How advertising really works
Derren Brown is a British “mentalist” and entertainer. He has a number of fascinating videos over on You Tube, including this classic – quite simply, the most persuasive illustration of nonconscious processing I have ever seen. When you click on the video below, you may have to follow the link over to You Tube to watch it. Please do so, then come back to discuss. Be sure to watch to the end – it’s worth the investment.
Welcome back. What lessons can we draw from this clever experiment?
First, nonconscious processing exists. Our brains are busy taking in stimuli all around us that never reach conscious awareness. As Derren Brown says toward the end of the video, “if you knew the amount of effort we’ve gone into to make this work, you’d be absolutely flabbergasted.” But advertisers and marketers go into this amount of effort every day. That’s why it’s a trillion dollar a year business. And much of that messaging enters our brains with about as much awareness as the harps and bears and “zoo” stimuli entered the brains of the advertising guys in the video. Clearly, they were unaware of any of it.
Second, nonconscious processing is not susceptible to self-reporting research techniques. Imagine a focus group with these two fellows following the experiment (assuming of course they had not been debriefed). I’m sure they would have provided wonderful and detailed explanations of how they came to their ideas. But those reports would have told us next to nothing about the effectiveness of the stimuli that actually influenced them.
Third, repetition matters. This was one of the most interesting aspects of the video to me. Notice how many variants of the key stimuli the unwitting participants were exposed to. The underlying psychological processes at play are all forms of conditioning, and all conditioning requires repetition to achieve its magic.
Fourth, subliminal stimuli don’t make us do anything, but they do impact us when WE decide to do something. What we see here is not a case of zombie programming. The participants did not start thinking about dead animals on their own. They were presented with a specific task, and in using their full conscious processing capabilities to perform that task, they activated and engaged the subliminal ideas their brains had “taken in” and “filed away” without conscious awareness. If they had not been asked to design a taxidermy store logo, they would not have been drawing bears with wings playing harps and sitting on clouds.
Each of these lessons has important implications for advertising and marketing research, and reinforce many of the themes and ideas we have been discussing in this blog. Let’s review:
1. Research methodologies that focus only on people’s explicit evaluations of advertising are missing something important, the nonconscious effects of stimuli on conscious attitudes and behavior.
2. Although the conscious brain is not aware of its own nonconscious processing, these processes do leave clear markers of their presence in neural activations and physiological reactions. Capturing and interpreting these markers is a necessary component of any thorough market research methodology.
3. Nonconscious influences are subtle and are best measured over time. Their full effect may not be apparent from a single exposure because they trigger conscious attitude and behavior change mainly by accumulating unnoticed over time. Getting a “snapshot” of nonconscious effects is better than not measuring them at all, but to be really effective, research measuring nonsconscious effects must be ongoing so trends can be tracked and responded to.
4. Measuring the experience of a stimulus only tells a part of the story. Imagine we were measuring the neural and physiological responses of Derren Brown’s advertising guys as they were driven by the zoo. Would we have seen attention and emotional response? Would we have observed later explicit recall or recognition of the experience? Probably not. Yet the experience did have a huge effect later, just when Derren Brown wanted it to, when it was activated by the explicit cognitive process of designing the requested logo. Similarly, to fully understand advertising effectiveness, we need to measure its impact on decisions, actions, and later cognitive processes (e.g., attention, attraction, memory activation at time of sale), not just reactions to the ad itself.
5. We find here some persuasive evidence in favor of the “low attention” model of advertising effectiveness discussed in our post on Robert Heath. Conscious attention to the relevant stimuli was low at best, yet those stimuli impacted choices and behaviors in a huge way, allowing Derren Brown to “predict” what the participants must have thought was a completely internally-derived result. Perhaps we need to refine our research terminology when we discuss attention and advertising effectiveness. The attention we see operating in this video is a kind of recognition or impression that precedes – in neural response time – traditional conscious attention. Indeed, it may not trigger conscious attention at all. So what do we call it … pre-attention, attraction, impression, elicitation? Language matters, especially when old words used in new ways can cause as much confusion as insight.
6. Finally, I saw some indirect evidence in this video for Robert Heath’s point that more attention (explicit attention) may actually be detrimental to advertising effectiveness. Suppose the two advertising guys had consciously recalled the zoo they passed and some of the other stimuli they observed? They might have censored their “animal heaven” idea, because they would not want to appear unoriginal. Similarly, rationally dissecting an advertising “pitch” may reveal it to be as simplistic and non-rational as most pitches are. From the advertisers point of view, it’s much better to have people “primed” with diffuse, nonconscious good feelings about your brand than to be thinking what a silly argument you made in your ad.
Thanks to Derren Brown for providing such a great educational tool for understanding how our brains – and advertising – really work.