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90 CHAPTER5ANALYZINGCONSUMERMARKETS ANDBUYERBEHAVIOR


Table 3.1 Selected Characteristics of Major U.S. Social Classes


Social Class Characteristics

Upper Uppers (less than 1 percent of The social elite who live on inherited wealth; they
U.S. population) give large sums to charity, maintain more than one
home, and send their children to top schools.This
small group serves as a reference group for other
social classes.
Lower Uppers (about 2 percent of People coming up from the middle class who have
U.S. population) earned high income or wealth through professions
or business; they tend to be active in social and
civic affairs, buy status-symbol products, and aspire
to be accepted in the upper-upper stratum.
Upper Middles (12 percent of U.S. People without family status or unusual wealth who
population) are focused on their careers as professionals,
independent business persons, and corporate
managers; they believe in education and are civic-
minded and home-oriented.
Middle Class (32 percent of U.S. Average-pay white- and blue-collar workers; they
population) often buy popular products to keep up with trends,
and they believe in spending more money on
worthwhile experiences for their children and
aiming them toward a college education.
Working Class (38 percent of U.S. Average-pay blue-collar workers and those who
population) lead a working-class lifestyle; they depend on
relatives for economic and emotional support, job
tips, and assistance, and they tend to maintain sharp
sex-role divisions and stereotyping.
Upper Lowers (9 percent of U.S. Workers whose living standard is just above
population) poverty; they perform unskilled work, are poorly
paid, and are educationally deficient.
Lower Lowers (7 percent of U.S. People on welfare, visibly poverty stricken, and
population) usually out of work; some are uninterested in
finding permanent work, and most depend on
public aid or charity for income.

Sources:Richard P. Coleman,“The Continuing Significance of Social Class to Marketing,”Journal of
Consumer Research,December 1983, pp. 265–80, and Richard P. Coleman and Lee P. Rainwater,Social
Standing in America: New Dimension of Class(New York: Basic Books, 1978).

are more likely to adhere to the model in which the man makes large-purchase deci-
sions. In the United States, husband-wife involvement has traditionally varied widely by
product category, so marketers need to determine which member has the greater influ-
ence in choosing particular products. Today, traditional household purchasing pat-
terns are changing, with baby-boomer husbands and wives shopping jointly for prod-
ucts traditionally thought to be under the separate control of one spouse or the other.^7
For this reason, marketers of products traditionally purchased by one spouse may need
to start thinking of the other as a possible purchaser.
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