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Engel - Kollat - Blackwell (Ekb) Model

The Engel-Kollat-Blackwell model outlines a five-stage consumer decision process: 1) awareness of a product through advertising, 2) information processing about how the product relates to needs, 3) evaluation through research and comparison, 4) purchasing decision if convinced of value, and 5) outcome analysis after purchase to assess satisfaction and potential repeat purchases. The model suggests consumers make rational decisions based on assessed influencing factors.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
489 views1 page

Engel - Kollat - Blackwell (Ekb) Model

The Engel-Kollat-Blackwell model outlines a five-stage consumer decision process: 1) awareness of a product through advertising, 2) information processing about how the product relates to needs, 3) evaluation through research and comparison, 4) purchasing decision if convinced of value, and 5) outcome analysis after purchase to assess satisfaction and potential repeat purchases. The model suggests consumers make rational decisions based on assessed influencing factors.

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tanuja
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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ENGEL- KOLLAT- BLACKWELL (EKB) MODEL

This model outlines a five-stage decision process that consumers go through before purchasing a
product or service.

1. Awareness: The consumer becomes aware of the product through any form of advertisement
and thus, a desire, a need for the product is generated.
2. Information processing – After discovering a product or service, a consumer begins to think
about how the product or service relates to their past experiences or needs and whether it will
fulfil any current needs.
3. Evaluation – The consumers does further research on the product. It does a comparison with
other competitive products available in the market to decide whether to switch to the new
product or continue with the existing one.
4. Purchasing decision – The consumer decides to purchase the product if he/she is convinced
that the new product provides more value. Otherwise, he/she will continue with the existing
product.
5. Outcome analysis – After making a purchase, a customer will use what they’ve bought and
assess whether their experience is positive or negative. After a trial period, they’ll keep a
product and maybe decide to become repeat customers or express dissatisfaction and return to
stage three.
Overall, EKB says that consumers make decisions based on influencing factors that they assess
through rational insight.
This model applies to businesses that have many competitors with similar products or services. If
your product market is highly saturated and competitive, the goal is to outshine your competitors
by meeting customers at every stage of their journey.

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