Posts Tagged ‘brand development’

Monkey see, monkey do. How the consumer experience drives brand equity.

Thursday, June 3rd, 2010

In the early 1990s, while studying the brain activity of monkeys, neuroscientists discovered specific neurons would fire in a part of the brain’s frontal lobe with specific activities.  What they also found was the same neurons fired in the monkey who was just watching the action.  Mirror neurons let the observer experience at least part of the action taking place. 

More recently in Daniel Goleman’s book Social Intelligence he says our brain is designed to make connections. If someone is angry with us, we have a similar reaction.  If someone smiles at us, we become happier.  “The fact that we can trigger any emotion at all in someone else–or they in us–testifies to the powerful mechanism by which one person’s feelings spread to another.”

Human actions and emotions register in others and in a profound way provide the power to change those that observe.  How companies look, act and communicate with customers, then, has a great effect on their brand equity. An empathetic voice, a smiling face, and confident actions will go a long way in building trust.

This research reminds me how important it is in marketing to paint a picture and tell a story to customers – to make an emotional connection.   And how easy a positive connection could be lost with a negative interaction.

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Two Birds & One Stone – Brand Strategy

Monday, January 21st, 2008

For the past seven years, The New York Times Magazine has published the “Annual Year in Ideas” to highlight some of the most interesting ideas, perspectives and innovations from different disciplines during the year.

One entry was particularly telling and relevant to marketing. “Two-Birds-With-One-Stone Resistance.” Psychologist Ayelet Fishback of the University of Chicago conducted an experiment that showed connecting one tool or method to multiple goals weakens the mental association between the tool and any one goal.

In one study, participants were informed that jogging both strengthens muscles and increases the body’s level of oxygen. When researchers reinforced the idea of strengthening muscles, participants illogically decided that jogging was less effective for boosting oxygen.

In another study, test group participants were shown a pen and told about its dual function as a laser pointer. Later, they joined a control group to complete a short form and were given the choice of the laser pen or a conventional pen. Of the participants in the test group 17% selected the laser pen, in contrast 50% of the control group chose the laser pen.

Knowing that the pen had more than one purpose made the students reluctant to use it. Fishback explains, “Once you associate the pen with another function, that same pen doesn’t come to mind as easily when it comes to writing.”

So, it is not possible to communicate two or more things with equal effectiveness and doing so could be damaging to the message of a campaign.

One Brand. One Voice.

Messages bombard people everyday – watching television and listening to the radio; driving through the city and driving a shopping cart: reading the newspaper in a kitchen or online; in airports, restaurants, movie theatres, malls, and at ballgames; through text messaging, e-mail blasts and sky writing. It’s a wonder that any messages get through at all. That’s why the messages that are the most successful are the ones that are simple, clear and single focused.

Bill Bernbach founded DDB Advertising in New York in 1949. He said, “Our job is to simplify, to tear away the unrelated, to pluck out the weeds that are smothering the product message.”

It may be tempting to try to kill two birds with one stone, but as research shows it just doesn’t work. In fact, it could confuse consumers into selecting the competition, because they can’t remember your brand, your voice, or your message.

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A Lesson In Brand Identity

Saturday, June 1st, 2002

A stale image can be the death-knell for any business, but a little creative design goes a long way. Here’s how one company found a much-needed brand makeover.

Read full story:  Brand Identity Lesson

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