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HOME::Marketing

Top 7 Secrets To Unlocking Your Customer's Brain For Instant Sales

By Denise Corcoran

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Have you ever wondered ….

* Why even the highest priced or lowest quality products sometimes outsell their competitors’?

* Why and how your prospects buy the products or services they do, even if their choices seem irrational or impractical?

* Why some brands have a devoted cult-like following while others have zero loyalty?

A new field called NeuroMarketing – combining neuroscience, marketing and technology – has generated a buzz across every industry and every business sector. Neuroscience is now telling us:

“Our unconscious mind – not our conscious mind -- drives how we respond to ads, brands and products and, ultimately, drives all our buying decisions. Customers don’t really know why they buy what they buy, which is why traditional market research fall short.”

To understand the reasons why this is true and what it means to your marketing success, we must briefly look at the architecture of our brain.

There are 3 main parts to the brain, each functioning as a brain unto itself.

* The “Human” (“New,” or outer-most) Brain: Most evolved part of the brain known as the cortex. Responsible for logic, learning, language, conscious thoughts and our personalities.

* The “Mammalian” (Middle) Brain: Also known as the limbic system. Deals with our emotions, moods, memory and hormones.

* The “Reptilian” (Old) Brain: Also known as the R Complex controls our basic survival functions, such as hunger, breathing, flight-or-fight reactions and staying out of harm’s way.

According to Erik du Plessis in The Advertising Mind, the “old” brain rules all rapid decision-making, including buying decisions.

To strengthen your brand, loyalty and sales, you must understand your customers’ “reptilian hot buttons.” Below are top 7 critical insights as to what those buying "hot buttons" are and how to leverage them in your marketing.

  1. The old brain is driven by emotions.

    Our old brain operates on autopilot – ie., a stimulus response mechanism. Emotions are automatic responses to sensory stimuli. The smell of coffee, the sound of the ocean, the view of a setting sun … all trigger an unconscious emotional response.

    Emotions play a similar critical role in our buying decisions. Business Pundit (www.businesspundit.com) reminds us that “in an oversupplied economy, customer feelings drive purchase decisions and profitability. Your new imperative is to assess and appeal to your customer’s feelings. Welcome to The Feelings Economy.”

    Key lesson: The more senses you trigger and associate with your products/services, the more you will appeal to your customers’ emotions and influence their buying behavior.

  2. The old brain “decides” on the basis of the gain vs. pain tradeoff.

    The two basic drivers of all behavior and decisions are: to seek pleasure and avoid pain. According to Kevin Hogan, author, The Science of Influence, “most people react to the fear of loss and the threat of pain in a much more profound way than they do for gain.”

    Consumers focus more on not getting hurt over the need to feel great when making decisions. “They overemphasize the importance of pain by about 2.5:1 in decision making.” How to overcome your customer’s “distorted” gain vs. pain trade-off?

    Key lesson: Marketing guru, Seth Godin illustrates through his Joy/Cash Curve that high value purchases often trigger increasing amounts of buying pain. His solution: add more joy and pleasure to the buying process, such as he did in his work with Lexus. According to Godin, when you make buying pleasurable, you actually reset the customer’s “value meter.” How are you adding more joy to your buying process?

  3. The old brain is highly influenced by beginnings and endings.

    Research confirms that the beginning and ending of an event or experience alters our perception of the entire experience. Our initial impression becomes the “filter” for how we perceive what is to follow. The most recent experience leaves a final impression with greater weight.

    Key lesson: In marketing, for your message to be accepted, it is critical to leave a strong first impression – like a compelling story, a big smile, etc. Also, if a customer has a pleasant or unpleasant experience with your product or company, that most recent experience will influence future purchases more than all other experiences combined. What impression are you leaving with your prospects in the first few seconds or words? How has your last customer contact enhanced or jeopardized repeat sales?

  4. The old brain is visually oriented and responds rapidly to images.

    From the moment we are born, we are able to see shadows and associate meaning to them. In communications, we are told that 65% of our how our message is received is through our physiology (or visual cues). Study after study has shown that someone’s first impression of you is based on your physical appearance.

    In each instance, it is our old brain rapidly responding to visual cues, not words. Words are the realm of the “new” brain and are secondary in the buying process.

    Key learning: Enhance and deliver your core marketing message visually – eg., the design of your product, images in an ad, external packaging, etc. Where can you visually strengthen your brand and emotional connection with customers?

  5. The old brain perceives the “pain of buying” in relative, not absolute, terms.

    Neuroscience tells us that the “pain” in the old brain is most activated with price. Not in absolute terms but rather in relative terms – such as fairness vs. unfairness, or alternative uses of dollars. Therefore, how you present or frame your prices could be driving customers away. How can you minimize activating the pain trigger with your price?

    Key lesson: From various posts by Roger Dooley (Neurosciencemarketing.com), key strategies include:

    * Emphasize “sales” prices (which does not activate pain in the old brain)

    * Utilize “package” pricing over pricing of individual components (the latter shows greater “pain activity in the old brain)

    * Series of small “bite-size’ investments in place of one large investment (Netflix)

  6. The old brain understands only what is tangible, physical and concrete.

    According to Patrick Renvoise, author, Neuromarketing: Is There A “Buy Button” In The Brain?, the old brain is constantly scanning for what is familiar and tangible. It does not understand numbers or abstract terms, like “integrated approach” or “comprehensive solution.”

    Key lesson: To speak to the old brain, you must use tangible “benefits” -- ie., what a customer will see, feel, hear, taste or smell as a result. Eg., a promise of“greater happiness” is gibberish to the old brain. Instead, tell your prospect how he/she will wake up every morning with a smile. Or use metaphors (such as referring to your service as the “Cadillac” offering) to make your benefits more tangible.

  7. The old brain’s control over buying decisions varies from culture to culture.

    According to market researcher, Clotaire Rapaille, some cultures are very reptilian, such as the American culture. Americans want instant gratification. They have a bias for action. Other cultures – such as the French and German -- are more cortex, control-oriented. Their bias is thinking over doing.

    Key lesson: Adapt your marketing communications to each culture and what part of their brain drives buying decisions. Use emotional appeal with Americans; use logic with European cultures.

Denise Corcoran - CEO, The Empowered Business (tm) - assists CEOs, executives and business owners in taking a quantum leap from the ordinary to extraordinary … from unrealized dreams to mastering their destiny … from slow growth to exponential results. A business & leadership coach, growth strategist and Master NLP Practioner, Denise's unique "inside out" approach can help you and your organization transform untapped potential into profits and results.

Subscribe to her monthly ezine - The Empowered Business (tm) - and learn the legendary mindset, strategy and performance secrets of top business achievers.
http://www.goldbar.net/go.php?id=7996&c=1738&ac=ezar

Source: https://Top7Business.com/?expert=Denise-Corcoran

Article Submitted On: August 17, 2007