Consumer Behaviour Research: Why Consumers Say One Thing and Do Another
If consumer decision-making were completely rational, marketing would be much easier.
Ask consumers what matters to them and they will often give clear, logical answers:
- “Price is most important.”
- “I always research before buying.”
- “Sustainability influences my decisions.”
- “I’m loyal to brands I trust.”
Yet real behaviour often tells a different story.
Consumers say they want healthier food, but still buy impulsively.
They claim advertising does not influence them, yet brand perception shapes choices constantly.
They say price matters most, while repeatedly paying premiums for brands they emotionally connect with.
So why does this happen?
The answer lies in the complexity of human psychology.
And this is exactly why consumer behaviour research is so important.
Why stated behaviour and real behaviour differ
One of the biggest challenges in market research is understanding the “Say-Do gap”:
- What consumers say they do
- And what they actually do
This is often referred to as the difference between stated behaviour and observed behaviour.
Human decision-making is influenced by:
- Emotion
- Bias
- Habit
- Social pressure
- Cognitive shortcuts
Many of these processes happen subconsciously.
Consumers are not intentionally misleading researchers. Often, they simply do not fully understand their own decision-making.
The psychology behind consumer behaviour
Consumer choices are rarely driven by logic alone.
Research from Harvard Business School suggests that up to 95% of purchasing decisions happen subconsciously.
This means consumers often create rational explanations after decisions are made emotionally.
For example:
- A customer may justify buying a premium coffee for “quality”
- But the real driver could be identity, comfort or routine
This distinction matters enormously for brands.
Because understanding what consumers truly value requires more than surface-level responses. This is where consumer psychology and neuromarketing studies are useful.
Why consumers behave differently than they claim
There are several psychological reasons why consumers say one thing and do another.
1. Social desirability bias
Consumers want to present themselves positively.
This can lead to overreporting behaviours seen as “good”, such as:
- Healthy eating
- Sustainable purchasing
- Ethical behaviour
And underreporting behaviours perceived negatively.
For example, many consumers claim sustainability influences purchasing decisions. Yet research from Kantar found that while concern about sustainability is high, actual purchasing behaviour often lags behind intentions.
2. Emotional decision-making
Consumers frequently believe they are rational decision-makers.
But emotion plays a major role in:
- Brand preference
- Memory
- Trust
- Loyalty
Research by Nielsen found that emotionally engaging campaigns significantly outperform purely rational messaging.
This is why brands that create emotional resonance are often more memorable and effective.
3. Habit and routine
Many consumer decisions are automatic.
People often:
- Buy familiar brands
- Follow routines
- Avoid cognitive effort
This explains why changing behaviour is difficult, even when attitudes shift.
Consumers may genuinely believe they want to change, while continuing existing habits unconsciously.
4. Context influences behaviour
Behaviour changes depending on situation and environment.
A consumer may:
- Spend differently online versus in-store
- Choose differently under time pressure
- Prioritise convenience over values when busy
This is why context matters so much in consumer insight research.
Psychological Drivers Behind Consumer Behaviour
| Psychological Factor | What Consumers Say | What Often Happens in Reality |
|---|---|---|
| Social desirability | “Sustainability matters most” | Convenience and price dominate decisions |
| Emotional influence | “I buy based on logic” | Emotion strongly shapes choices |
| Habit | “I like trying new brands” | Familiar brands are repeatedly chosen |
| Time pressure | “I research carefully” | Fast, instinctive decisions occur |
| Brand perception | “Advertising doesn’t affect me” | Brand familiarity influences trust and choice |
Why this matters for brands
The gap between stated and real behaviour creates risk.
Without proper research, brands may:
- Build strategies around inaccurate assumptions
- Misinterpret customer needs
- Launch ineffective campaigns
- Overestimate behavioural change
This is where market research companies UK play a crucial role.
Research helps uncover:
- Underlying motivations
- Emotional drivers
- Behavioural barriers
- Unmet needs
The goal is not simply to collect answers.
It is to understand why consumers behave the way they do.
The importance of qualitative research
Quantitative research is excellent at identifying patterns.
But qualitative research helps explain them.
Methods such as:
- Focus groups
- In-depth interviews
- Ethnographic research
allow researchers to explore:
- Emotions
- Language
- Motivations
- Hidden tensions
This deeper understanding often reveals insights consumers themselves struggle to articulate.
Research approaches and behavioural insight
| Research Method | What It Reveals | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| Surveys | Stated attitudes and preferences | Measures scale and trends |
| Focus Groups | Emotional and social drivers | Explores deeper motivations |
| Ethnographic Research | Real-world behaviour | Identifies contextual influences |
| Brand Tracking | Perception over time | Measures awareness and movement |
| Behavioural Analysis | Actual actions and engagement | Reduces reliance on assumptions |
Consumer behaviour research and brand strategy
Understanding behavioural psychology helps brands:
- Improve messaging
- Reduce friction
- Build stronger emotional connection
- Develop more effective products and campaigns
It also helps explain why some brands achieve stronger momentum than others.
At Vision One Research, this approach goes beyond measuring attitudes alone.
The focus is on uncovering the deeper insight behind behaviour, helping organisations make more confident, evidence-based decisions.
Why behavioural insight matters more than ever
Consumers are becoming harder to predict.
Economic uncertainty, digital overload and changing expectations mean behaviour is increasingly fluid.
This makes behavioural understanding a competitive advantage.
Because the brands that succeed are often not the ones that ask the most questions.
They are the ones that understand the answers most deeply.
Final thought
Consumers are human.
And humans are complex.
What people say and what they do are often different because decisions are shaped by emotion, habit, context and subconscious bias.
This is why consumer behaviour research matters.
Because understanding behaviour is not just about listening to consumers.
It is about understanding the psychology behind their choices.
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