How Economic Factors Affect Consumer
Behavior
Are you losing customers and blame online sales?
When I visit businesses with
slow sales I hear many excuses for why they have so few
customers this month. It seems they are
willing to blame online sales, the local government policies, or even
the local council. Their comments only serve to highlight the fact they do not
understand that the current economic factors have more to do with the customers
behaviour than any of those other factors. Money
is not spent if the customer is worried about their future. The
single biggest factor for consumer behaviour spending patterns is how secure
they feel their short-term future is regarding savings, employment and home
payments. The more insecure they feel about the economy, the more they will pay down debt or keep money for the rainy days.
This ‘happiness’ factor is measured by the consumer confidence index which is
reported daily showing how secure the consumer believes the future is. When the
CCI goes over 100 points, customers will spend. If the
CCI goes under 100 the customers stop spending.
How the economy affects the consumer behaviour?
The consumer is bombarded with messages
of doom & gloom from the newspaper and other news media telling them all about the problems in the world. Currently we have concerns with ;
- Eurozone debt and several countries in recession
- Declining natural resources and climate warning
- Instability in several governments causing public unrest & armed
violence
- Over a 20% drop in Australian super and shares
- Loss of primary industries with large scale unemployment happening almost
weekly since start of 2012
Business owners need to pay attention to
these economical factors. Mortgage payments are often the largest expense a
customer has and will not risk losing their home just to take a chance and buy
your products. When there is uncertainty in the mortgage rates, sales will decline in most sectors. The
instability of employment in manufacturing, financial
services and construction sectors will cause customers to focus on what would
happen if they lost their employment.
So they start saving money for their possible unemployment and spend it on
career change prospects like training in new skills. Due to the high costs of
aged care and related retirement expenses many consumers are looking ahead to
their future by investing in superannuation and/or shares to be financially
secure. With the global recession and collapse of
some international organisations thought to be secure from the economy wobbles,
super funds have lost millions of consumers
financial net.
What the current economy means to your customers?
They are unsure if they will be able to keep the family home, pay for their
retirement and even if they will have a job
in the next six months. So the consumer goes
into survival mode by saving money and stopping all unnecessary
spending. As a business
owner or manager you need to pay attention to the local economic factors
as they will mean the difference between meeting
your sales targets or not.
- Simple present
- Simple Present Continous
- Past Tense
- Present Future
- Past Perfect
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