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ARTICLES
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Home page » Articles » Marketing strategies articles » Image and Emotional Marketing
Image and Emotional Marketing
Companies are increasingly turning to image and emotional marketing
to win customer mind share and heart share. Although this has
gone on from the beginning of time, today it is accelerating. The old
marketing mantra advised companies to outperform competitors on
some benefit and to promote this benefit: “Volvo is the safest car”;
“Tide cleans better than any other detergent”; “Wal-Mart sells at the
lowest prices.” Going under the name of benefit marketing, it assumed
that consumers were more influenced by rational arguments
than by emotional appeals. But in today’s economy, companies
rapidly copy any competitor’s advantage until it no longer remains.
Volvo’s benefit of making the safest car means less when customers
start seeing most cars as safe.
More companies are now trying to develop images that move
the heart instead of the head. Those addressed to the head tend to
state the same benefits. So companies are trying to sell an attitude
like Nike’s “Just do it.” Celebrities are shown wearing “milk mustaches.”
Prudential wants people to have a “piece of the rock.” These
campaigns work more on affect than cognition.
Companies are turning to anthropologists and psychologists
to develop messages that touch emotions more deeply. One approach
is to build the image of the product around some deep archetype—
the hero, antihero, siren, wise old man—that resides in
the collective unconscious.
You can readily find out how your customers and noncustomers
see your company and your competitors. A marketing research
firm would ask: “How old a person is this company?” (The
answer may be a “teenager” in the case of Apple Computer and a
“grandfather” in the case of IBM.) Or “What animal does this company
remind you of?” (Hope for a lion or a monkey, not an elephant
or a dinosaur.) Article added at: 11.17.2006 by Emanuel Julo
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