How to nudge
When a brand is successful in
gaining market share it shows up as small changes
in buying propensity across many consumers.
Based on this empirical fact Professor Andrew
Ehrenberg described successful advertising as
‘nudging’ (in contrast to persuading
or converting).
Given this is what happens when advertising
works, it’s odd when campaigns try to hit
consumers with a sledgehammer approach - by this
I mean some advertising campaigns ask for a leap
not a nudge. The whole idea of a USP is
about hitting consumers with a super compelling
argument why they should radically change their
buying behaviour to favour that brand.
I suppose that some advertisers feel that a
sledgehammer gives best chance of achieving a
nudge, given that lots of other things may go
wrong with the campaign (e.g. the media
strategy). But as most consumers
aren’t going to make a huge change in their
behaviour, and they know it, how do they react to
claims telling them they should ? For
example, if you overtly tell people they are
doing the wrong thing and should change.
The risk is that many people simply reject the
message - they conclude that the message is wrong
not them. Cognitive dissonance in action.
So it’s not true that USP sledgehammers
necessarily produce bigger nudges.
If you want to nudge maybe you should ask for
something small – ‘please consider
trying our brand, it’s nice’.
Sounds wimpy but it fits with the behavioural
evidence.
