Attitudes (Marketing)
How people feel and lean about a brand. Attitudes are settled evaluations — positive or negative — that predispose people to respond and buy a certain way, hard to change but central to marketing.
- Term
- Attitudes
- Are
- Settled feelings/evaluations toward a brand
- Made of
- Beliefs, feelings, tendencies to act
- Shape
- How people respond and buy
Parts of speech & senses
- Attitudes are a person's relatively settled feelings, beliefs, and evaluations toward a brand, product, or idea — stable predispositions that shape how they respond and buy. "Changing entrenched attitudes took more than one ad."
What attitudes are
Attitudes, in consumer behavior, are a person's relatively settled and enduring evaluations, feelings, and predispositions toward an object — a brand, product, category, or idea. An attitude is a learned tendency to respond consistently favorably or unfavorably toward something. Attitudes are commonly described as having three components: cognitive (beliefs and knowledge about the object), affective (feelings and emotions toward it), and behavioral (tendencies to act toward it). Together these form an overall evaluation — positive, negative, or neutral — that predisposes how a person thinks about, feels toward, and acts on the object, including whether and how they buy.
Attitudes matter to marketing because they're a major driver of behavior and a key intermediate outcome marketing seeks to shape. Favorable attitudes toward a brand make purchase more likely; unfavorable ones make it harder. Much of marketing aims to form, reinforce, or change attitudes — building positive beliefs and feelings toward the brand. Attitudes sit between marketing communication and behavior: advertising and experience shape attitudes, which in turn shape buying. They're a central concept in understanding how marketing influences buyers, and a common target of measurement (tracking attitudes toward a brand as a gauge of marketing's effect and brand health).
Forming and changing attitudes
Attitudes form through experience, information, and influence — direct experience with a product, exposure to marketing and information, and social influence all shape the beliefs, feelings, and evaluations that constitute attitudes. Marketing influences attitude formation by shaping beliefs (communicating information and claims), feelings (creating emotional associations), and experiences (the product and brand experience). For new or unknown brands, marketing's job is largely to form favorable attitudes from scratch; for established ones, to reinforce positive attitudes and counter negative ones.
Changing existing attitudes, especially entrenched ones, is notoriously difficult — a key practical insight. Attitudes are relatively stable and resistant to change; people tend to maintain their attitudes and interpret new information through them (selective perception), so a single message rarely shifts a settled attitude. Changing attitudes typically requires sustained effort, compelling new information or experiences, and often addressing the specific beliefs or feelings underlying the attitude. This is why it's often easier to reinforce favorable attitudes or build them in those without strong existing ones than to reverse negative attitudes — and why marketers must be realistic about the difficulty and time required to change entrenched attitudes, rather than expecting quick reversals.
Working with attitudes well
Working with attitudes well means understanding the target buyers' existing attitudes toward the brand and category, and shaping marketing to form, reinforce, or (where necessary and feasible) change them — building favorable beliefs, feelings, and evaluations through communication and experience. It means measuring attitudes to gauge marketing's effect and brand health, recognizing the difficulty of changing entrenched attitudes (and being realistic about the sustained effort required), and often focusing on reinforcing positive attitudes and building them where they're weak rather than expecting to reverse strong negative ones quickly. Attitudes are a key intermediate outcome to understand, shape, and track.
The failures are ignoring buyers' existing attitudes (marketing that doesn't account for how people already feel), expecting to change entrenched attitudes quickly or with a single message (underestimating their stability), and not measuring attitudes to understand marketing's effect. The discipline is to understand, shape, and track attitudes — forming and reinforcing favorable ones, addressing the beliefs and feelings underlying them, and being realistic about the difficulty of changing entrenched attitudes — recognizing attitudes as relatively stable predispositions that strongly shape behavior, so working with them effectively (and patiently where change is needed) is central to influencing how people respond and buy.
Synonyms & antonyms
Synonyms
Antonyms
Origin & history
Attitudes — settled feelings and evaluations toward a brand — are stable predispositions that strongly shape buying, so marketing forms, reinforces, and patiently changes them, recognizing entrenched attitudes resist quick reversal.
Etymology: source.
Usage trends
Search interest for this term over the last five years:
Common questions
- What are attitudes in consumer behavior?
- A person's relatively settled, enduring evaluations, feelings, and predispositions toward a brand, product, or idea — a learned tendency to respond favorably or unfavorably, with cognitive (belief), affective (feeling), and behavioral components.
- Why do attitudes matter to marketing?
- Because they strongly shape behavior and sit between communication and buying — favorable attitudes make purchase more likely. Much of marketing aims to form, reinforce, or change attitudes, and they're a key measure of marketing's effect and brand health.
- Why are attitudes hard to change?
- Because they're relatively stable and resistant — people maintain their attitudes and interpret new information through them, so a single message rarely shifts a settled attitude. Changing entrenched attitudes requires sustained effort, compelling new evidence, and time.
Resources & people to follow
- referenceRGM analysis — definitions, senses, and usage verified per term
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Related training
Disciplines
Areas of marketing where attitudes (marketing) is a core concern: