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Neuromarketing

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Title: Neuromarketing


1
Neuromarketing-
  • an introduction

Neuromarketing- an introduction
2
Introduction
  • I know that half the money I spend on
    advertising is wasted, I just do not know which
    half.
  • John Wannamaker (1876)

3
In search for understanding consumer behaviour
  • Marketing and environmental stimuli enter
    the consumers consciousness and/or
    subconsciousness. A set of psychological
    processes combine with certain consumer
    characteristics to result in decision processes
    and purchase decisions.
  • The marketers task is to understand what
    happens in the customers consciousness and/or
    unconsciousness between the arrival of the
    outside marketing stimuli and the ultimate
    purchase decision.
  • Kotler and Keller (2006, p.184)

4
The emergence of neuromarketing
  • Neuromarketing
  • Neuroscience

5
Defining neuromarketing
By studying activity in the brain,
neuromarketing combines the techniques of
neuroscience and clinical psychology to develop
insights into how we respond to products, brands,
and advertisement. From this, marketers hope to
understand the subtle nuances that distinguish a
dud pitch from a successful campaign. Mucha
(2005, p. 36)

6
The scientific background (1)
  • fMRI - functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging
  • developed in the early 90s
  • apparatus allows the precise
  • tracing of areas activated in the
  • brain responding to stimuli
  • 3D-Encode activated regions appear
  • in multiple colour
  • originally applied to detect the location
  • of illnesses, e.g. headaches, paralysis
  • and seizures in the human brain

7
The scientific background (2)
  • QEEG quantified electroencephalography
  • (an alternative to fMRI)
  • established that aspects of
    cognition and emotional responses to
    commercial messages below the level
    of conscious awareness, can be successfully
    monitored in real time and analysed with
    sufficient depth and accuracy to provide an
    invaluable window on their consumers inner
    decision making process.
  • Lewis (2005/2006, p.5)

8
Neuromarketing- researching consumer behaviour
(1)
  • neuromarketing is based on neuro-scientific
    consumer research and the assumption that the
    majority of consumer behaviour is made
    subconsciously
  • what motivates consumers to purchase a certain
    product?
  • self-esteem
  • emotions
  • consumption experience
  • goal-directed behaviour
  • external influences
  • it starts, where traditional consumer research
    techniques end
  • in the consumers brain

9
Neuromarketing- linking science and marketing
  • overconsumption and compulsive shopping can be
    traced back to a dysfunction of the orbitofrontal
    cortex (ORF)
  • Leake (2006)
  • impulsive buying decisions are based on the
    emotional state of the buyer (governed by the
    limbic system), rational buying decisions are
    processed in the frontal cortex
  • Mucha (2005)
  • memory retention is processed in the amygdale and
    ventro-medial lobes (VFML)
  • Ambler, Ionnides and Rose (2000)
  • irrational buying and selling is associated with
    the autonomic nervous system
  • Peterson (2005)

10
Neuromarketing-its potential impact on promotion
campaigns
Sponsoring -celebrities -events
  • Posters/billboards
  • location
  • duration

TV/ radio adverts -channels/stations -time slots
Web adverts -duration -contents
Freebies/ promotion extras -location -product
choice
11
Neuromarketing-its potential impact on
advertisement designs
Poster/billboards
Radio promotion
sports person
size
music
balance information/entertainment
colour arrangement
slogan/message
voice
length
TV advertisement
colour arrangement
balance information/entertainment
image
length
voice/music
product focus
12
Neuromarketing-its potential impact on product
development
  • flavour
  • smell
  • colour
  • health/fashion trends
  • identifiying new target groups

13
Neuromarketing-its potential impact on product
packaging/design
  • logo
  • colour scheme
  • packaging materials
  • packaging size
  • limited editions
  • smell

14
Neuromarketing-its potential impact on
distribution
  • shelving
  • product grouping
  • special offers
  • smell
  • music
  • general atmosphere
  • availability

15
Neuromarketing- between hype and reality (1)
  • Technological limitations
  • 7 of patients/test subjects worldwide are not
    suitable for brain scans
  • noise and density of apparatus might prevent some
    test subjects from taking part in experiments
  • falsified results due to apprehensiveness
  • apparatus is large and inflexible (artificial
    environment)
  • tests require medical supervision
  • due to time and money constraints, only a small
    number of test subjects can be scanned
  • General limitations
  • accurate measurements of brain activities are
    limited Michel (2004/2005)
  • certain emotions cannot be clearly
    differentiated Kurfer (2006)
  • analysis of collected data still remains an
    enigma Reynolds (2006), Ahlert
    (2005)
  • neuromarketing without future
    Walter, Adler, Ciaramidaro and Erk (2005)
  • Consumer behaviour cannot be recreated in
    laboratory
  • Time costs prevent the testing of a great
    number of individuals
  • Brain activities cannot be measured against the
    will of test subjects
  • Ethical issues should not be solely reduced to
    neuromarketing

16
Neuromarketing- between hype and reality (2)
  • marketing executives are hoping to
    use neuroscience to design better
    selling techniques. fMRI is being exploited by
    savvy consulting companies intent on finding the
    buy button in the brain, and is on the verge of
    creating advertising campaigns that we will be
    unable to resist.
  • Editorial of nature neuroscience (2004, p. 683)

17
Neuromarketing- between hype and reality (3)
  • it appears to be less transforming the existing
    fundamentals of the marketing discipline, as it
    is rather a neuro-scientific consumer research
    technique, with the potential to add
    significantly to marketers current understanding
    of consumer behaviour
  • it introduces the subconscious perspective with
    the potential to reform and extend quantitative
    research
  • it might be the first technique, which allows the
    inclusion of the environment into quantitative
    research
  • a response error of test subject is non-existent

18
Neuromarketing- ethical concerns
  • We can sell these people refrigerators. They
    may not have room for them, and they will put
    them on the front porch. They will buy a big
    automobile and all the luxuries, but they never
    move up the scale.
  • Chicago ad executive, cited from V. Packard
    (1981, p. 99)

19
Neuromarketing- ethical concerns
  • Consumer rights rest upon the assumption that
    consumer dignity should be respected, and that
    producers have a duty to treat consumers as ends
    in themselves, and not only as means to the end
    of the producer. Thus, consumer rights are
    inalienable entitlements to fair treatment when
    entering into exchanges with other parties.
  • Crane and Matten (2004, p. 268)
  • e.g. consumers right to privacy, fair pricing
    and free thought and choice
  • doadvertising techniquesinvolve a violation
    of human autonomy and a manipulation and control
    of consumer behaviour, or do they simply provide
    an efficient and cost effective means of giving
    the consumer information on the basis of which he
    or she makes a free choice. Is advertisement
    information, or creation of desire?
  • Arrington (1982)
  • human beings do not have a so called free will,
    as the brain reacts to stimuli split seconds
    before the human being recognises them
    consciously
  • an escape from ethical responsibility in
    general?
  • Traindl (2005)
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