ScholarGate
Msaidizi
Process / pipelineMarketing / qualitative consumer research

Projective Techniques in Consumer Research

Projective 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.

Fungua katika MethodMindHivi karibuniTumia, linganisha, pata mwongozo
Zana na rasilimali
Pakua slaidi
Jifunze na uchunguze
VideoHivi karibuni

Soma mbinu kamili

Kwa wanachama pekee

Ingia kwa akaunti ya bure ili kusoma sehemu hii.

Ingia

Ramani ya mbinu

Jirani ya mbinu zinazohusiana — chagua nodi ili kuchunguza.

Vyanzo

  1. Zaltman, G. (2003). How Customers Think: Essential Insights into the Mind of the Market. Boston, MA: Harvard Business School Press. ISBN: 9781578518265

Jinsi ya kunukuu ukurasa huu

ScholarGate. (2026, June 23). Projective Techniques in Consumer and Marketing Research. ScholarGate. https://scholargate.app/sw/marketing/projective-techniques

Mbinu ipi?

Weka mbinu hii kando ya jamaa zake wa karibu na uzisome bega kwa bega — maktaba huweka vitabu mezani; uamuzi ni wako.

Linganisha bega kwa bega

Imerejelewa na

ScholarGateProjective Techniques in Consumer Research (Projective Techniques in Consumer and Marketing Research). Imepatikana 2026-06-24 kutoka https://scholargate.app/sw/marketing/projective-techniques · Seti ya data: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20539026