Information Search
High Effort Decision Making
Low Effort Decision Making
Post-Decision Process
Social Influence
100

This term describes the set of brands that are top of mind for a consumer when making a purchase decision.

What is the evoked set? (aka consideration set)

100

This cognitive bias occurs individuals rely too heavily on an initial piece of information when making decisions, leading to insufficient adjustments

What is anchoring (and adjustments)?

100

This type of mental shortcut leads consumers to judge probabilities based on how easily examples come to mind, for example, believing plane crashes are more common than car accidents.

What is the availability heuristic?

100

This psychological anxiety or discomfort that emerges after a decision is made between two attractive options.

What is post-purchase dissonance?

100

This influence tactic involves making a large request first, then following up with a smaller and more reasonable request.

What is the door-in-the-face technique?

200

This type of information search relies on knowledge already stored in memory.

What is an internal search?

200

This type of decision model is compensatory and relies on processing by brand. It asks you to make a decision by assigning weighted importance to options.

What is the multi-attribute model?

200

This type of fallacy occurs when you believe that a combination of events is more probably than a single, general event. 

What is the conjunction fallacy?

200

1. Generate Hypothesis

2. Exposure to evidence

3. Encoding evidence

4. Integrating evidence

What are teh four steps of hypothesis testing (aka how consumers gain knowledge)?

200

This type of influence occurs when social pressure encorages conformity.

What is normative influence?

300

When a consumer has high motivation, ability, and opportunity (aka MAO), they are able to conduct this type of search much more effectively.

What is an external search?

300

In this noncompensatroy model, a consumer sets a minimum for each attributes and rejects any brand that fails to meet it.

What is a conjunctive model?

300

The Sports Illustrative Jinx is an example of this type of fallacy?

What is the regression to the mean?

300

This occurs when there is a discrepancy between our prior experience and a product's performance.

What is disconfirmation paradigm?

300

This source of influence offers very high control, but lower relative credibility.

What is marketer-dominated source?

400

This bias causes consumers to pay more attention to information that confirms what they already believe.

What is confirmation bias?

400

Framing a product by its % of fat content is an example of this type of framing.

What is attribute framing?

400

Under low-effort conditions, consumers will often choose a good-enough result rather than the optimal result.

What is satisficing?

400

This theory explains why people are motivated by perceived fairness.

What is the equity theory?

400

This type of influence tactic happens when you get someone to agree to a small request first, then you follow it up with a larger (critical) request.

What is the foot-in-the-door technique?

500

This feature is the most prominent in a consumer's mind.

What is a salient attribute?

500

Believing that expensive wine is higher quality is an example of this kind of fallacy, when people think two variables are connected even when evidence is weak or nonexistent.

What is illusory correlation?

500

This type of cognitive bias occurs when you ignore general statistics in favor of anecdotal evidence.

What is neglecting base rates?

500

Locus of causality, controllability, stability

What are the three factors of attribution theory?

500

it may be difficult to evaluate the quality of this type of good even after consumption.

What is a credence good?