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Wednesday, 6 July 2011

External Influences - Social Environment and Social Class


Social Environment

Reference groups have an influence on purchasing behavior, but the level of influence will depend on where the product will be consumed—in public or in private—and whether the product is a want or a need.

GROUP INFLUENCE ON PRODUCT AND BRAND SELECTION

Need
Want
Public
Example: fast food lunch
A product used in public that you need
weak group influence for product selection, strong group influence for brand selection
Example: yacht
A product used in public that you want
strong group influence for product selection, strong group influence for brand selection
Private
Example: bed sheets
A product used in private that you need
weak group influence for product selection, weak group influence for brand selection
Example: hot tub
A product used in private that you want
strong group influence for product selection, weak group influence for brand selection

Social Class

Populations can be subdivided into groups who members share similar hobbies, opinions, and activities. Americans have two lifestyles—the one they are in and the one they strive to be in, which is usually better than their current situation. It is important for a marketer to understand the subdivisions of society in order to better choose target markets for their products and services.

PROFILE OF THE AMERICAN CLASS STRUCTURE
CLASS
% Pop
INCOME
EDUCATION LEVEL
OCCUPATION
DESCRIPTION
Upper-Upper
.3%
$5 million and up
Graduate Degree
CEO, Executives, Senator
Inherited wealth, aristocratic, fund charities, “old money”, participate in politics
Upper
1.2
$2 million
Graduate Degree
Executive, professional
Entrepreneurs, Sports Stars, Entertainers
Lower-Upper
12.5
$250,000
Graduate Degree, medical degree
Executive, Professional, Doctor
Education is important, involved in arts
Middle Class
32
$100,000
College Degree
Office workers, managers
Insecure due to economic fluctuations, live in the suburbs
Working Class
38
$50,000
High school
Teacher, plumber,
Skilled workers, may be in danger of falling into a lower class
Lower
9
$20,000
Some High School
Janitor, farmer
Poorly educated, low income, work as laborers
Lower-Lower
7
$9,000 and under
Grade School
Minimum wage or unemployed
Unskilled, may be unemployed for long periods of time, receive government support

by Mkt Teachers

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