


The area of digital marketing deeply studies and analyzes the mind of the consumer. Our goal is to connect with their thoughts and feelings, understanding what pushes them to buy a specific product or service and what the path they follow to make that decision is.
A belief shared by many marketing experts is that consumers are guided by emotional aspects when shopping. However, statistics don’t always reflect reality. For example, Statista published a survey about the reasons why consumers trust a store. The main factors were the prices (62%), being an ethical and responsible store (32%), and having good reviews on forums and blogs (25%).
These are important elements that come from a rational analysis, but frequently, the impulse to enter a store comes from other places: the color, slogan or the shop display caught our eye or we simply liked the song playing in the store. However, when asked on the survey, the users mention their rational reasoning with much more frequency than their irrational reasons.
To learn what happens in the mind of the consumer and how to get closer to them, neuromarketing offers very valuable tips.
The goal of neuromarketing is to dive deeper into the reaction of the consumer’s brain when they are facing an ad of a specific product or service. Companies want to provide added value through emotions in the buying process of their users. Digital marketing and neuromarketing work together to create emotional marketing strategies that facilitate the buying process.
Neuromarketing incorporates concepts of neuroscience, psychology, sociology, and anthropology. Some studies have drawn very useful conclusions for creating attractive campaigns. For example, colors. Each color is linked to a concrete feeling or mood and when we design a brand, we must keep the message and tone in mind and choose a palette of colors that aligns with our vision. If we don’t, a clash is created that many consumers unconsciously detect and reject.
The techniques of neuromarketing impact the buyer’s five senses. Storytelling is a very powerful weapon and it has been proven in ads that create a context and story, inserting the product in an emotional narrative that connects to their audience; it receives more consumer attention.
The study of the gaze provided very valuable insights for neuromarketing. The case of Roger Dooley is exemplary: he studied the visual behavior of spectators for an ad for baby products and analyzed where they looked. The results were clear: in ad 1, there was a baby looking at the product and in ad 2, the baby was looking at the camera (facing the audience). When the baby looked at the product, the spectators did as well and when the baby looked at them, they ignored the product. Neuromarketing taught us a lesson: the focus of your ad must be what you are trying to sell, not the actors or the decor.
These are examples of how neuromarketing unites emotions and buying behavior to create satisfactory user experiences that encourage conversion.
Neuromarketing uses various techniques and research methods to obtain results. In some cases, they are tools that come directly from neuroscience and in other cases, they are methods that are popular, but don’t have scientific backing.
We hope this article helped you understand the importance of using the resources around us to learn more about consumer behavior. This is the only way we’ll be able to capture consumer attention and have a competitive advantage above other brands.