Psychology:
Psychological theories
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1.
Buy first, ask questions later
Nick Chater, Admap, March 2010, pp.24-25
If we consciously mulled over every decision when we do our weekly shop, we would need a supercomputer to cope. But this is not how the brain works. Instead, we use heuristics, such as 'buy the same t
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2.
Deeply understanding the mind to unmask the inner human
Katja Bressette, ESOMAR, Qualitative, Marrakech, November 2009
Developing successful marketing strategies requires the unmasking of the inner human using appropriate methodologies. This requires an understanding of how the mind works – how humans process informat ...
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3.
Sustainability as a monetary brand value - A social-psychological and economical frame-work
Stephan Götze, ESOMAR, Congress, Montreux, September 2009
This presentation describes the results of basic research regarding the relation between sustainability and brands in general and the relevance of sustainability for brand equity in particular. The un ...
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4.
Darwin or lose? - Evolutionary modeling in the context of recession
Miquel Pardina, ESOMAR, Congress, Montreux, September 2009
Darwinism is relevant to Marketing Science as far as emotions are concerned. Biological and evolutionary thinking explain why universal emotions take place and how they affect our daily lives. Being a ...
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5.
'I don't like it, but I don't know why'
Simon Vangelder, Market Research Society, Annual Conference, 2007
Most marketers and researchers have experienced situations where a market or a brand behaves in a manner they cannot decipher. Market research, both past and present, continues to highlight dissatisfa ...
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6.
'In me 'ead son'
Mark Earls, Market Research Society, Annual Conference, 2007
This paper is about how dominant marketing thinking shapes our underlying assumptions about human behaviour, and continues to predominate in the face of the challenges at the current 'inflexion point' ...
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7.
Getting to Next - The Psychology of Influence
Futures Company, Yankelovich MONITOR think tank, 2007
This 2007 Yankelovich MONITOR paper states that currently, the most important and influential premise that consumers bring to their interactions with world around them, in general, and the marketplace
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8.
Interconnectivity is not the same as enlightenment
David Penn, Admap, May 2006, Issue 472, pp.37-38
David Penn, managing director of Conquest Research, says we should distinguish between brain science, which is a new way of understanding the consumer mind, and neuromarketing, which through observing ...
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9.
Getting to Next - Conformity Motivation as a Marketing Tool
Futures Company, Yankelovich MONITOR think tank, 2006
Social Proof, a persuasion tactic with a long and storied history, is evidence that I should buy or own or use a product based on the fact that other people buy or own or use that product. The proof o
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10.
How to use the senses for a better brand experience
Mike Flynn, Admap, May 2005, Issue 461, pp.31-33
Mike Flynn, principal of Flynn Consulting, explains how the brain processes sensory stimuli, and why this is important to marketers. He discusses the thinking behind sense-based brand experiences and ...
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11.
Neuromarketing: the future of consumer research?
Dr David Lewis and Peter Laybourne, Admap, May 2005, Issue 461, pp.28-30
Because the vast majority of our cognitions, including decision making and emotional reactions, occur below the level of conscious awareness, Peter Laybourne and Dr David Lewis (from Neuroco, a neurom ...
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12.
More science: more sense, or nonsense?
Tamsin Addison, Admap, May 2005, Issue 461, pp.24-27
Dr Tamsin Addison, head of research at RSM Robson Rhodes Business Consulting, reviews the current neuromarketing literature and investigates how, and with what effect, neuromarketing is being used. Sh ...
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13.
Advertisers' new insight into the brain
Erik du Plessis, Admap, May 2005, Issue 461, pp.20-23
Erik du Plessis, CEO of Millward Brown South Aftrica, believes that new brain-scanning techniques and new thinking on emotion are revolutionising advertising practices. Using the theories of the neuro ...
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14.
Why grey matter matters
Roderick White, Admap, May 2005, Issue 461, pp.18
In this introduction to Admap’s focus on ‘the consumer brain’, Roderick White argues that many recent insights into how the brain processes and stores advertising (or fails to) resonate with earlier t ...
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15.
The mind, the brain and the media
John Svendsen and Sue Elms, Admap, April 2005, Issue 460, pp.28-31
Sue Elms and John Svendsen, from Carat Insight, describe a planning framework that has been developed from current thinking on communication processing. They introduce the concept of hierarchical res ...
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16.
Grow up: it's time to play
Sean Pillot de Chenecey, Young Consumers, Vol.6, Issue 2 (2005), pp.40-43
Discusses the psychology of play, and argues that `play’ values are increasingly being adopted (by adults as well as children) as a corrective to `work’ and stress. Various psychologists’ theories are ...
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17.
Communicating with the fragmented consumer
Chris Hackley, Admap, March 2005, Issue 459, pp.41-43
Chris Hackley, professor of marketing at Royal Holloway College, London University, argues that today social identity is a 'pick'n'mix stall', where consumers express their identity through a range of ...
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18.
How to measure brand emotion
Larry Percy, Rolf Randrup and Flemming Hansen, Admap, November 2004, Issue 455, pp.32-34
Larry Percy and Flemming Hansen, from Copenhagen Business School, and Rolf Randrup, TNS/Gallup, contend that by measuring the emotional associations that consumers have with brands, managers will have ...
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19.
Consumer decision-making
Wendy Gordon, Admap, October 2004, Issue 454, pp.74-76
Wendy Gordon, founder and partner at Acacia Avenue research and strategy consultancy, confronts some traditional theories of consumer decision-making and explains how recent research is modifying our ...
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20.
Mass marketing, RIP?
Mark Earls, Admap, October 2004, Issue 454, pp.62-64
Mark Earls, executive planning director at Ogilvy, argues that the mass (as in mass marketing) has not been usurped by the individual, as is the popular view. He shows that the mechanism that drives ...
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21.
How to understand consumers
Admap, October 2004, Issue 454, pp.59
In this introduction to 6 articles focusing on understanding consumers, the author muses on how little we know about how buying decisions are made and how many of us still rely on outdated theories.
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22.
Best in Brief:Success that lasts
Frank Auton, Market Leader, Issue 25, Summer 2004, pp.62
Review of article in Harvard Buusiness Review. Article analyses `success’ and argues that it must be more than single-minded ambition, which leads to dissatisfaction and stress. Enduring success requi ...
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23.
Making data dance. Lessons on the quality of life
Dieter Korczak, ESOMAR, Responsible Marketing, Berlin, May 2004
What are the environmental, social and economic dimensions of sustainable development at a regional level? This key question led to the search for an indicator system that could measure it. The author ...
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24.
The herd perspective
Mark Earls, Admap, April 2004, Issue 449, pp.14-16
Mark Earls, Ogilvy executive planning director, argues that human behaviour is better understood by thinking of consumers as herd animals (rather than individual decision makers). He then goes on to ...
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25.
Brand dreams and brain trash
Mark Oldridge, Market Research Society, Annual Conference, 2004
Argues (in some detail) that the model which underpins all current theories of the brand, that it is a representational image or memory inside the heads of individuals which is modified by information ...
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26.
Bringing reality to the dream - the myth of decline
Paul Flatters and Charlotte Cornish, Market Research Society, Annual Conference, 2004
Argues that the pessimistic view of the future prevalent in many current academic and sociological books is mistaken. Evidence from work at the Future Foundation has, on the contrary, shown that (at l ...
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27.
Understanding motivation
Admap, January 2004, Issue 446, pp.13
This ‘Best Practice’ looks at ‘why we buy what we do’. Although consumer motivation is an extremely complex field, this paper briefly guides the reader through the psychological and need state theori ...
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28.
Changing consumers: rethinking your strategy
Chris McDonald, Admap, May 2003, Issue 439, pp.22-25
Chris McDonald asks whether it is time to revolutionise the approach to marketing due to the rapid increase in the number of TV stations, magazines and growth in advertising expenditure. The number of ...
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29.
Is cognitive processing the right dimension?
Bruce Hall, Admap, January 2003, Issue 435, pp.39-41
Bruce Hall contributes to the debate on the significance of low and high involvement processing of advertising messages by suggesting that it is a problem of measurement. This particularly applies in ...
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30.
LIP to HIP: responding to changing views
David Penn, Admap, November 2002, Issue 433, pp.32-33
David Penn review the current debate on the theories of 'active' and 'passive' learning from the viewpoint of a pragmatic research practitioner rather than an advertising theorist. He believes that t ...
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