Two years ago I got a different cell phone, with a new number. I had trouble remembering it until my wife pointed out that it's composed of the month and year that I turned twelve, the year I graduated high school, and the year I was born. Since then, I've never forgotten it.
This is an excellent example of how memory works.
In order for any new information to "stick" when it hits our minds, we associate the new with something we already know. All successful memorization is associative.
So is all decision making, which is an important point for advertisers.Each person's opinion is built upon what she's already accepted as fact, and can retrieve from memory.
Sometimes she will accept new information and come to a new conclusion, which appears to contradict the earlier opinion. It doesn't. The old opinion was based on the old information. The new opinion is based on additional information that complements the old.
And when she is presented with new information that contradicts the old? She refuses to accept it. "This does not compute." It must be a lie.
As marketing guru Al Ries said in his recent Advertising Age article, The Sad And Unnecessary Decline Of Saturn:
"When you believe in something, what you generally do when faced with facts that seem to contradict your beliefs is to fault the execution, not the strategy.
Conventional wisdom dies hard. You can defend any strategy by pointing out flaws in its execution."
The Clarence Thomas confirmation hearings had opinions divided according to gender. Without exception men believed him, women believed her. Lorena Bobbitt's trial, and her subsequent acquittal, had all of the women in our office standing and cheering. Our female news director shouted "There IS justice." The O.J. Simpson verdict split the bias along racial lines. Whites believed him guilty. Blacks believed him to have been "set up."
Also another way to remember something is when you keep repiting it a couple of times.Remember repetition is the mother of retention.
Comment By: JUANA VAZQUEZ | 9/24/05 at 12:00 AM Politics, Religion, and AdvertisingI certainly agree with the premise of the article, but I'm not sure what to do with the information.
I agree that people's perceptions are based on their personal experiences, and in order for them to change their perceptions, their experiences have to change, but - so what? How does that help me in my advertising forays? If people don't know me, and have had no personal contact with me, how do I affect their perceptions?
Just throwing that out there.
Karla, the point of the article is that you must ALWAYS deliver what you promise in your ads.
In the case of a new business, customers having NO personal experience can be a good thing. Whatever you choose to reveal about yourself will go unchallenged.
What should you say? Well, what do your existing customers believe they get from you that they can't get anywhere else? Build on that.
You'll find new customers just like those who already do business with you by focusing on what your current customer base already likes, and promising that to anyone else who shops with you.
Then, be very sure to deliver it.
In terms of what to say, testimonials have a lot of weight when people don't know anything about you. Can you incorporate the comments of satisfied customers into your advertising?
Chuck ...