1. People play different roles and their consumption
behavior may differ depending on the particular role they are playing. State
whether you agree or disagree with its perspective, giving examples from your
personal life.
Yes, I agree
that people play different roles and their consumption behavior may differ
depending on the role they are playing. In fact, we all are just actors who are
playing a role when we purchase something. In life, we all have many roles and
our consumption practice may be altered by our role. For example: We may be
students, teachers, brothers, sisters, mothers, fathers, team member, political
leader etc.
Not only this, a
person can play the role of information provider, from the user to the payer
and to the disposer. Each and every one of which has great impact in the
consumption and the decision process.
A mother plays the role of an influencer in a
child’s purchase process, whereas she plays the role of a disposer for the
products consumed by the family.
In social
science, this theory is popular by the name of Role theory (the perspective that much of consumer behavior
resembles actions in a play)
·
Each
consumer has lines, props and costumes that are necessary to a good
performance. Since people act out many different roles they may modify their
consumption decisions according the particular play they are in at the times.
The criteria that they use to evaluate products and services in one of their
roles may be quite different from those used in another role.
·
Another
way of thinking about consumer roles is to consider the various plays that the
consumer may engage in. One classical role here is the consumer as a chooser-
somebody who can choose between different alternatives and explores various
criteria for making this choice. But the consumer can have many other things at
stake than just making the right choice.
·
We
are all involved in a communication system through our consumption activities,
whereby we communicate our roles and statuses. We are also sometimes searching
to construct our identity through various consumption activities.
·
The
main purpose of our consumption might be exploration of a few of the many possibilities
the market has to offer us.
·
We
might feel victimized by fraudulent or harmful offerings from the marketplace
and we may decide to take action against such risks from the marketplace by
becoming active in consumer movements. Or we may react against the authority of
the producers by co-opting their products and turning them into something else
as when military boots all of a sudden became normal footwear for peaceful
women.
·
We
may decide to take action as political consumers and boycott products from
companies or countries whose behavior does not meet our ethical or
environmental standards.
·
Hence
as consumers we can be choosers, communicators, identity seekers, pleasure
seekers, victims, rebels and activist.
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