ABSTRACT

Neuroscientific research shows that the great majority of purchase decisions are irrational and driven by subconscious mechanisms in our brains. This is hugely disruptive to the rational, logical arguments of traditional communication and marketing practices and we are just starting to understand how organizations must adapt their strategies. This book explains the subconscious behavior of the "neuro-consumer" and shows how major international companies are using these findings to cast light on their own consumers’ behavior.

Written in plain English for business and management readers with no scientific background, it focuses on:

  • how to adapt marketing and communication to the subconscious and irrational behaviors of consumers;
  • the direct influence of the primary senses (sight, hearing, smell, taste, touch) on purchasing decisions and the perception of communications by customers’ brains;
  • implications for innovation, packaging, price, retail environments and advertising;
  • the use of "nudges" and artifices to increase marketing and communication efficiency by making them neuro-compatible with the brain’s subconscious expectations;
  • the influence of social media and communities on consumers’ decisions – when collective conscience is gradually replacing individual conscience and recommendation becomes more important than communication; and
  • the ethical limits and considerations that organizations must heed when following these principles.

Authored by two globally recognized leaders in business and neuroscience, this book is an essential companion to marketers and brand strategists interested in neuroscience and vital reading for any advanced student or researcher in this area.

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

part I|48 pages

The advent of the neuro-consumer

chapter Chapter 1|5 pages

From philosophical theory to neuroscience

chapter Chapter 2|4 pages

Consumer behavior studied by marketing research

chapter Chapter 4|6 pages

The brain

Underestimated by science for centuries

chapter Chapter 5|10 pages

Neuromarketing and the neuro-consumer

Two 21st-century inventions

part II|58 pages

Understanding the neuro-consumer’s brain

chapter Chapter 7|7 pages

The neuro-consumer’s brain

A complex organ

chapter Chapter 8|14 pages

Is the brain free or programmed?

chapter Chapter 9|14 pages

How age and gender condition the brain

chapter Chapter 10|7 pages

How memory conditions the brain

chapter Chapter 11|14 pages

The influence of emotions and desires

part III|54 pages

The neuro-consumer’s brain influenced by the senses

chapter Chapter 12|10 pages

The neuro-consumer and the sense of sight

chapter Chapter 13|8 pages

The neuro-consumer and the sense of hearing

chapter Chapter 14|11 pages

The neuro-consumer and the sense of smell

chapter Chapter 15|12 pages

The neuro-consumer and the sense of touch

chapter Chapter 16|11 pages

The neuro-consumer and the sense of taste

part IV|46 pages

The neuro-consumer’s brain influenced by innovation

chapter Chapter 17|11 pages

The influence of innovation, design and packaging

chapter Chapter 18|8 pages

The influence of the price of products and services

chapter Chapter 19|17 pages

The influence of experiential and sensory marketing

chapter Chapter 20|8 pages

The salesman faced with the neuro-consumer

part V|56 pages

The neuro-consumer’s brain influenced by communication

chapter Chapter 21|16 pages

Advertising language

chapter Chapter 23|19 pages

The subliminal influence of brands

part VI|36 pages

The neuro-consumer’s brain influenced by the digital revolution

chapter Chapter 25|14 pages

The brain and the emergence of social networks

chapter |3 pages

Conclusion