26. Cоnsumer Decisiоn Prоcess: Heаlth Trаcking Weаrable (10 points) Read the following paragraph and access the stages of the consumer decision process for Sloane's consideration of a health tracking wearable. Two months into 2026, Sloane noticed they were consistently feeling tired despite getting what they thought was enough sleep. They realized there was a gap between their current state (feeling fatigued and lacking concrete health data) and their desired data (having clear insights into their sleep, recovery, and readiness). Sloane first spontaneously thought about the health tracker market leader, the apple watch. Later that night, as they were talking to a few friends over dinner, they discovered that several had received an Oura ring as a holiday gift and had glowing recommendations. As health trackers cost several hundred dollars and need for accurate sleep data was important to Sloane, they then explored technology websites for comparative data on features of Oura ring vs. Apple watch. They decide that sleep tracking was the most important attribute followed in importance by range of features beyond health and battery life. Sloane compared the Oura ring and Apple watch on sleep tracking, and after finding that the Oura ring dominated, they consequently chose the Qura ring. Next, they ordered the sizing kit to ensure proper ring fit. After proper sizing, Sloane went directly to the Oura website, added the Oura ring to their cart, but hesitated after seeing high shipping fees. After receiving a promotional offer for free shipping, they purchased the Oura ring. Sloane was excited when the ring arrived and posted their "unboxing" of the ring on social media and satisfaction with its sleep data on night 1. Using the 5-stage consumer decision process framework, identify and assess each stage of Sloane's decision journey. Cite specific evidence from the scenario to support your answer.