Browse our range of digital marketing courses which are designed and validated by the digital industry. View Courses
Full Screen

Technology and Consumer Behavior

More Free Lessons in

Digital Marketing View All →

Get cutting-edge digital marketing skills, know-how and strategy

This micro lesson is from one of our globally recognized digital marketing courses.

Start a FREE Course Preview Start a FREE Course Preview
Global Authority

The Global Authority

12 years delivering excellence

Members

245,000+ Members

Join a global community

Certification

Associate Certification

Globally recognised

Membership

Membership Included

Toolkits, content & more

Digital Marketing - Study Notes:

User-generated content

Another way technology has influenced consumer behavior is allowing consumers to generate their own content. This has led to the rise of user-generated content. Think about some of the biggest sites out there, such as Facebook or YouTube. In fact, YouTube is the second largest search engine and it is content generated by people worldwide. YouTube don't really produce anything themselves. It’s a platform. And now 80% of all online content is user-generated. It plays a huge part in influencing consumer behavior and influencing purchase decisions because it allows users to feel in control.

Influential

However, we can’t really control user-generated content. So, as marketeers, we need to find those consumers who appreciate our brands and encourage them to generate more content that will build up trust and help other users find our brands. Recent research indicates that among millennials, but user-generated content is 20% more influential when it comes to purchasing. This again reflects the move from deference to reference. People are not only trusting their friends; they’re trusting other people online. They may never have met them, but the decision-making journey has changed for good. People are taking in so many different sources of information.

Memorable

User-generated content is seen as being 35% more memorable. So, as marketeers, one of our jobs is to produce memorable content but also to give customers the ability to also produce content. So marketers need to consider how they can help consumers. Do you deny them access to your assets? Or do you help them find the right thing so when they are creating user-generated content, it truly reflects your brand image, your brand tone of voice?

Trusted

User-generated content is 50% more trusted than other types of media and information. We may have brand spokespeople promoting our brand. However, among different generations, people are seeking out user-generated content. They don't feel that the content is being manipulated by people, by media, or by the brands themselves. It’s seen as honest and transparent.

Among millennials, user-generated content delivers significantly more trust. This may involve talking with friends and family. Or it could involve blogs and social media, such as Reddit. Banner adverts, on the other hand, are seen to rank just 19% for trustworthiness. Millennials are reading expert-generated reviews, so think about how this influences their decision-making journey and influences the customer journey. Consumers now have multiple reference points And Some reference points are given more attention than others.

Changing consumer lifestyles

Technology is changing how consumers behave and it’s changing how they make these decisions. There are four ways that this is happening.

Content grazing

Content grazing occurs when we’re maybe doing two different things at once. The classic example is watching a television show whilst checking your email on the phone.

Investigative spiderwebbing

This is a multichannel approach. Suppose you are watching a movie. You're watching Batman and then you want to know what else has Christian Bale been in. So, whilst the movie is playing, you're searching for that on your tablet or mobile device. Or maybe you've seen a pair of shoes that you really like during a television advert and you go on your device to search. And you find more details about that on your device while you're still consuming media.

Quantum journey

Technology allows us to jump around. Consider investigative spiderwebbing again. You’ve seen that pair of shoes advertised and you're looking for more information on them. Next day, you're at your desk and you decide that you to buy those shoes. You’ve still got the page up on your mobile. However, because you're at your desk, you actually end up doing the purchase on your desktop PC. So the customer journey is not linear. We jump around all the time because technology allows us to do so. And this is what Apple and Google, in their operating systems, are really trying to encourage. Technology like Handoff makes it easier for us to switch from one device to another.

Social spiderwebbing

This is where we might share our purchase decisions with our friends. So, for example, you've bought the shoes and you now decide to share your experience on Facebook or Twitter. Other people read about your experience, and this in turn could influence their purchase decisions.

Back to Top
John Makin-Shaw

John Makin-Shaw is the Head of Marketing at Aioi Nissay Dowa Insurance. For over 15 years he has been designing, launching, and managing customer propositions for some of the UK’s biggest brands.

Data protection regulations affect almost all aspects of digital marketing. Therefore, DMI has produced a short course on GDPR for all of our students. If you wish to learn more about GDPR, you can do so here:

DMI Short Course: GDPR

The following pieces of content from the Digital Marketing Institute's Membership Library have been chosen to offer additional material that you might find interesting or insightful.

You can find more information and content like this on the Digital Marketing Institute's Membership Library

You will not be assessed on this content in your final exam.

    ABOUT THIS DIGITAL MARKETING MODULE

    Traditional Communications
    John Makin-Shaw
    Skills Expert

    This module introduces fundamental marketing principles and tools including the value proposition, the classic marketing mix, market research, the customer journey, communications planning, creative planning, media strategy, and amplifying brand performance. By referring to current and recent examples, it illustrates how digital technology and changing consumer behavior and lifestyles are altering the consumer decision-making process and disrupting traditional marketing models and strategies.