The Rule of Persuasion in the Marketing Process - Juniper ...www.researchgate.net › publication › fulltext › The-Rule-

0 downloads 0 Views 478KB Size Report
The Rule of Persuasion in the Marketing Process - Juniper ... › publication › fulltext › The-Rule-... › publication › fulltext › The-Rule-...Sep 27, 2018 — balance. The economic crisis and the dynamics of the web have ... which however tends to distinguis
Research Article

Psychol Behav Sci Int J

Volume 9 Issue 5 - September 2018 DOI: 10.19080/PBSIJ.2018.09.555775

Copyright © All rights are reserved by Francesco Greco

The Rule of Persuasion in the Marketing Process

Francesco Greco* University of Niccolò Cusano, Italy Submission: June 01, 2018; Published: September 27, 2018

*Corresponding author: Francesco Greco, University of Niccolò Cusano, Italy, Email: Abstract The main goal of the article is to bring forward the idea of abandon definitively the concept that all purchases are rational, with reference to some objective norm or to some universal law. Sometimes the wishes and choices of purchase of persons are predictable, sometimes are not. If the field of consumption was dominated by the laws of rationality, we would not need to have recourse to the cognitive analysis or the paradox. The people, either as individual consumers, that as corporate decision makers, express, in their behavior, the entire human nature, in which replaces, often, a slope of irrationality. Transferring these concepts in marketing, it can be argued that if it is possible to understand what causes voltage to a subject, you will be able to identify potential levers of purchasing, as this voltage is produced by stimuli that can be addressed in the search for a product or a service. Keywords: Advertising communication; Change cognitive behavioral; Theory of reasoned action; Principle of coherence; Cognitive dissonance theory of cognitive response; Competitive strategies on brand; Paradox of Allais and the theory of the Prospect by Tversky and Kahneman

Introduction

The study of consumers is a challenge that always affects the marketing. Identify and satisfy his desires, understand how he perceives and considers the messages of the company is of vital importance for businesses [1]. To understand the consumer, it is necessary to analyses the reality that surrounds them and understand how they relate to it. In recent years we have witnessed profound changes that have affected society and its natural balance. The economic crisis and the dynamics of the web have distorted the values of society and consequently the marketing is trying to redefine the boundaries of their own discipline to respond in a consistent and effective manner to new scenarios. The successful policies of the past must be rebuilding in today’s reality and operating manuals of marketing must therefore adapt to the new market dynamics [2]. Every day we are surrounded by symbols, images and messages of which only a very small minority able to go beyond our perceptual barriers and arouse our interest. This surplus of culture, joined to the fragmentation of the experience and of the very sense of self, understood as the membership of an individual to more social spheres and meaning (relegated not to a single style of life or to a single identity) reveals one of the most relevant concepts that distinguish the company today: the problem of identity building due to fragmentation of the individual. The (Morace, 2004). (Bauman, 2007)

marketing must then take note of these phenomena and offer individuals/consumers, what can help them to express their own identity.

Morace says that “the identity of each one and its relative expression, you play and then through a delicate balance between membership of a collective heritage (the community culture of origin, the family group) and expression of an individual character which however tends to distinguish personal.1 “. Consumers today are looking for in products the affirmation of identity2 and at the same time, the brand, through their positioning seek to define their own identity, as a set of specific values to offer to consumers [3]. In a communicative context articulated and complex, characterized by a media crowding becomes increasingly difficult to persuade. The large amount of information that comes to our senses requires an inevitable selection. One of the main requirements of the communicators and experts of marketing is, in fact, be able to attract the attention and to arouse interest of a public that is increasingly aware. The attention of the public is not an unlimited resource. It is simply not enough to put on the stage a product or a message because this is perceived [4]. Our way of processing the information, in fact, responds to the principle of maximum energy savings3. Generally, the information

1 2

3

(According to the principle of the economic viability of the attention cited from Davenport and Beck,2001)

Psychol Behav Sci Int J 9(5): PBSIJ.MS.ID.555775 (2018)

001

Psychology and Behavioral Science International Journal more easily perceived are those adapted- if those who agree with our stereotypes, those that coincide with a scheme already consolidated in our memory. This selective mechanism is only as strong as lower is the degree of involvement in the selection or in the evaluation of a specific message. To make it even more complex the work of communicators is the awareness that the message received is not always properly understood and interpreted. Various studies ha