One of these so-called 'integrative models' is the FCB grid, developed at Foote, Cone & Belding (now Draftfcb) and written about by Richard Vaughn*. This model divides goods and services into four categories, along two axes: the Think/Feel axis, and the High Involvement/Low Involvement axis.

Vaughn makes interesting generalizations about how marketers should address the consumer decision process in each of these four quadrants**. But those are sort of boring, so I overlaid my vague and general idea as to what marketing approaches work, instead.

I think this framework is also somewhat helpful in thinking about the various ways to help consumers find the right product (as opposed to selling it to them.)

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* Vaugh, Richard (1980), "How Advertising Works: A Planning Model," Journal of Advertising Research, 20 (September/October), 27-30; and (1986), "How Advertising Works: A Planning Model Revisited," Journal of Advertising Research, 26 (January/February), 27-30. Sorry, no link.
** Later refined by Rossiter and Percy: Rossiter, John R., Larry Percy, and Robert J. Donovan (1991), "A Better Advertising Planning Grid," Journal of Advertising Research, 31 (October/November), 11-21. Again, no link. Academic journals suck.
I think I'm missing something - how do you differentiate Recommendation Engines from Collaborative Filtering?
ReplyDeleteRecommendation engines ask you questions and use your answers to tailor results. I'm using collaborative filtering to mean taking prior purchase behavior and use that to make recommendations.
ReplyDeleteI don't think low-involvement purchases will support the added user cost of explicitly specing what they want. OTOH, I don't think the broad data collection of a Netflix or Amazon would be precise enough to help me choose a car. With high-involvement items, it's probably just better to ask the consumer what they are looking for.
Dear Jerry,
ReplyDeleteI like your blogg which help me up understand some issues was not clear before. I would like to ask you if there is possibility to give me the reference belonging the model you insert in this page which talks about (personal selling, word of mouth...with high-low involvement)
Thanks
Saeed---
ReplyDeleteThat model is mine, and just my opinion. If you think about those marketing types, that's just where they seem to fit. You can use me for a reference, I'm probably as reliable as anyone else in marketing :)
Jerry
Dear Jerry, I would like to request permission to include your version of the Vaughn FCB matrix with the blue circles that appears in this article (The FCB Grid and its flipside, http://reactionwheel.blogspot.co.uk/2009/11/fcb-grid-and-its-flipside.html) in a forthcoming marketing handbook on communications. I am a freelance permissions consultant working on the book. Due acknowledgement of the original source will of course be clearly given – and a link to this site. Please let me know if you would allow this or if you have any queries. Many thanks, Jennie Pick.
ReplyDeleteJennie,
ReplyDeleteFeel free. I've moved the blog over to my own domain, so if you could reference http://reactionwheel.net/2009/11/fcb-grid-and-its-flipside.html instead of blogger, that would be great.
Thanks,
Jerry