Neuromarketing Study: How to Measure Advertising Effectiveness To Influence Consumer Behavior

Dmitry Gaiduk
3 min readJul 25, 2019

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Such rich and successful companies face a particularly sophisticated marketing challenge. The process of advertising production is fraught with nuances such as quality responsibility before millions of consumers, brand identity that should stay unwavering, and strong messages that should provoke the desired emotions ( Emotional Marketing: 7 Basic Emotions and How Brands Provoke them with Video Content).

When we talk about advertising, we assume a demonstration of some goods. In fact, when creating a good advertisement you need to keep in mind things of a completely different level.

Consumers don’t want things, they want to be happier, more successful, more loved.

Emotions often become a sticking point in marketing strategy. The success of a brand is impossible without a strong emotional appeal. Gillette never talks about washing or shaving, it talks about dreams and success. Nike doesn’t describe shoes, it talks about how to be unbeatable and unstoppable.

We at CoolTool have conducted a marketing case study of the recent much-talked-of Gillette and Nike ad campaigns to discover how they used emotions with strong messages: Gillette wants men to become better than they are ( WE BELIEVE: THE BEST MEN CAN BE campaign). Nike convinces women they can more then they think ( DREAM CRAZIER campaign).

Measuring the effectiveness of emotional marketing efforts requires more powerful research tools than surveys (Get to know more from our pdf ‘How And Why Measure Customers’ Emotional Responses’). We used a neuromarketing approach with its technologies to measure human emotions and subconscious reactions: Facial coding and implicit tests.

Based on our analysis, it seems the video didn’t provoke strong emotions. Usually, 15–35% of users have positive emotions watching such commercials, but in this case, we can see only about 10% of ‘happy viewers’. The prevailing emotion of this video is sadness. But was it sadness in reality? We’ll be able to check it using open-ended questions in surveys (see the full case study below to get to know what we’ve uncovered). Spoiler: The analysis of implicit reactions showed that this video positively influenced men regardless of their ‘angry’ answers.

Check what other valuable consumer insights we’ve discovered using neuromarketing technologies. Download the full case study 👇

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Originally published at cooltool.com

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About CoolTool

CoolTool is an automated platform that allows you to track and understand what people see, think and feel beyond their conscious control. We help marketers to build better brands, ads, products and user experiences via a holistic understanding of consumer behavior. Thanks to AI technology, CoolTool successfully integrates a survey engine with eye tracking, emotion measurement, EEG, implicit tests, and website behavior tracking.

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Dmitry Gaiduk

Research Professional | Co-Founder & Chief Product Officer at CoolTool, Co-founder at UXReality