December 2007 Archives

The science of persuasion

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I have been meaning to blog about an interesting article on Comment is Free about peer group pressure as it applies to advertising messages.

The article mentions a change in copy to an infomercial - changing the call to action from "call now as operators are waiting" to "if operators are busy please call again" apparently broke a 20-year-record for a home shopping channel.

Why does this work?  The winning call to action implies high demand and perhaps also scarcity - it helps the customer to paint a mental picture of needing to re-dial to get an open phone line.

I've heard of similar things happening with Google Adwords copy, where quite simple changes to call to action copy - like adding "book online today" - make a big difference to response.  In fact Adwords would be a fantastic place to test this kind of thing.

There has been some great work by Robert Cialdini, a professor of psychology at Arizona State University in this kind of area.  For instance, he tested three versions of cards left in the bathrooms of single-occupancy rooms in hotels asking the guests to re-use towels.

The full research is well worth reading, but here's a summary.

Three cards were initially tested:

Card 1:

HELP SAVE THE ENVIRONMENT.
You can show your respect for nature and help save the environment by reusing your towels during your stay.

Card 2:

PARTNER WITH US TO HELP SAVE THE ENVIRONMENT
In exchange for your participation in this program, we at the hotel will donate a percentage of the energy savings to a nonprofit environmental protection organization. The environment deserves our combined efforts. You can join us by reusing your towels during your stay.

Card 3:

JOIN YOUR FELLOW GUESTS IN HELPING TO SAVE THE ENVIRONMENT
Almost 75% of guests who are asked to participate in our new resource savings program do help by using their towels more than once. You can join your fellow guests to help save the environment by reusing your towels during your stay.

Card 3 is the card that pushed the triggers on peer group pressure.  People like you - argues the copy - reused their towels.  An (invisible) majority of guests reused their towels - so you should join them.  Card 1 prompted a reuse rate of 38%.  Card 2 was slightly worse, with a 36% resuse rate.  Card 3 did significantly better, with a 48% reuse rate.

Which brings me back to the article in Comment is Free.  What prompted the posting was a sign in a doctor's waiting room which pointed out how many patients the previous week had missed their appointments.  The first week, twenty patients had missed appointments.  A week later, that number had risen to thirty patients.

What's happening is that the sign suggests to some people that it's actually socially acceptable to miss appointments without cancelling them!  The sign should have read something like: "98% of patients at this surgery either turn up for appointments or cancel them.  This helps us to provide a better service to all our patients."

 

Samsung YP-P2 rumour mill

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Samsung YP-P2I own a Samsung P2 and am obsessively checking the forums to find out when the long-promised firmware upgrades will turn up.  There's no sign of the firmware, but instead an interesting video has leaked onto YouTube supposedly showing a new docking cradle that would add wi-fi, a card reader and an FM transmitter to the P2.

It's really interesting from a marketing point of view, because there has been no official announcement of the product - so sites like engadget are being rather cautious about the news in case it turns out to be fake.  But elsewhere I've seen plenty of sites reporting on the news as fact.

Of course, an unsubstantiated rumour with a swirl of conspiracy theory around it is a much more interesting story than a straight product release from Samsung. And YouTube would be a great place to do this - it's a natural home for gadget obsessives.  In fact there are already more than 70 videos of the Samsung P2 posted on YouTube, mostly by customers and featuring such arcane delights as 'unboxing a new Samsung P2'. 

Of course, it could even be that Samsung will leak stuff like this just to get an early sense of consumer reaction before the product itself has gone anywhere near production.  Or alternatively it could just be a fake! 

 

Blonde map of Europe

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Blonde Hair Map of EuropeDemographic targeting is oh-so-boring, so why don't we try something different?

Forget about ABC1s living within a 5 mile radius of Guildford - why not target people by hair colour instead?

The utterly fabulous Blonde Map of Europe shows that the epicentre of blondes in Europe is not in Essex, as we might imagine, but is in fact slightly to the north of Stockholm. 

 The Baltic Sea is pretty much a brunette-free zone.

This distribution of blonde-ness can be explained in a single word: VIKINGS!!!

So what can we sell to modern-day vikings? Off the top of my head, I'd say that they will have an above-average propensity to buy cruises, lager and fur coats.  There isn't much of a market in axes any more, so perhaps this is sublimated into a desire to buy kitchen knives and liquidisers?  Anyone out there tested this?