Posts Tagged ‘branding’

Can photos of faces improve your marketing

Tuesday, February 9th, 2010

I have often advised clients to include some humanity in their corporate design and marketing. The theory being it positively influences customer behaviour by engaging with them on a more emotional level.
I recently read two articles that back this design hunch;
One, in the New York Times, describes an experiment in which a digital photograph of the patient was attached to the front of a number of the radiologist’s file. The result was these patients received a longer and more meticulous report.

A pretty lady used in a design to increase response

A more obvious was example was one South African company’s attempts to boost their loan business. Using several variations of a mailer sent to 50,000 people they discovered that a photograph of a pretty lady in the design of the offer letter was as effective as a 5% difference in the loan interest rate in getting response from a male target audience – that’s a huge differential in the lending world.

Small businesses ignore branding at their peril

Friday, January 22nd, 2010

Do SME’s need to worry about having a ‘brand’.

What’s the worst that could happen?

The latest scientific research into buyer behavior suggests a poorly conceived brand can frightened customers away before you get the chance to talk to them.

The PhD’s who study human behavior (neuroscientists) believe the decision to trust and buy is almost entirely instinctive.

From the age of four humans stop believing everything at face value and start to make instinctive decisions based on ‘vibes’.

At this tender age we stop innocently believing  everything at face value and start to develop a subconscious radar that attemps to judge the motive, values and beliefs that lie behind what is being said.

So now, when an older brother says “everyone eats worms” a subconscious alarm bell goes off and without any rational evidence to back up his choice the boy says “no!”.

Having an internal ‘radar’ that looks past the facts is vital to our survival, and a worm free diet.

Over the years and into adulthood this radar becomes highly tuned and suprisingly accurate. A far better and more reliable decision making machine than our gullible and plodding rational brains.

Neuroscientists now believe that our emotions and instincts are 80% responsible for purchase decisions.

So before a customer has finished reading the first sentence of your advert / prospectus / website their subconcious radar is shouting one of two things…

“Danager” or “approach opportunity