BSM Project
BSM Project
BSM Project
SESSION-2022-23
Signature of student
+2 2nd year commerce
CERTIFICATE
Conclusion
Refrence
DICLARATION
INTRODUCTION TO CONSUMER BEHAVIOUR
Hyper-personalisation
By understanding your customers on a deeper level, you can create a
more personalised experience for them. This could include things like
tailoring your marketing messages or product recommendations to
their specific needs and interests. Gathering data for hyper-
personalisation can be done through browser history, purchase history
and even social media activity.
What is Consumer?
A consumer is a person or a group who intends to order, or uses
purchased goods, products, or services primarily for personal, social,
family, household and similar needs, who is not directly related to
entrepreneurial or business activities. The term most commonly refers
to a person who purchases goods and services for personal use.
Consumer Rights
● Right to Safety
Means right to be protected against the marketing of goods and
services, which are hazardous to life and property. The purchased
goods and services availed of should not only meet their immediate
needs, but also fulfil long term interest
● Right to be Informed
Means right to be informed about the quality, quantity, potency,
purity, standard and price of goods so as to protect the consumer
against unfair trade practices.
● Right to Choose
Means right to be assured, wherever possible of access to variety of
goods and services at competitive price. In case of monopolies, it
means right to be assured of satisfactory quality and service at a fair
price. It also includes right to basic goods and services. This is
because unrestricted right of the minority to choose can mean a denial
for the majority of its fair share. This right can be better exercised in a
competitive market where a variety of goods are available at
competitive prices.
● Right to be Heard
Means that consumer's interests will receive due consideration at
appropriate forums. It also includes right to be represented in various
forums formed to consider the consumer's welfare
The Consumers should form non-political and non-commercial
consumer organizations which can be given representation in various
committees formed by the Government and other bodies in matters
relating to consumers.
● Right to Seek redressal
Consumer Responsibilities
Ask Yourself!
● Have you faced any problems as a consumer?
● Have you ever complained when you have had such a problem?
● Do you know that you could seek the assistance of a consumer
group to protect your interests?
Be Critically Aware
● The responsibility to be more alert and to question more – about
prices, about quantity and quality of goods bought and services used.
Be Involved
● The responsibility to be assertive – to ensure that you get a fair deal
as a consumer. Remember, if you are passive, you are likely to be
exploited.
Be Organized
● The responsibility to join hands and raise voices as consumers; to
fight in a collective and to develop the strength and influence to
promote and protect consumer interest.
Practice Sustainable Consumption
● The responsibility to be aware of the impact of your consumption
on other citizens, especially the disadvantaged or powerless groups;
and to consume based on needs – not wants.
Be Responsible to the Environment
● The responsibility to be aware and to understand the environmental
consequences of our consumption. We should recognize our
individual and social responsibility to conserve natural resources and
protect the earth for future generations.
What Is a customer?
A customer is an individual or business that purchases another
company's goods or services. Customers are important because they
drive revenues; without them, businesses cannot continue to exist. All
businesses compete with other companies to attract customers, either
by aggressively advertising their products, by lowering prices to
expand their customer bases, or by developing unique products and
experiences that customers love. Think Apple, Tesla 0r Google.
KEY TAKEAWAYS
● Customers are the individuals and businesses that purchase goods
and services from another business.
● To understand how to better meet the needs of its customers, some
businesses closely monitor their customer relationships to identify
ways to improve service and products.
Understanding Customers
Businesses often honour the adage "the customer is always right"
because happy customers are more likely to award repeat business to
companies who meet or exceed their needs. As a result, many
companies closely monitor their customer relationships to solicit
feedback on methods to improve product lines. Customers are
categorized in many ways. Most commonly, customers are classified
as external or internal.
Studying Customers
Businesses frequently study their customers' profiles to fine-tune their
marketing approaches and tailor their inventory to attract the most
customers. Customers are often grouped according to their
demographics, such as age, race, gender, ethnicity, income level, and
geographic location, which all may help businesses cultivate a
snapshot of the "ideal customer" or "customer persona." This
information helps companies deepen existing customer relationships
and reach untapped consumer populations to increase traffic.
Customer Service
Customer service, which strives to ensure positive experiences, is key
to a successful seller/customer dynamic. Loyalty in the form of
favourable online reviews, referrals, and future business can be lost or
won based on a good or bad customer service experience. In recent
years, customer service has evolved to include real-time interactions
via instant message chats, texting, and other means of
communication. The market is saturated with businesses offering the
same or similar products and services. What distinguishes one from
another is customer service, which has become the basis of
competition for most businesses. This is a key element of Sigma Six.
3.Discount customers
5.Wandering customers
Customer Characteristics
1. Informed About Your Company, Industry, & Events
Consumers share information at a rapid pace. If you have a question
about a business, you can Google it and have an answer in seconds.
From customer reviews to news coverage, press releases, and social
media, there aren't many places for your business to hide on the
internet.
This graphic shows how many review sites a customer will visit
before they make a decision to buy from your business.
6. Willing to be Self-Sufficient
Time is a fundamental customer need. Every customer wants their
problem solved as quickly as possible, without cutting corners. And,
what's better than waiting for your support team to help?
And, depending on the industry you're a part of, this process repeats
indefinitely. If your competitor's offer is clearly better than your
current one, customers won't hesitate to move away from your
business. While you may think you've earned a customer's loyalty,
remember that 51% of them will churn after one poor experience.
But now, customers have been let in on the secret and understand that
companies are actively working to win over their business through
customer service. This has raised expectations for how brands should
treat their customers. In fact, 54% of customers admitted that their
expectations for customer service are higher than they were a year
ago.
BRAND
A brand is a name, term, design, symbol or any other feature that
distinguishes one seller's good or service from those of other sellers.
Brands are used in business, marketing, and advertising for
recognition and, importantly, to create and store value as brand equity
for the object identified, to the benefit of the brand's customers, its
owners and shareholders. Brand names are sometimes distinguished
from generic or store brands.
● Product Brands
Product brands are those companies that are often defined by their
first or most popular product.
Service Brands
A service brand is just that – a brand that is defined by the service that
it provides. Some of the biggest brands to grow to prominence in the
last few years are service brands – like Uber, Lyft, and Airbnb – with
several others developing a hybrid service/product brand identity –
like Dollar Shave Club, Quip, or Blue Apron. With service at the core
of their identities, service brands need to develop and maintain a
strong positive image and customer interactions.
Personal Brands
The rise of social media didn’t invent the personal brand, but it did
make it a major part of the branding conversation. Celebrities are the
most common examples of personal brands – people like Oprah,
Martha Stewart, and Chrissy Teigen have nearly perfected the art –
but charismatic founders and leaders of companies (for example Steve
Jobs, Elon Musk, Vera Wang) can become deeply connected to and
associated with their brand even as the company expands and their
involvement changes.
Event Brands
Geographical Brands
Countries, cities, streets, and buildings such as landmarks have
distinct key qualities that can be seen as identifications of a brand, if
utilized correctly. Also known as city or destination brands, these
brands capitalize on the feelings that a city or region builds in order to
associate itself with related ideas and concepts. The “I LOVE NY” or
“Visit Denver “trademarks and brands are great examples of this.
Other Types of Brands
Global Brands: Typically epitomized by household names such as
Amazon, McDonalds, and Disney, these brands are widely marketed
and recognized world-wide.
3. Product Branding
Ever notice how ‘Kleenex’ has become a word synonymous with
‘tissues? That’s because the product has reached the pinnacle of
product branding success – the type of branding that gets consumers
to choose one product over another based on the brand alone. You’ll
often see logos or colours on specific items that jump out at you; this
is because you’ve learned to associate the two together as a result of
effective product branding.
4. Geographical Branding
If you work in the tourism industry, this type of branding is for you.
Geographical branding focuses on the unique traits of a specific area
or region as the selling point of a particular place and why you should
visit.
You’ll often see countries claiming a type of food as their own or
hyping up the unique history of the region. (Think Egyptian pyramids
or Greek Moussaka.) Also, areas of the world that are trying to
change their reputation can try their hand at geographical branding;
the city of Amsterdam, for example, did a great job of this with their
“I Amsterdam” rebrand, turning the focus away from their Red-Light
District and onto the cultural diversity of the city instead.
5. Online branding
Also referred to as “internet branding”, this type of branding refers to
how you position your company (or yourself) online. This could refer
to building a website, establishing a social media presence, publishing
a blog – anything that happens on the web under your name.
6. Offline Branding
As the name suggests, this refers to branding that happens off the
web. From doling out business cards to staging sit-down lunches with
desired clients or leads, offline branding requires a mix of good
design and outgoing spokespeople to represent your brand.
7. Co-branding
This is the moment where branding meets partnerships. Co-branding
is when 2+ company brands are connected by the same product. For
example, Uber and Spotify partnered on the “soundtrack for your
ride” campaign, providing users of both apps with a better ride-
sharing experience by allowing them to be the DJs of their trips.
8. Service Branding
This type of branding puts a strong emphasis on the customer, and on
providing your clients with impeccable services. While every brand
should do their best not to alienate their customers, service branding
takes this one step further; it focuses specifically on adding perceived
value to customer service, and uses this as their selling point.
People who interact with service brands look forward to the “extras”
they get, whether it’s an airline giving out hot chocolate chip cookies
on international flights, or a local coffee art store handing out “how-to
DIY” packets with every purchase.
9. Ingredient Branding
When you highlight the achievements of one specific ingredient
within a product, or one specific branch within a business – those
become the lure of the brand rather than the product or business as a
whole.
Think Westin’s Heavenly Bed, where emphasizing the quality of the
bed is what convinced people to choose Starwood hotels (later Westin
and Sheraton) for their vacation accommodations.
10. Activist Branding
If there’s a cause you believe in with all your heart, you may be able
to channel it into your brand strategy. Specifically, activist branding,
or “conscious branding” is a way to make a positive social impact
through your brand, so that your brand ultimately becomes
synonymous with the cause. Companies like Gillette have used this
type of branding as of late (although whether or not it worked in the
razor company’s favour is too soon to tell).
11. “No-brand” Branding
Also known as “minimalist branding,” this approach assumes that a
product alone is enough to capture consumer attention without
needing to rely on any bells or whistles.
In line with this philosophy, Brandless, a company that seeks to make
quality food affordable, emphasizes their lack of brand as a way to
show customers that they don’t have to pay a penny more than
necessary for “branded” food. Instead, consumers have direct access
to healthy, affordable food – of which the quality speaks for itself.
CONCLUSION
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DICLARATION
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