For too long marketers have been asking the wrong question. If consumers make decisions unconsciously, why do we persist in asking them directly through traditional marketing research why they do what they do? They simply ca...

Buy Now From Amazon

For too long marketers have been asking the wrong question. If consumers make decisions unconsciously, why do we persist in asking them directly through traditional marketing research why they do what they do? They simply can't tell us because they don't really know. Before marketers develop strategies, they need to recognize that consumers have strategies too . . . human strategies, not consumer strategies. We need to go beyond asking why, and begin to ask how, behavior change occurs. Here, author Douglas Van Praet takes the most brilliant and revolutionary concepts from cognitive science and applies them to how we market, advertise, and consume in the modern digital age. Van Praet simplifies the most complex object in the known universe―the human brain―into seven codified actionable steps to behavior change. These steps are illustrated using real world examples from advertising, marketing, media, and business to consciously unravel what brilliant marketers and ad practitioners have long done intuitively, deconstructing the real story behind some of the greatest marketing and business successes in recent history, such as Nike's "Just Do It" campaign; "Got Milk?"; Wendy's "Where's the Beef?"; and the infamous Volkswagen "Punch Buggy" launch as well as their beloved "The Force" (Mini Darth Vader) Super Bowl commercial.

Similar Products

Brainfluence: 100 Ways to Persuade and Convince Consumers with NeuromarketingSeducing the Subconscious: The Psychology of Emotional Influence in AdvertisingHooked: How to Build Habit-Forming ProductsSocial Psychology: A Very Short Introduction (Very Short Introductions)Methods of Persuasion: How to Use Psychology to Influence Human BehaviorCognitive Neuroscience: A Very Short Introduction (Very Short Introductions)Humanizing Big Data: Marketing at the Meeting of Data, Social Science and Consumer Insight