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Encourages you to buy or use a product or service because everyone else is. |
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Uses strong emotional language that connects you with your fears or desires. |
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Glittering Generalities Effect |
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Relates the product or services to words or images that promise everything, but deliver little or nothing. |
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Relates a product or services to the experience of ordinary people. |
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Use of celebrities or experts to speak for a product. |
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Uses statistic and data to persuade consumers to buy a product or services. |
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A decision by consumers to stop buying a product or service as a way to bring about change. |
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Processes used by manufacturers and service providers to place their good or service in the public consciousness. |
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Defend status quo, they are tradionalists and conservative 30% of consumers. |
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Young people, wannabes, 15% of North American market, will do anything to fit it. |
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Welfare recipients, people on fixed incomes, minimum wage earners, senior citizens on pension, ignored by advertisers, 15% of of North American market. |
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Materialists who want the best of everything, about 20% of North American polpulation, feel at home with high priced, exclusive brands. |
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Socially Conscious Achievers |
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Care more about inner peace, environment, safety than financial success, about 20% of North American population. |
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Aims to uphold competition among the products be ensuring fair business practices. |
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Consumer behaviour can affect the quality of life for individuals and groups in Canada. |
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The Canadian goverment cannot ban products. Banning products goes against the consumers as stated in the Charter of Rights and Freedoms. |
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Governments can encourage consumer spending by giving tax breaks. |
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The more people buy, the better it is for the economy and the environment. |
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Advertisers may use false advertising and misleading information about the product or services as a way of influencing consumers. |
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Boycotts are relatively new away of taking action against issues of concern. |
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The prosperity of people affects how much they spend as consumers. |
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Laws in Canada and the U. S. state that producers must include as list of ingredients on the food and cosmetic products they produce. |
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Canada has legislation limiting the amount of toxins that industries can release into the atmosphere, but the U. S. does not. |
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Consumerism does not play an important role in mixed economy. |
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