Learning objectives |
Upon successful completion of the course,
students will be able to demonstrate:
- Knowledge about and understanding of theories and analytical
methods around consumer culture, psychology and behaviors
- Knowledge about and understanding of heterogeneity within a
consumer market and factors influencing the formation of consumer
cultures across markets
- Knowledge about and understanding of consumer behaviors and
their motivational drivers
- Knowledge about and understanding of relation between consumer
behaviors and marketing strategy
- Skills for designing a survey and collecting primary data by
applying selected theories
- Skills for analyzing primary and/or secondary data by defining
the role of variables that explain selected theoretical
concepts
- Skills for identifying a consumer segment and developing a
market communication and branding strategy to target it
- Competences to formulate a research question
- Competences to design an empirical study by critically
selecting and combining appropriate theories and methods to address
the selected research question
- Competences to interpret and communicate results of the
empirical study
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Course prerequisites |
Can only be taken as part of the Minor in
International Business Communication. |
Examination |
Consumer
Culture and Market Segmentation:
|
Exam
ECTS |
7,5 |
Examination form |
Home assignment - written product |
Individual or group exam |
Individual exam |
Size of written product |
Max. 10 pages |
Assignment type |
Report |
Duration |
Written product to be submitted on specified date
and time. |
Grading scale |
7-point grading scale |
Examiner(s) |
One internal examiner |
Exam period |
Summer |
Make-up exam/re-exam |
Same examination form as the ordinary exam
|
Description of the exam
procedure
|
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Course content, structure and pedagogical
approach |
Consumers increasingly expect to be addressed and met on their
own terms. This can only be achieved if businesses can handle
complex insights into culturally diverse subgroups (segments) of
consumers and their behavior across the global market place. The
identity formation and thereby value formation of modern consumers
are becoming increasingly complex due to their belongings to
various local, national and global communities accessible via
contemporary media technologies and the world-wide web. This
implies that the key challenge to develop a successful marketing
and communication strategy is to obtain a systematic understanding
of the complex consumer segments and a decision-making mechanism of
their preferences and choice of consumption behaviors.
The same applies to the policy making. For example, to overcome
a challenge like the Covid-19 crisis, but also e.g., the long-term
crisis on climate change, a socially responsible behavior is
required. However, individuals’ attitudes to a crisis may
substantially differ, and manifest itself in different behaviors.
Therefore, a modern policy maker needs to differentiate messages
suitable for respective target segments and seek to optimize their
potential effects on the citizens’ responsible behaviors.
The course reviews theoretical concepts from three aspects: 1)
market segmentation addressing heterogeneity within-market and
homogeneity across-markets; 2) consumers' psychology
addressing personal values, beliefs and norms, and their relations
with their attitudes and behavioral choices in our contemporary
society; and 3) consumers' perception and cognition of various
marketing stimuli.
The course will support students to design an empirical study by
selecting (or combining) appropriate methods relevant to an
identified research issue.
For example:
- For investigating values, norms, beliefs and attitudes held by
diverse consumer segments, the students will acquire skills for
exploring state-of-the-art international survey databases such as
the European Social Survey, but also secondary consumer data
collected in collaboration with selected industries such as
beauty-care industry and tourism industry.
- For understanding consumers' identities and values relevant
to a specific product choice as well as consumers' perception
and cognition of a specific marketing stimulus; the students will
acquire skills for designing a survey to collect primary data.
Subsequently, they will also learn how to process and analyze the
collected data
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Description of the teaching methods |
The course aims at providing students a
process-based learning experience where their own backgrounds and
experiences will contribute to their knowledge acquisition process.
In this way, the course will implement a blended learning-based
approach on top of an activity-based course design (Margaryan et
al. 2004). The course consists of a combination of lectures,
exercise lessons (group assignments and peer-reviews) and a
workshop. |
Feedback during the teaching period |
Through a group-based assignment, the course will
create an activity-based learning place and will facilitate
knowledge co-creation via activities such as
"student-to-student feedback" and teacher's feedback
for each group assignment in the class and online. |
Student workload |
Preparation (reading and watching course materials) |
55 hours |
Group work and assignments |
75 hours |
Exam (including preparation) |
46 hours |
Lectures and workshop |
30 hours |
Total |
206 hours |
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Expected literature |
Expected literature (theories):
- Kotler, Philip & Keller, Kevin Lane (2015) Marketing
Management, Global Edition, United Kingdom: Pearson Education
M.U.A.
- Craig &Douglas (2005) Beyond national culture: implications
of cultural dynamics for consumer research, International Marketing
Review, Vol23-3, 322-342
- Cleveland & Laroche (2007) Acculturation to the global
consumer culture: Scale development and research paradigm. In
Journal of Business Research Vol. 60.
- Stern, P. C., T. Dietz, T. Abel, G. A. Guagnano, and L. Kalof.
1999. “A Value-Belief-Norm Theory of Support for Social Movements:
The Case of Environmentalism.” Human Ecology Review 6 (2):
81–97.
- Stern, Paul C., Linda Kalof, Thomas Dietz, and Gregory A.
Guagnano. 1995. “Values, Beliefs, and Proenvironmental Action:
Attitude Formation Toward Emergent Attitude Objects.” Journal of
Applied Social Psychology 25 (18): 1611–36.
- Ajzen, I. (2011), The theory of planned behaviour:
Reactions and reflections. Psychol. Heal. 26, 1113–1127.
- Markus, H.R. & Kitayama, S. (2010) Cultures and Selves: A
Cycle of Mutual Constitution. In Perspectives on Psychological
Science 5(4) 420-430
- Uchida, Yukiko, Vinai Norasakkunkit, and Shinobu Kitayama.
2004. “Cultural Constructions of Happiness: Theory and Empirical
Evidence.” Journal of Happiness Studies 5: 223–39.
- Schwartz, Shalom H. (2012) An Overview of the Schwartz Theory
of Basic Human Values. Online Readings in Psychology and Culture,
International Association for Cross-Cultural Psychology.
- Inglehart, R. & Baker, W.E. (2000) Modernization, cultural
change, and the persistence of traditional values. In American
Sociological Review, Vol. 65
- Belk (2013) Extended Self in a Digital World, Journal of
Consumer Research Vol 40, 477-500
- Schmitt (2012) The consumer psychology of brands, Journal of
Consumer Psychology 22, 7-17
- Bavel et al. (2020) Using Social and Behavioral Science to
support Covid-19 pandemic response, Nature Human Behavior Vol4,
460-477
Expected materials (methods):
- European Social Survey
https://www.europeansocialsurvey.org/
- Sarstedt, M. & Mooi, M. (2014) A Concise Guide to Market
Research: The Process, Data, and Methods Using IBM SPSS
Statistics.
- Snow, J. (2018). The Complete Research Suite: A step-by-step
guide to using Qualtrics. Chapter 1 and 3. Retrieved on:
23.08.2018.
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