Buying Behaviour Of Consumers

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BUYING BEHAVIOUR OF CONSUMERS

Buying Behaviour of Consumers in Designer Clothing



Buying Behaviour of Consumers in Designer Clothing

Introduction

The study of consumers and brand perception about designer clothing was originated within economics, but since the 1960s it has become a discipline in its own right, drawing on theories and methods from psychology, sociology and anthropology as well as semiotics and literary theory. The majority of studies of consumer brand perception have addressed it at the individual level, often using experimental methods to explore cognition. More recent approaches have moved to the socio cultural level and drawn on contemporary social theory. In parallel with this development, there has been a shift away from positivist assumptions about reality towards interpretive approaches based on the idea of the social construction of reality (Alhakmi, 2008, 1096).

The focus of most early work was in the decision process, operational zed as a choice between competing brands. There is now general agreement on a sequential-stage model of information-processing that starts with problem recognition, followed by information search, evaluation of alternatives and finally product choice. This model of a rational consumer seeking a solution to a problem has been mirrored in much advertising that seeks to stimulate recognition of a problem and to demonstrate its solution by a specific designer brand (Grover, 2007, 90-99). Each stage in the process has been studied in great detail and it has become clear that it is rare for a consumer to act fully rationally, particularly in searching for information and processing it to reach an optimal choice. A key variable is the degree of involvement that the consumer has with the product category. This predicts a range of brand perception from low-involvement habitual decisions at one extreme to high-involvement extensive problem-solving at the other. Involvement is a complex concept that attempts to combine brand perceptions of risk with the importance of the product to the individual consumer. Often the most highly involving products are those with symbolic meaning for the individual's sense of self. At low levels of involvement, consumers are likely to engage in very limited information search and to use simple decision heuristics such as selecting a designer wear whose name they recall, or buying-the-brand-last-bought. Levels of involvement have also been found to predict the amount of attention and processing that consumers will give to advertisements. In low-involvement categories, frequent repetition is required to increase levels of brand awareness, and it is brand awareness that has been found empirically to be the best predictor of purchaser brand perception in these product categories realities (Alhakmi, 2008, 1096).

For products in the mirage of involvement, the evaluation process has been modelled using multi-attribute attitude theory, which predicts consumer designer wear perception based on an evaluation of a limited number of salient beliefs about a product's attributes and the relative importance of these attributes to the consumer. The theory of reasoned action includes an assessment of social influence on brand perception. This model has been supported by a meta-analysis of several hundred studies to predict consumer ...
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