Influencing Emotion

Influencing Emotion

There’s no shortage of research that shows we’re fundamentally emotional creatures. The triggering of emotions sets in place the reactions that become our behaviour and, somewhere or other along the way, our conscious mind catches on and gets involved to a greater or lesser extent. Why does the emotional reaction come first? Well, imagine that something is flying towards your head at great speed. You could spend time consciously wondering what it is that’s about to hit you; provided you don’t mind whatever it is hitting you first. Instead the brain has evolved to detect the threat in the many millions of sensory inputs it’s receiving each second, and react in a way that protects you. In some cases these reactions are evolutionary; simply put those ancestors of ours who didn’t instinctively duck eventually died out. In other cases it may be a learned response; you soon learn that if […]

How Advert Placement Influences its Impact

How Advert Placement Influences its Impact

If you’ve read The Secret of Selling you’ll already know about the way in which apparently peripheral elements can have a dramatic influence on consumer behaviour. It all stems from the fact that the different areas of our brains get involved in shaping our behaviour in ways that we don’t always identify accurately. Something reaches part of the brain and triggers a response, whilst the conscious mind is busily occupied elsewhere. In much the same way that a magician uses our inability to focus on more than one thing at once to make the card disappear, we’re left oblivious to what’s happened. When it comes to advertising it’s no surprise that the same principles come in to play. What’s interesting is the way in which some very basic ‘logic’ influences just how that unconscious influence occurs, and it’s something that is very useful for anyone involved in marketing communication to know. You […]

How to Reduce the Damage when Things Go Wrong

How to Reduce the Damage when Things Go Wrong

For some reason young children often find it hard to apologise. Things get out of hand when they’re playing and the next thing you know one feels so aggrieved about something the other has done that she throws a toy at him, he reacts to this and throws six back. Both feel completely justified and, when you hear the commotion and go to sort it out both turn the tears on and appear equally upset. Often it’s impossible to work out, between the snuffles and sobs, what singular action set the chain of angry events in motion. A request for them to apologise to each other is met with fierce resistance. It’s ironic really because, later in life, we British become so apologetic that someone could stand on our foot and we would say, “I’m sorry, please would you mind not breaking my toes.” Eventually one might manage a hugely […]

Retailer Insanity: Why Asda (Wal-Mart) Has Lost the Plot

Retailer Insanity: Why Asda (Wal-Mart) Has Lost the Plot

I don’t own shares in the UK supermarket chain Asda (or rather their parent company Wal-Mart) but if I did I would be selling them just about now. Earlier this month Asda announced that they wanted to invoke a new era of ‘democratic consumerism’. To quote their chief executive Andy Bond this will be “the dawn of a new age where customers dictate how we do business and the products we sell.” Dictate! To facilitate this the company is setting up a massive internet based survey, so that it can regularly solicit the opinions of 18,000 customers when decisions are being taken on issues like purchasing. Don’t misunderstand me, I’m all for democracy. But Asda already has it. They choose what to do and look at the numbers of people who come through their doors and what they choose to buy when they get there. But there’s no point asking […]