Personal Project Communication - Lecture week 6
J. de Boer MSc
Automatic, stereotyped behavior is prevalent in much human action, because in many cases, it is the most efficient form of behaving and in other cases it is simply necessary. You and I exist in an extraordinarily complicated
environment, easily the most rapidly moving and complex that has ever existed on this planet.
To deal with it, we need shortcuts. We can't be expected to recognize and analyze all the aspects in each person, event, and situation we encounter in even one day. (we don't have the time, energy, or capacity for it)
No one is better than you at persuading yourself to change!
Vulcano Insurance
Why smoking is bad arguments
Buy this product and follow me to the Promised Land!
Basic needs?
Product-irrelevant needs are promised! (social, emotional, sexual)
Seduce to reach desirable goal!
PL directly aimed at creating strongest reward response in the brain of the perceiver.
Even though claims made are exaggerated or obvious lies
Note: Even unachievable desires are strong motivators!
Just do it
also: liking
"It's amazing how complete is the delusion that beauty is goodness." (Leo Tolstoy, The Kreutzer Sonata)
Averageness
How prototypical of representative a face is
Symmetry
The degree to which a face is symmetrical on the vertacial axis
Sexual dimorphism
The hormonal expression of sex-specific features
40 faces around the world
Science of Attraction
When consumers are choosing between two similar products, introducing a decoy can push people towards the desired direction
The effect explained
It is more difficult to choose between two equally preferred options.
(adding decoy reduces stress reactions by lowering the feeling of conflicting information)
No matter how well-informed you are about this technique, it is almost undetectable.
Anything ca be advertised as a decoy (even a politician)
Always use the decoy as the least-favoured option
Works best in high-quality vs low-quality products.
The Decoy Effect, or How to Win an Election
by Shankar Vedantam
Take a look at
the canteen or supermarket!
The more we see it, the more we like it
The mere-exposure effect is a psychological phenomenon by which people tend to develop a preference for things merely because they are familiar with them.
The effect has been demonstrated with many kinds of things, including words, Chinese characters, paintings, pictures of faces, geometric figures, and sounds.
In studies of interpersonal attraction, the more often someone sees a person, the more pleasing and likeable they find that person.
I'm moving to Johannesburg!
You need a pen + paper
REMEMBER
Which face correspondents with which name
RECALL
Write down the name of each character
How many correct?
Draw your preferred characters
How many of these do you prefer?
When a brand or product is seen as human-like,
people will like it more and feel closer to it.
What do you see?
The tendency to describe and visualise animals or non-living things using human characteristics.
Humans try to explain many events with Anthropo-morphism (forces of nature, behaviour of animals) by ascribing thoughts, needs, or intentionality to these events as if they were human.
We use it when we're little: stuffed animal, pets.
Feeling pity for Nemo
We keep using it.
Our brain continues to try to see things as human-like.
It makes us bond with objects. It makes it see more like us!
Futuristic Anthropomorphism?
People or symbols that signify legitimate authority trigger compliance and obedience
Academic titles
Impressive clothing
Expensive material goods
Rank, stature, age, position, experience, gender, abilities
Milgram (1963) was interested in researching how far people would go in obeying an instruction if it involved harming another person.
How easily could ordinary people be influenced into committing atrocities, for example, Germans in WWII.
People have an innate drive to
copy others' decisions and behaviour
Should the glass be half full or half empty? Fearing loss increases risk-taking: expecting gains increases safety behaviour
"Healthy lifestyles" campaigns are often framed negative.
The effect is dependent on conscious processing of the image.
Everything else being equal: People opt for certainty.
the certainty effect happens when people overweight outcomes that are considered certain relative to outcomes that are merely possible
- Li & Chapman (2009)
The FIRST Gamble is 61% chance of winning 65.000 Euros and 39% chance of winning 0.
The SECOND Gamble is 63% chance of winning 60.000 Euros and 37% chance of winning 0.
The FIRST Gamble is 98% chance of winning 65.000 Euros and 2% chance of winning 0.
The SECOND Gamble is 100% chance of winning 60.000 Euros and 0% chance of winning 0.
The FIRST Gamble is 61% chance of winning 65.000 Euros and 39% chance of winning 0.
The SECOND Gamble is 63% chance of winning 60.000 Euros and 37% chance of winning 0.
The FIRST Gamble is 98% chance of winning 65.000 Euros and 2% chance of winning 0.
The SECOND Gamble is 100% chance of winning 60.000 Euros and 0% chance of winning 0.
Both changes increased 37%
Certainty effect
happened
Situation 1 : both gambles risky
Most people prefer higher outcome
Situation 2 : Smaller outcome becomes certain
Most people prefer sure thing over risky option
People are drawn to certainty, giving higher preference to options that have high levels of certainty.
Often leads to risk/loss aversion
Loss aversion
People are 2x more sensitive for feelings of los, than to feelings of gain.
Once in a loss situation, we do everything to avoid it.
A loss or gain frame needs to be followed up by a clear "how-to" to move someone to act.
Some words are to intrinsically good,
it is hard to say 'no' to them
Equality
Freedom
Justice
Love
Wonderful
Happiness
Progress
Democracy
Terrorist
Inequality
Deterioration
Rivalry
Hypocrite
Sadness
Weakness
Incompetent
Note all God terms
(words with positive meaning)
in the speech by MLK.
Many words have inherent positive or negative connotations.
They refer to desires,
needs, and fears.
God terms & Devil terms play into our needs. Using these words triggers the respective needs in the target.
When God terms are popular for a while, the powers of their use deteriorates
(they can even turn into Devil terms!)
The saleswoman Brownie Wise first came up with the “Tupperware party” idea in the early 1950s. She suggested that Tupperware sellers would ask housewives around the United States to invite their girlfriends for a small gathering.
When the guests arrived the Tupperware seller should hand out small gifts (reciprocity).
Then the seller presented, along with the hostess, the amazing products. And the guests were invited to tell what benefits they could see with the products. (commitment and consistency)
The hostess received a small commission on sales, which made her more motivated to both speak well about the products and buy them herself. (authority)
Guests simply did not want to leave the event without buying something – but not because the products were so amazing, or that the seller was so good, but because they liked the hostess. (liking)
As soon as a couple of the guests bought the Tupperware products it simplified the buying decision for the rest of the group. (social proof)