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Test your basic knowledge |
Consumer Behavior
Start Test
Study First
Subject
:
business-skills
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
If you are not ready to take this test, you can
study here
.
Match each statement with the correct term.
Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.
This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. Marketing messages and promotional materials that appear to come from independent parties - although they are sent by marketers
Theory-of-Reasoned-Action (TRA) Model
Neo-Pavlovian Conditioning
Intention-to-Buy Scales
Covert - Masked or Stealth Marketing
2. The number of consumers exposed to a message and how they react
Geodemographic Clusters
Exposure Effects
Instrumental (operant) Conditioning
Addressable Advertising
3. Addressable communications that are significantly more response measured than traditional broadcast measures
Family Branding
Consumer Involvement
Advertising Resonance
Narrowcast Messages
4. Focused on the degree of personal relevance that the product or purchase holds for the consumer
Exploitive Targeting
Consumer Involvement
Buzz Agents
Socioeconomic Status Score
5. Individuals born between 1946 and 1964 (approx. 40% of the adult population)
Cognitive Associative Learning
Attitude-Toward-Behavior Model
Generation Y
Baby Boomers
6. A component of the functional approach to attitude-change that suggests that consumers want to protect their self-concepts from inner feelings of doubt
Ego-Defensive Function
Socialization of Family Members
Knowledge Function
Peripheral Route to Persuasion
7. Used to assess the likelihood of a consumer purchasing a product or behaving in a certain way
Broadcast Model
Consumer Generated Media
Intention-to-Buy Scales
Narrowcast Messages
8. The point at which an individual can become satiated with numerous exposures and both attention and retention decline
Advertising Wearout
Hemispheric Lateralizatio
Narrowcast Messages
Attitude-Toward-the-Ad Models
9. The process - started in childhood - by which an individual learns the skills and attitudes relevant to consumer purchase behavior
Consumer Socialization
Value-Expressive Function
Addressable Advertising
Consumer Ethics
10. Theories based on the premise that learning takes place as the result of observable responses to external stimuli
Viral Marketing
Local Strategy
Rehearsal
Behavioral Learning
11. The placement of ads in the specific media read - viewed - or heard by each targeted audience - based on consumer profile
Media Strategy
Unaided Recall
Index of Status Characteristics
Branded Entertainment
12. Researchers who participate in the environment that they are studying without notifying those who are being observed
Cognitive Ages
Theory-of-Reasoned-Action (TRA) Model
Foot-In-The-Door Technique
Participant Observers
13. A behavioral theory of learning based on a trial-and-error process - with habits formed as the result of positive experiences resulting from specific behaviors
Peripheral Route to Persuasion
Attitude-Toward-Behavior Model
Instrumental (operant) Conditioning
Single-Variable Indexes
14. Customizing both product and communications programs by area or country when conducting business on a global basis
Medium
Modeling (observational/vicarious learning)
Local Strategy
Attitudinal Measures
15. The sum total of learned beliefs - values and customs that serve to direct the consumer behavior of members of a particular society
Self-Perception Theory
Internal Attributions
Attribution Theory
Culture
16. A method for systematically analyzing the content of verbal and/or pictorial communication. the method is frequently used to determine prevailing social values of a society in a particular era under study
Content Analysis
Cognitive Associative Learning
Exploitive Targeting
Attributions Toward Things
17. A model that proposes that a consumer's attitude toward a specific behavior is a function of how strongly he or she believes that the action will lead to a specific outcome
Self-Perception Theory
Door-In-The-Face Technique
Addressable Advertising
Attitude-Toward-Behavior Model
18. A theory concerned with how people assign causality to events - and form or alter their attitudes after assessing their own or other people's behaviors
Generation X
Exploitive Targeting
Attribution Theory
Tricomponent Attitude Model
19. An attitude-change theory that classifies attitudes in terms of four functions: utilitarian - ego-defensive - value-expressive - and knowledge functions
Cognitive Learning
Internal Attributions
Social Class
Functional Approach
20. Designing - packageing - pricing - advertising - and distributing products in such a way that negative consequences to consumers - employees - and society in general are avoided
Traditional Family Life Cycle
Marketing Ethics
Mixed Strategies
Socialization Agent
21. Mostly refers to advertising by premier online merchants who analyze the purchase behaviors of their users and utilize this data to make customized recommendations to individual users about future offerings.
Family Branding
Addressable Advertising
Traditional Family Life Cycle
Licensing
22. Allowing a well-known brand name to be affixed to products of another manufacturer
Socialization Agent
Chunking
Aided Recall
Licensing
23. Making the same response to a slightly different stimuli
Classical Conditioning
Single-Variable Indexes
Attitude-Toward-Behavior Model
Stimulus Generalization
24. Selected fact-based demographic or socioeconomic variables (such as occupation - income - education level) that are used to classify individuals in terms of social class
Attitude-Toward-the-Ad Models
Objective Measures
Market Maven
Attitude-Toward-Object Model
25. The premise that observable responses to specific external stimuli signal that learning has taken place
Order Effects
Functional Approach
Stimulus-Response Learning
Cross-Cultural Consumer Analysis
26. A promotional theory that proposes that highly involved consumers are best reached through ads that focus on the specific attributes of the product
Social Class
Central Route to Persuasion
Functional Approach
Medium
27. A way to track bodily responses to stimuli - in an effort to see which products generate the most positive response
Value-Expressive Function
Physiological Measures
Peripheral Route to Persuasion
Attribution Theory
28. A theory of attitude change that suggests individuals form attitudes that are consistent with their own prior behavior
Ego-Defensive Function
Foot-In-The-Door Technique
Stimulus Generalization
Viral Marketing
29. Advertising designed to promote a favorable company image rather than specific products
Attributions Toward Things
Instrumental (operant) Conditioning
Institutional Advertising
Theory of Trying to Consume
30. A series of personal evaluations an individual uses to put himself or herself into a social class
Buzz Agents
Subjective Measures
Attribution Theory
External Attributions
31. Unethical marketing directed to groups that are especially vulnerable to undue influence by advertising - such as children and persons of lesser education
Socialization Agent
Licensing
Theory of Planned Behavior
Exploitive Targeting
32. The division of members of a society into a hierarchy of distinct status classes - so that members of each class have either higher or lower status than members of other classes
Stimulus Discrimination
Social Class
Exploitive Targeting
Cognitive Learning
33. Psychographic/demographic descriptions of the audience of a specific medium
Source Credibility
Exposure Effects
Physiological Measures
Audience Profile
34. An orientation for assessing whether to use a global versus local marketing strategy concentration on high-tech to high-touch continuum
Product Standardization
Sleeper Effect
Composite-Variable Indexes
Core Values
35. Observational research by anthropologists of the behaviors of a small sample of people from a particular society
Consumer Fieldwork
Encoding
Self-Perception Theory
Narrowcast Messages
36. Recasts the theory-of-reasoned-action model by replacing actual behavior with trying to behave as the variable to be explained and/or predicted
Source Credibility
Medium
Tricomponent Attitude Model
Theory of Trying to Consume
37. Learning theory in which the basic premise is that the righta dn left hemispheres of the brain "specialize" in the kinds of information that they process
Hemispheric Lateralizatio
Theory of Trying to Consume
Door-In-The-Face Technique
Differential Decay
38. Caused by confusion with competing ads - and make informational retrieval difficult
Viral Marketing
Advertising Wearout
Interference Effects
Licensing
39. The consumer is asked whether he or she has read a particular magazine/seen a particular TV show and can recall any of the ads seen in them
Consumer Ethics
Sleeper Effect
Chunking
Unaided Recall
40. Wordplay - often used to create a double meaning - used in combination with a relevant picture
Consumer Involvement
Advertising Resonance
Multiattribute Attitude Models
Class Consciousness
41. Consumers who agree to promote products by bringing them to family gatherings - suggesting to store owners that they stock the items - reading certain books in public - and finding other ways to create "buzz" about a product
Advertising Resonance
Attitude-Toward-Object Model
Chunking
Buzz Agents
42. A feeling of social-group membership that reflects an individual's sense of belonging or identification with others
Class Consciousness
Determined Detractors
Elaboration Likelihood Model (ELM)
Consumer Generated Media
43. An individual's perceived age (usually 10 to 15 years younger than his chronological age)
Cognitive Ages
Knowledge Function
Composite-Variable Indexes
Persuasion Effects
44. The consumer is shown an ad and asked whether he or she remembers seeing it and recalls any of its salient points
Hemispheric Lateralizatio
Social Status
Single-Variable Indexes
Aided Recall
45. A cognitive theory of human learning patterned after a computer information processing that focuses on how information is stored in human memory and how it is retrieved
Information Processing
Neo-Pavlovian Conditioning
Determined Detractors
Field Observation
46. The approximately 71 million Americans who were born between the years of 1977 and 1994 (the children of the baby boomers)
Door-In-The-Face Technique
Generation Y
Subjective Measures
Advertising Wearout
47. Persistent critics of marketers who initiate bad publicity online
Determined Detractors
Geodemographic Clusters
Knowledge Function
Attitude-Toward-the-Ad Models
48. The creation of a strong association between conditional stimulus and the unconditional stimulu requiring (1) forward conditioning; (2) repeated pairings of the CS and US; (3) a CS and US that logically belong together; (4) a CS that is novel and unf
Neo-Pavlovian Conditioning
Attribution Theory
Functional Approach
Peripheral Route to Persuasion
49. Advertising technique in which all the viewers of a given TV show or readers of a magazine receiver the same advertising content
Theory of Planned Behavior
Source Credibility
Broadcast Model
Functional Approach
50. Priorities and codes of conduct that both affects and reflects the character of American society
Differential Decay
Core Values
Attribution Theory
Utilitarian Function