Neuromarketing

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Neuromarketing

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Title: Neuromarketing


1
Neuromarketing The science behind why we buy
  • Douglas Kong
  • Executive/business Coach
  • Regional Director, The Alpha Group Singapore
  • dsgkong_at_gmail.com

2
What you will learn
  • What neuromarketing is all about
  • How corporations use neuromarketing
  • An evaluative critique of neuromarketing
  • How you can make use of it

3
Traditional marketing research
Verbal reports, surveys etc
4
Techniques used to study the brain
  • Functional MRI
  • Electro-Encephalo Graphy (EEG)
  • Eye-tracking techniques
  • Biometrics GSR, Pulse rate, thermal, muscle tone

5
What is neuroscience?
  • Any or all of the sciences, such as
    neurochemistry and experimental psychology which
    deals with the structure, function and/or
    development of the nervous system and the brain

6
What is Neuromarketing?
A new field of marketing that studies Consumers
Sensori-motor Cognitive Affective response
to the stimuli of products, brands, and
advertisement
7
  • By studying activity in the brain, neuromarketing
    combines the techniques of neuroscience and
    clinical psychology
  • to develop insights as to how we respond to
    products, brands and advertisements.
  • From this, marketers hope to understand the
    subtle nuances that distinguishes
  • a dud pitch from a successful campaign.

Mucha (2005, p 36)
8
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 happen
    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)
9
Researching customers behaviour
  • Neuromarketing is neuro-scientific consumer
    research based on 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

10
Consumer Research linking science and marketing
  • Overconsumption and compulsive shopping can be
    traced back to a dysfunction of the reward system
    and orbitofrontal cortex (OFC)
  • 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
  • Memory retention is processed in the amygdala and
    the ventromedial prefrontal cortex (VMPFC)
  • Irrational buying and selling is associated with
    the autonomic nervous system

- Leake (2006)
- Mucha(2005)
- Ambler, Ionnides and Rose 2000)
- Peterson(2005)
11
Warnings on cigarettes pack, does it work?
  • Highlighted by Martin Lindstrom in Buyology
  • Intention was to discourage smoking
  • MRI studies indicated when viewing warning
    labels, nucleus accumbens activated
  • Nucleus accumbens is part of reward circuit in
    the brain
  • Together with racing cars, rugged cowboys,
    warnings are associated with smoking behaviours

12
  • How corporations use neuromarketing research

13
The Pepsi Challenge
14
Read Montague 2004
  • 67 had their brains scanned while being given the
    Pepsi Challenge, a blind taste test of Coca
    Cola and Pepsi
  • 50 chose Pepsi and Pepsi tended to produce a
    stronger than Coke in the brains prefrontal
    cortex (region thought to process feelings of
    reward)
  • When subjects were told that they were drinking
    coke, ¾ said that Coke taste better their brain
    activity also changed.
  • The lateral prefrontal cortex, an area of the
    brain that scientists say governed high level
    cognitive powers, and the hippocampus, an area
    related to memory, were now being used,
    indicating that consumers were thinking about
    Coke and relating it to memories and other
    impressions.
  • Results showed that Pepsi should have half the
    market share, but in reality customers are buying
    Coke for reasons related less to their taste
    preferences and more to their experience with the
    Coke brand.

15
McClure and colleagues, 2004
  • Stated preference, equal for both coke and pepsi
    no of subjects 15
  • Tests allowed for up to 3 trials per test, so
    subject can chose from 0 to 3 times
  • In Blind tests, no of times chosen was Coke vs
    Pepsi 22 vs 23
  • In blind tests, both preferences showed
    activation of VMPFC (part of reward system)
  • Cued test with coke produce significantly higher
    of counts(37), no difference between pepsi(23)
    and blind
  • Knowing and drinking is simply more rewarding
    beyond just the taste of the drink itself
  • In cued test, Coke produces activation of the
    hippocampus on both sides (memory), midbrain and
    the DLPFC
  • People chose to drink Pepsi on the basis of taste
    preference (VMPFC involved in choices based
    strictly on sensory information)
  • The choice of coke appear to be associated with
    recall of previous information with cultural
    information and modify behaviour based on emotion

16
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17
Daimler Chrysler
  • A DaimlerChrysler study in Ulm showed pictures of
    66 cars
  • 22 sports cars, 22 sedan cars and 22 small cars
    to 12 men with an average age of 31, as they lay
    in a scanner.
  • Far more than other models, sports cars excited
    areas of the brain associated with reward and
    reinforcement.
  • Among the sports cars that generated the
    strongest brain responses the Ferrari 360
    Modena, the BMW Z8 and the Mercedes SLR

18
Campbells Soup
19
Campbells Soup
  • Use 3 different neuromarketing companies
  • 1,500 subjects over 3 years
  • Use a variety of measures, GSR, HR, thermal, EEG
  • Direct observations, in aisle, shopping including
    eye tracking pupillometry
  • Use of ZMET techniques and consumer feedback

20
Hyundai cars
  • Goal to know what customers think before mass
    production begins
  • 15 men and 15 women were tasked at looking at a
    Hyundai test model
  • They wear skull caps with EEG electrodes embedded
    in them
  • They were told to focus on specific parts
    including the bumper, windscreen and tyres
  • Their brain responses were recorded on to hard
    disks worn at the waist and then taken to be
    analysed as to their perception
  • Korean companies that used neuromarketing include
    cosmetic companies Amore, LG, Hyundai among others

21
Frito Lay
  • Products targeted at women
  • Neuromarketing used to test commercials,
    products, packaging
  • Pitches should play up healthy associations and
    avoid guilt connections
  • Matte packaging in favour of green noisy
    packaging
  • Prank ad rejected by focus group showed approval
    on EEG activity

22
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23
Eye tracking methods
24
Sex differences
  • Sex hormones in women produces differential
    responses in different stages of the menstrual
    cycle
  • To uncertain reward, stronger response in the
    follicular phase than the luteal phase (where
    estrogen is active)
  • The stress response in men activate left
    orbitofrontal cortex (flight/fight activation)
    where in women the limbic system is activated
    (emotion processing)
  • Advertising that activates fear may be processed
    differently

25
  • Some advertisement is based on the eliciting of
    fear, as in this insurance advertisement. The
    response of women to this ad will depend on what
    stage of their menstrual cycle they are in.
  • Female response to fear is regulated by the
    female estrogen which fluctuates throughout the
    menstrual cycle.

26
Brain loyalty
  • Loyal brand followers showed activation of areas
    involved in the reward system (striatum,
    orbitofrontal cortex), emotion (amygdala), and
    memory retrieval system.
  • Suggest affective bonding
  • It has been suggested that hormones of bonding eg
    vasopressin involved

27
Amygdala in processing emotion
  • The amygdala is well known in stress theory as
    the trigger for the Stress Response
  • Amygdala Hijack refers to stressful situation
    when the amygdala shuts off the rational brain
    and launch the flight/fight/freeze reaction.
  • Under stressful situations, men tend to show a
    physical response, whereas women tend to be more
    thoughtful.
  • This is due to the fact that in men, the right
    amygdala is activated and in women the left is
    activated

28
Amygdala in emotion processing
  • The amygdala besides the stress response system
    is also linked to the reward system
  • The right amygdala has to do with negative
    emotion, it plays a part in fear processing, fear
    inducing stimuli and fear conditioning
  • The left amygdala can process both positive and
    negative emotions and plays a role in the reward
    system
  • From survival perspective, emotions are
    attractive or repulsive
  • Activation of the amygdala alone cannot tell us
    that something is attractive or repulsive to the
    subject
  • Perhaps we need to ask whether the subject
    like the stimulus concerned

29
Emotional activation direction?
30
Neuro-bullshitting I
  • Vance Packard Hidden Persuaders
  • Vance is a journalist. Based on the work of James
    Vicary, market researcher, who in 1957 claimed
    that flashing very brief messages quickly on a
    movie screen increased the sale of food and
    drinks. The messages were Drink Coca Cola and
    Hungry? Eat popcorn. Sales of popcorn and coke
    increased 57.8 and 18.1 respectively.
  • Vance book provoked an outcry and lead to
    subliminal advertising banned in many countries.
  • The Truth is in 1958 conducted a TV test with
    Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, flashing out
    the message Telephone now hundreds of times
    during a broadcast. There was no increase in
    calls recorded.
  • In 1962, Vicary admitted that he fabricated his
    claim, the story itself being a marketing ploy.
  • Efforts to replicate the results of Vicarys
    reports by other never resulted in success.

Wikipedia, Subliminal stimuli
31
Priming as a modulator of behaviour
  • An implicit memory effect, where a stimulus can
    affect the response to a second stimuli
  • Context, words, mood, feeling can all serves as
    priming agent
  • In marketing, music has been used as a priming
    agent
  • Scent has also been used as a priming agent

32
Neuro-bullshitting II
  • The buy button Martin Lindstrom Buy-ology
  • Makes interesting points eg
  • Health warning on cigarettes does not work
  • Subliminal advertising from billboards to
    supermarket shelves
  • Sex doesnt sell, its a big turn-off unless sex
    is being sold
  • Companies copy from religion and create rituals,
    corona, iPhone
  • Most of his reviewers give negative comments
    not worth it, I want a refund, it should be
    a 3page article or 1,000 page report, art of
    hype, hype and verbosity, too much ego 285
    out of 306 endorses critical reviews.

33
Warnings on cigarettes pack, does it work?
  • Highlighted by Martin Lindstrom in Buyology
  • Intention was to discourage smoking
  • MRI studies (on smokers) indicated when viewing
    warning labels, nucleus accumbens activated
  • Nucleus accumbens is part of reward circuit in
    the brain
  • Together with racing cars, rugged cowboys,
    warnings are associated with smoking behaviours
  • However, effects on non-smokers, ex-smokers may
    be relevant to preventive effects

34
Neuro-bullshitting II
  • The buy button Martin Lindstrom Buy-ology
  • Makes interesting points eg
  • Health warning on cigarettes does not work
  • Subliminal advertising from billboards to
    supermarket shelves
  • Sex doesnt sell, its a big turn-off unless sex
    is being sold
  • - it does, depending on the target audience.
  • Companies copy from religion and create rituals,
    corona, iPhone
  • Most of his reviewers give negative comments
    not worth it, I want a refund, it should be
    a 3page article or 1,000 page report, art of
    hype, hype and verbosity, too much ego 285
    out of 306 endorses critical reviews.

35
Love your iPhone?
  • Martin Lindstrom (branding consultant)
    commissioned MindSign (neuromarketing company) to
    do a fMRI study of subjects shown video/audio of
    the iphone.
  • Among other things, the insula was activated.
    This is said to indicate feelings of love and
    compassion.
  • Lindstrom interpreted this to indicate that we
    love our iPhone.
  • In actual fact, the right insula is associated
    with social disgust and social avoidance and
    engagement with the environment, while the left
    insula is associated with social compassion and
    social approach, also with contentment and rest
    and digest, away from the environment.
  • Significantly, Lindstrom did not specify which
    insula is activated or other details.

36
Advantages of Neuromarketing
  • Able to measure emotions which shape behaviour
  • More effective than traditional marketing
    research
  • Transcend language and cultural barriers
  • Scientific and objective perspective to marketing
  • Accuracy of results must make sense
    scientifically as well as marketingwise

37
Emotional aspects measured
  • Purchase intent
  • Perceived product value
  • Emotionally salient features
  • Right pricing strategy
  • Attention activation of design
  • Uniqueness among competitive displays
  • Strength of brand reputation
  • Compatibility with brand.

38
Marketing to the Emotional
  • 1. The emotional brain is self-centred
  • 2. Contrast before/after, fast/slow,
    with/without
  • 3. Tangible Input be specific, concrete
    unbreakable, save x, 24 hr turnaround
  • 4. The beginning and the end good beginning and
    good ending
  • 5. Visual stimuli pictures, videos
  • 6. Emotion remember emotions better, a good
    story to connect
  • We are not thinking machines that feel, we are
    feeling machines that think.

Damasio, Descartes Error
39
The 4 step process to reach the emotional
  • Diagnose the Pain
  • Differentiate Your Claims
  • Demonstrate the Gains
  • Deliver to the Old Brain

40
Use Neuromarketing Insights To Improve Your
Marketing Results
  • douglas.kong_at_the-alpha-group.biz
  • dsgkong_at_gmail.com
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