Nation Branding and Place Marketing - Psychology and Demographics of Consumer
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Nation Branding and Place Marketing - VIII. The Psychology and
Demographics of the Consumer
By Sam Vaknin
Author of "Malignant Self Love - Narcissism Revisited"
The country's "customers" are its investors, tourists, traders,
market intermediaries, NGOs, and office-holders in other countries
and in multilateral institutions. Understanding their psychology and
demographics is crucial. Their interactions with one another take
place in a complex environment, affected by governments, social
forces, cultural factors, and markets.
The country must clearly identify its clientele: who are they, what
motivates them, what do they do and buy (and how, where and when),
what are their decision-making processes and priorities, who
influences these and how. It is important to remember that people
and institutions buy goods and services to satisfy needs. Nation
branding is tantamount to casting the country as the superior if not
exclusive answer to those needs it can cater to or even create.
The country's brand manager would do well to analyze the purchasing
process: how, when, and where transactions are concluded.
Understanding consumption and investment habits and patterns allows
for better targeting and education of relevant market segments in
order to influence and alter the behavior of target customers.
The brand manager must distinguish consumer customers from business
customers and from institutional customers.
Consumer customers purchase goods and services from the country for
their own consumption. Tourists are consumer customers.
Business customers buy goods and services from the country on behalf
of third parties. Tour operators are business customers.
Institutional customers assemble information about the country and
analyze it in order to make or to influence political and credit
decisions. Banks, governments, NGOs, and lenders evaluate and
finance tourism projects based on such data.
Business customers operate on a large scale and are, therefore, less
numerous and less dispersed than consumer customers. Consequently,
it is easier to foster long-term and close relationships with them.
But, being dependent as they are on end-users, theirs is a volatile,
demand-driven market. Moreover, business customers are tough
negotiators (though some of them seek quality rather than price
advantage).
To attract these movers and shakers, the country's brand manager
must constantly monitor the global economy as well as the economies
of the nation's main partners. Everything, from monetary policy to
regulatory and fiscal developments affect purchasing and investment
decisions.
The Encyclopedia Britannica 2005 Edition mentions some additional
considerations:
"... Organizational factors, which include the objectives, policies,
procedures, structures, and systems that characterize any particular
company... Interpersonal factors are more salient among business
customers, because the participants in the buying process-perhaps
representing several departments within a company-often have
different interests, authority, and persuasiveness. Furthermore, the
factors that affect an individual in the business buying process are
related to the participant's role in the organization. These factors
include job position, risk attitudes, and income."
Consumer customers are the hardest to predict and "manipulate"
because they are influenced not merely by hard-nosed intelligence -
but also by rumors, age, education, stage in one's life-cycle,
occupation, lifestyle, self-conception, past experiences, pecuniary
circumstances, personal predilections and prejudices, as well as by
a variety of cultural and social factors such as one's values,
perceptions, preferences, one's status, reference groups, family,
and role models. Thus, the customer's idiosyncratic background
largely determines the economic outcome.
It is here that branding has an often decisive role. The more
costly, infrequent, and risky the purchase, the higher the
consumer's emotional involvement in the buying task. The more
differentiated the country's brand, the less the anxiety provoked by
the need to commit resources irrevocably.
The influence of branding on the buying process is the topic of our
next article.
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AUTHOR BIO (must be included with the article)
Sam Vaknin ( samvak.tripod.com ) is the author of Malignant
Self Love - Narcissism Revisited and After the Rain - How the West
Lost the East. He served as a columnist for Global Politician,
Central Europe Review, PopMatters, Bellaonline, and eBookWeb, a
United Press International (UPI) Senior Business Correspondent, and
the editor of mental health and Central East Europe categories in
The Open Directory and Suite101.
Until recently, he served as the Economic Advisor to the Government
of Macedonia.
Visit Sam's Web site at samvak.tripod.com
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