Social marketing’s consumer myopia: Applying a behavioural ecological model to address wicked problems
Abstract
Purpose
Addressing calls for broadening social marketing thinking beyond “individualistic” parameters, this paper aims to describe a behavioural ecological systems (BEM) approach to enhance understanding of social markets.
Design/methodology/approach
A conceptual framework – the BEM – is presented and discussed within a context of alcohol social change.
Findings
The BEM emphasises the relational nature of behaviour change, where individuals are embedded in an ecological system that involves the performances of behaviour and social change within historical, social, cultural, physical and environmental settings. Layers of influence on actors are characterised as macro (distant, large in scale), exo (external, remote from individuals), meso (between the individual and environments) and micro (the individual within their social setting). The BEM can be applied to guide social marketers towards creating solutions that focus on collaboration amongst market actors rather than among consumers.
Practical implications
The BEM contributes to a broader holistic view of social ecologies and behaviour change; emphasises the need for social marketers to embrace systems thinking; and recognises that relationships between actors at multiple layers in social change markets are interactive, collaborative and embedded in dynamic social contexts. Importantly, a behavioural ecological systems approach enables social marketers to develop coherent, integrated and multi-dimensional social change programmes.
Originality/value
The underlying premise of the BEM brings forward relational logic as the foundation for future social marketing theory and practice. Taking this approach to social market change focuses strategy on the intangible aspects of social offerings, inclusive of the interactions and processes of value creation (and/or destruction) within a social marketing system to facilitate collaboration and interaction across a network of actors so as to overcome barriers and identify solutions to social problems.
Keywords
Citation
Brennan, L., Previte, J. and Fry, M.-L. (2016), "Social marketing’s consumer myopia: Applying a behavioural ecological model to address wicked problems", Journal of Social Marketing, Vol. 6 No. 3, pp. 219-239. https://doi.org/10.1108/JSOCM-12-2015-0079
Publisher
:Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2016, Emerald Group Publishing Limited