Brain Blogger
 
 
June 13, 2013
 
Neuroscience in Marketing – Delving Into the Consumer’s Brain
By _Lorena  Nessi_ (http://brainblogger.com/author/lorenanessi/) 
 
Neuromarketers don’t just want to get into your heads,  they want to get 
into your your brain, even if they have to rewire it in the  process! When we 
think about brands, something happens in our brains — there’s  electrical 
activity; a measurable response. The technology used to monitor this  
response is becoming increasingly refined, and as it does so, neuromarketing’s  
grasp on our most fundamental responses to advertising and products is  
tightening.

 
It is widely accepted within the marketing world that the vast majority of  
advertising content is processed subconsciously, hence people themselves 
are not  going to be the best judges of the influence which marketing is 
having upon  them. The _techniques of neuromarketing_ 
(http://brainblogger.com/2012/02/12/the-brains-buying-power/)  seek to peer 
into the recesses of  the 
human brain itself, in order to expose the truth about what viewing adverts  
does to people. 
Neuroscience offers brands and products the opportunity to analyze — with  
increasing precision — the brain’s direct responses to stimuli. Of course, 
such  technology can be put towards convincing us to buy products or to like 
ads, as  well as merely measuring our responses to existing material. 
Indeed, this is  already being done as the results from the first generation of 
neuromarketing  are applied to the next wave of branding and advertising. 
The first academic reference to neuromarketing was published a decade ago.  
Professor Read Montague suggested increased performance of one product over 
 another if its brand was more recognized by the consumer. This was based 
on a  study in which an _fMRI machine_ 
(http://brainblogger.com/2012/11/11/opioid-addiction-inherent-differences-in-brain-functions/)
  was used to 
monitor the frontal lobe of the  brain, the area known to be responsible for 
our 
thinking, planning and  decision-making. 
The participants of the study preferred Coca-Cola if they knew they were  
drinking it, in comparison with Pepsi, which they reported as tastier if they 
 did not know which one was which. Coca-Cola has recently caused headlines 
in the  business world by announcing that all of its next generation of 
quantitative  advert performance tests will be conducted using neuromarketing 
technology,  specifically facial coding. 
Today, the techniques for gathering data from our brains have been mostly  
developed in order to analyze consumers’ decision-making behavior. These 
include  the brain imaging techniques: 
    *   Electroencephalography (_EEG_ 
(http://brainblogger.com/2011/03/31/how-to-recharge-the-batteries-in-our-brain/)
 ), which measures the 
subconscious brain response to  stimuli directly 
    *   Eye tracking, to analyze visual focus 
    *   Galvanic Skin Response (GSR), which measures the brain’s response 
to  stimuli in the skin for the identification of emotional or physiological  
arousal.
Facial coding is the latest trend in the world of neuromarketing, and  
involves using software designed using expert guidance to pinpoint fleeting  
moments of ‘true’ emotion which pass over consumers’ faces during engagement  
with a product or ad. 
One risk of neuromarketing is that it may be used specifically to target  
desirable subconscious responses in the consumer, independently of their 
actual  conscious recognition of this influence. To an extent, this already 
occurs with  traditional advertising, but the degree to which neuromarketing 
might enhance  and add sophistication to the advertiser’s ability to bypass the 
conscious mind  in evoking a response raises many controversial questions 
about freedom of  thought, as well as invasion of privacy. While some present 
it as a harmless  opportunity for increasing the popularity of a brand, 
others see it as a  dangerous encroachment on the free will of individuals in 
society. 
It seems a somewhat bitter irony that in a culture already suffocating in 
the  ubiquitous presence of _advertising _ 
(http://brainblogger.com/2008/05/19/a-tv-as-you-doctor/) in almost every aspect 
of life, be it billboards,  
TV, radio, the sides of vehicles, in our media and the like, that marketers 
are  now looking for ways to get advertising right inside our heads, in order 
to  advance the most invasive product placements of all time. 
References 
Eser,  Z., Isin, F., & Tolon, M. (2011). Perceptions of marketing 
academics,  neurologists, and marketing professionals about neuromarketing 
Journal of 
Marketing Management, 27 (7-8),  854-868 DOI: _10.1080/02672571003719070_ 
(http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02672571003719070)  
Morin,  C. (2011). Neuromarketing: The New Science of Consumer Behavior 
Society, 48 (2), 131-135 DOI: _10.1007/s12115-010-9408-1_ 
(http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12115-010-9408-1)  
Murphy,  E., Illes, J., & Reiner, P. (2008). Neuroethics of neuromarketing 
Journal of Consumer Behaviour, 7

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