport jackets, appliances, furniture, and automobiles. These products (in comparison with convenience goods) are consumed less frequently, are available in fewer outlets which are generally located further away from the consumer, and have greater variances in quality and price. The unit СКАЧАТЬ