University of East Anglia | 2.4_How_does_brand_make_us_buy_things Earlier in the course, we heard that brands make us want to buy. And what I'm going to do now is talk a little bit about why people want to buy particular brands. If brands really want to understand consumer behaviour, they've got to understand the motivations behind that behaviour. Consumers satisfy their needs through buying brands, and brands can help us in many ways. At a basic level, they satisfy our functional needs. For example, we buy petrol to get a car to take us from A to B. We buy a drink to satisfy a thirst. In doing so, brands can compete successfully, but to be really successful they need to satisfy our higher order needs. These typically called our psychosocial needs. Things like love, belonging, affiliation, maybe even achievement. And let's look at some examples of brands that satisfy those psychosocial needs. If we take Nike, that, famously, is associated with winners. It's strap line is, Just Do It. It's all about achievement. T-Mobile, their brand is all about belonging and all about affiliation, connecting people. And their strap line is, Life is For Sharing. So we can see that brands push themselves to satisfy those psychosocial needs, and brands that do that successfully, they're the ones who are going to win our custom. Let's take another example, something like these ties. If we look at these ties, there are four ties here, and in looking at them you might say they're all made of silk, and you'd be right. We can look at these four ties and say, well, they might have been bought from a high street retailer and they might have cost about 10 pounds each. You'd be partly right. Two of them were bought from a high street retailer and cost 10 pounds, but two of them were bought from Liberty and they cost about 100 pounds each. The question then becomes, why would anyone want to buy a tie like that? And the answer, of course, is that putting it on in the morning, you've got a great sense of achievement, of confidence, of success. You know that you have succeeded in life to the extent that you can afford to buy a really expensive tie, a Liberty. No one else knows that it's a Liberty tie because they can't see the label, but you do and what's important. So as we've seen, consumer behaviour is a very complex issue. And for brands to succeed, they really need to have a deep understanding of what makes us as consumers behave the way we do, and what makes us as consumers satisfy our needs. 1