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Projective Techniques in Consumer Research×Means-End Chain Laddering×
DziedzinaMarketingMarketing
RodzinaProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Rok powstania20031982
TwórcaAdapted to consumer research from clinical psychology (projective hypothesis); popularized in motivation researchJonathan Gutman (means-end model); Thomas Reynolds & Jonathan Gutman (laddering method)
TypIndirect qualitative elicitation pipeline for non-conscious associationsDepth-interview pipeline linking attributes to consequences to values
Źródło pierwotneZaltman, G. (2003). How Customers Think: Essential Insights into the Mind of the Market. Boston, MA: Harvard Business School Press. ISBN: 9781578518265Gutman, J. (1982). A Means-End Chain Model Based on Consumer Categorization Processes. Journal of Marketing, 46(2), 60-72. DOI ↗
Inne nazwyProjective Methods, Indirect Qualitative Techniques, Word Association and Completion Tasks, Enabling TechniquesLaddering, Means-End Chain Analysis, Attribute-Consequence-Value Analysis, Hierarchical Value Mapping
Pokrewne33
PodsumowanieProjective techniques are indirect qualitative methods that elicit consumers' private, often non-conscious thoughts and feelings by having them respond to ambiguous or third-person stimuli rather than answering direct questions. The underlying projective hypothesis, borrowed from clinical psychology, is that when a task has no obvious right answer, people fill the gap by projecting their own attitudes, motives, and feelings onto it. In marketing this takes forms such as word association, sentence and story completion, third-person and balloon tasks, collage building, personification, and thematic-apperception-style picture interpretation. Because respondents are ostensibly describing a stimulus, a typical buyer, or a character rather than themselves, the techniques bypass the self-presentation and rationalization that distort direct questioning. Gerald Zaltman's account of how customers think, emphasizing that much consumer cognition is non-conscious and metaphorical, explains why such indirect, enabling techniques can surface meanings that surveys miss. The analyst then interprets the projected content for recurring themes that reveal the brand's or category's emotional and symbolic associations.Means-end chain analysis explains consumer choice by linking the concrete attributes of a product to the consequences of using it and ultimately to the personal values those consequences serve. Jonathan Gutman's 1982 model proposed that consumers categorize products by the desirable consequences they deliver, and that these consequences are valued because they help attain higher-order life values, so a chain runs attribute to consequence to value. Laddering, formalized by Thomas Reynolds and Jonathan Gutman, is the interviewing technique that uncovers these chains by repeatedly asking why a feature matters until the respondent reaches the underlying values. The resulting ladders are content-coded into attributes, consequences, and values, then summarized in an implication matrix counting how often each element leads to another. Applying a cutoff to that matrix yields a hierarchical value map (HVM), a network showing the dominant attribute-consequence-value pathways for the category. The approach reveals not just what consumers want but why, providing a values-grounded foundation for positioning and advertising strategy.
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