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Buyology: Truth and Lies About Why We Buy

Buyology: Truth and Lies About Why We Buy
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Manufacturer: Random House Audio
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Buyology: Truth and Lies About Why We Buy Features

ISBN13: 9780739376010
Condition: NEW
Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.
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Additional Buyology: Truth and Lies About Why We Buy Information

Based on the single largest neuromarketing study ever conducted, Buyology reveals surprising truths about what attracts our attention and captures our dollars. Among the long-held assumptions and myths Buyology confronts:

Sex doesn’t sell - people in skimpy clothing and provocative poses don’t persuade us to buy products.

• Despite government bans, subliminal advertising is ubiquitous — from bars to supermarkets to highway billboards.

• Color can be so iconic that the sight of the robin’s egg blue of a certain famous jewelry brand significantly raises women’s heart rates.

• Companies shamelessly borrow from religion and ritual — like the ritual, made up by a bored American bartender, of drinking a Corona with a lime — to seduce our interest.

• “Cool” brands, like iPods, trigger our mating instincts.

The fact is, so much of what we thought we knew about why we buy is wrong. Drawing on a three-year, 7 million dollar, cutting-edge brain scan study of over 2000 people from around the world, marketing guru Martin Lindstrom’s revelations will captivate anyone who’s been seduced —or turned off— by marketers relentless efforts to win our loyalty, our money and our minds.

Packed with entertaining stories about how we respond to such well-known products and companies as Marlboro, Calvin Klein, Ford, and American Idol, Buyology is a fascinating tour into the mind of today’s consumer.

 

What Customers Say About Buyology: Truth and Lies About Why We Buy:

Over all, marketing campaign/stories can be just as intriging, fascinating, manuipulating, interesting and "I can't believe that", as any NY Times bestseller. I selected for this for my bookclub read and it was loved by everyone. Created an awesome discussion. Not many people are aware of how marketing/business development works. This book was a beginners glimpse into that world.

It says nothing about the impact these images might have on non-smokers and especially people in the tender age of being potential smokers (teenagers). But how can Lindstrom jump to such general conclusions, if the test did not include non-smokers. If you're seriously interested in the irrational, read Dan Ariely's Predicatbly Irrational or Malcolm Gladwell's Blink. Very self-indulgent and not as scientific as it claims to be.For example, the brain scans that show that smokers' addiction center turns on when they see the images of death on the packages makes Lindstrom jump to the conclusion, that this kind of prevention-advertising actually induces people to buy more cigarettes. The experiment was only done with smokers, who probably have some sort of conditioning and who relate those images to the sensation they experience when smoking.

Through this 3 year and $7 million study, sales professionals have the ability to understand why people buy what they buy and just as importantly what they do not buy.Lindstrom presents a powerful and complex subject in a fairly non-complex read. His research spans several geographic regions as well as includes a diversity of testing population. From Lindstrom's research, this message actually encourages people to smoke not discourage them.

Martin Lindstrom has done the same in this book to separate fact from fiction. Using brain research and technology, Lindstrom shows neurological evidence about how the mind makes decisions specific to buying or not buying something. Sherlock Holmes understood how to take the complex and see the simplicity.

He compares this data to current acceptable marketing and sales beliefs.One of my most favorite examples is the message on cigarette products and how they are hazardous to your health. For those in sales, understanding the why behind the purchasing decision is necessary if they wish to increase sales and be The Red Jacket in a sea of gray suits Sales success is very much dependent upon buying success.

Yet, much has been written both truthfully and untruthfully about why people buy.

Also, having just devoured another book right after this one, I realized that this book rubbed me the wrong way because the author is a classic extrovert and assumes the world and everyone else's brains function similarly. The author goes off on an odd religion/marketing tanget that doesn't really mesh well or prove anything. I also felt like the book was a big sales pitch, but I wasn't sure what I was supposed to buy at the end of it. It is interesting to consider how what we really prefer and what we SAY we prefer can be very different. It is also interesting to think about how the messages we see affect our desires (we are reminded by things and we use our own associations to decide how we process the information, we don't take away the message that the ad is supposedly giving us - like in the "anti-smoking" ads).However, this book could have been just as informative and a lot more interesting if it were halved in length.

The book's premise sounded interesting, unfortunately the book did not live upto the premise's promise. A slight book, about a topic that deserved much more research, and a more rigorous and scientific approach in the analysis. This 'slightness' perhaps is inevitable when written by someone who (I think) thinks that he is a lot smarter than he is.

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