Influence and Persuasion The Psychology of Social and Individual Behaviour Change.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Why People Buy: Consumer Behavior
Advertisements

Improving Your Sales Skills. Youll discover: Techniques to Use Prior to the Sales Techniques to Use During the Sale Post Purchase Selling Techniques.
Review of Chapter 27: Money Management
NEW! IMPROVED! Everybody is doing it! A MUST SEE!.
The Rule of Reciprocation: We should try to repay, in kind, what another person has provided us.
Persuasion Dale Walker University of Wyoming College of Arts & Sciences ALADN 2005 – New Orleans.
PSYCHOLOGY: LEARNING Learning- the process of acquiring new and relatively enduring information or behaviors.
Socio-cultural Cognition (4.1) 1. Describe the role of situational and dispositional factors in explaining behaviour. 2. Discuss two errors in attributions.
CHAPTER ELEVEN Attitudes and Influencing Attitudes McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2004 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Discuss the use of compliance techniques This example shows failure of the ‘door in the face’ technique.
Discuss the use of compliance techniques Comply or die; Winner of 1998 Grand National.
Changing Marketplace Advertising Strategy (Alstiel and Grow)
CREATING EFFECTIVE. PSA – What is it?  A PSA is an advertisement for a non-profit organization  Can take the form of a TV commercial, radio commercial,
The Dynamics of Persuasion There are six universal principles of influence that operate regardless of the venue –Whether asked to buy a car, volunteer.
Tom Inglis Katie Johnson David Hogan By: Bruce Horovitz.
Marketing For Nonprofits. What is marketing? Marketing is the methodology of communicating the value of a product or service to customers, for the purpose.
 Market research is the process of gathering information which will make you more aware of how the people you hope to sell to will react to your current.
BTT12OI.  Do you know someone who has been scammed? What happened?  Been tricked into sending someone else money (not who they thought they were) 
ETHOS, PATHOS, OR LOGOS? What appeal are advertisers using to get you to buy their product?
FINANCIAL LITERACY FOR THE ELEMENTARY CLASSROOM In Class Day One. Sponsored by: Maryland Council on Economic Education and Towson University College of.
3.3.4 PROMOTION. Central Question What is the best promotional mix?
Selling in Today’s Market
1 Integrated Marketing Communications: An Overview.
Persuasion Is All Around You! “Can You Hear Me Now?”
Promotional Mix The combination of promotional activities that an organization uses to communicate its message and sell its products. Possible Activities.
UNDERSTANDING PRINCIPLES OF MARKETING
Social Influence Tactics. Constantly bombarded by attempts to influence us… Newspapers Magazines Television Internet Radio Outdoor signs Politics and.
10 Ways to Get MORE Out of Your Advertising Dollar Marketing On Demand, LLC.
World of Marketing CHAPTER 1  With a partner, come up with a definition of marketing that you would see in a textbook  Please don’t use any resources,
© 2005 Pearson Education Canada Inc.1-1 Chapter 1 Integrated Marketing Communications: An Overview.
Sociocultural Level of Analysis: Social and Cultural Norms Part II.
Exposing Your Brand Play a Different Numbers Game.
Theoretical Understanding from Readings –Cialdini, Keys & Case Practical Application –Do Salary Negotiation Exercise –Discuss learning from Salary Negotiation.
Marketing Information Management Marketing Research.
Part 2: Planning and Strategy Chapter 4
Belly to Belly Create Relationships to Create Referrals.
Food Marketing. Family Influence on Food Choices Family is the major influence on the food choices and habits of its members. Starting as children due.
Persuasive Techniques Faulty Logic Propaganda Techniques.
 Advertising & Media  Unit 3 – Analyzing the customer.
Taking Sides (Heading for Cornell Notes) Getting To The Heart (Emotions), Head (Logic), & Moral (Ethics) Of The Issue.
4.2 Sociocultural Level of Analysis: Social and Cultural Norms.
Persuasion Fall 2013 Computer Science TA Orientation.
Marketing and Promotion
Chapter 10 Review Intro to Business. 1 Any paid form of communication through mass media directed at identified consumers to provide information and influence.
> > > > Promotion and Pricing Strategies Chapter 14.
Social Influence and Persuasion Donna Vandergrift, Associate Professor, Psychology Welcome Back Spring 2016
Compliance Theory Main theorist: Robert Cialdini Compliance is when you act the way you are “supposed” to act; either because you were directly asked,
Personal Selling 2 The Basic Sales Process They should all go like this…
Discuss the use of compliance techniques. What is compliance? Compliance is the modification of behaviour from direct pressure to respond to a request.
Decision Making and Influence: Presentation for Campus Environmental Sustainability Team (CEST) August 5, 2010.
The Language of Persuasion Techniques used in Commercials.
CHAPTER 11 MARKETING AND DISTRIBUTION. LEARNING OBJECTIVE I can identify what marketing is and the important role it plays in selling products.
Salman Ahmed Qurraishi.  Advertising mean “to Communicate”  Advertising is defined as any “paid-for method of promotion”. Advertising is the main form.
Or the 4 Ps of marketing.  The marketing mix or 4 Ps of marketing: ◦ Price ◦ Product ◦ Promotion ◦ Place  Decisions about these are based on the results.
Advertising Facts  The average child sees approximately 20,000 commercials in one year  A 1996 study reported that 57 percent of viewers think that.
Techniques of persuasion in advertisement. Advertisement is a form of marketing communication used to encourage, persuade, or manipulate an audience (viewers,
Deceptive Sales Practices Chapter 26. Door-to-Door Sales  There are some door-to-door and telephone salespeople who place intense pressure on people.
HOW DO YOUR EFFECT YOUR smell sound Sight touch taste.
Chapter 7 & 8 FMD 451. American Consumers- Largest spenders on the planet. Mass affluent consumers are growing Women age 35 and older spent $101.6 billion.
The Science of Persuasion
Theories: Explaining Human Behaviour
Daniel Duric, Iaroslava Pozniak,Christopher Tombrink
Compliance Techniques
Social Norms.
Required “Influence” Skills for Entrepreneurs
Compliance and conformity
Compliance and commitment
Principles of Learning: Classical and Operant Conditioning, and Social Learning Psychology I Mrs. Hart.
WHAT IS A PERSUASIVE ARGUMENT?
Influence Each of you has some playing cards
Presentation transcript:

Influence and Persuasion The Psychology of Social and Individual Behaviour Change

Social Change: Psychology Psychologists focus on changing an individual’s thinking –broad social change can flow out of this 3 methods of social change: –behaviour modification –modelling theory –social persuasion

Behaviour Modification Process by which behaviour is changed due to experiences and changes in one’s environment Ivan Pavlov, Classical conditioning B. F. Skinner, Operant conditioning

Albert Bandura Bandura concluded that learning is largely a modeling experience When humans observe behaviour – either acceptable or unacceptable – they are more likely to practice it Children learn through the experiences of others Question - What does this mean to us?

Conditioning in Advertising Commercials tap into natural emotional responses in the brain –connect product to those reactions Different techniques: –music, jingles –sexual images –heart strings –celebrity

A hamburger advertisement! What factors are being linked or associated? Another example:

Ad campaigns attempt to give the product an “image” or “identity” –animate an inanimate object Promise to match the product’s identity with the purchaser’s.

See all types everyday in society All shape our behaviour, effect broader social change ADVERTISERS!Above and other tactics used especially by ADVERTISERS! Try to shape: –buying patterns –thinking patterns –social trends

Largely based on the social psychology work of Robert Cialdini –Influence: The Psychology of Persuasion –Influence: Science and Practice Cialdini outlines 6 “weapons of influence” used by marketers to elicit automatic responses.

Cialdini argues we use mental shortcuts –automatic responses, assumptions in given situations usually help us; also make us vulnerable A few simple examples: value  more expensive = better quality –e.g. price increase vs. discount contrast  if the 2 nd item in a list is different from the first, see it as more different than it is –e.g. clothing sales

Weapon 1: Reciprocation Rooted in the social belief that we should repay in kind what others do for us e.g. The “kind favour” study –experimenter, subject, confederate –confederate gets subject a Coke –later asks subject to buy raffle tickets  subjects done a favour buy more and spend more

Common uses Come across this in marketing –free sample of products –charities that mail out a “gift” Hard to counter: obligation to the cycle Redefine: concession or “compliance trick”? Also used in negotiations and requests: –e.g. “Happy Days” and TV censors –e.g. counselling juvenile delinquents?

Weapon 2: Commitment and Consistency Created by 2 general characteristics: Inner desire to meet commitments Dislike appearing inconsistent Both drive us to become attached to something once we’ve made a commitment to it –e.g. placing bets –e.g. beach “theft” study –e.g. driver safety sign request Be a safe driver DRIVE CAREFULLY

Salesperson gets customers to commit –E.g. energy sales and “cooling off” periods sales drop as customers change mind have customers fill out own forms Initiation rites –hard to get in = high commitment once in e.g. fraternities and sororities, hazing Common uses

Weapon 3: Liking Basic behavioural characteristics: –more likely to buy from those we like –like those who are similar to us Common uses  company has people sell product to family, friends; sell in homes

Supporting studies  “lost” wallet study Subjects find a lost wallet (planted) –has money, cheque, ID, note Finder is similar to note writer = 70 % return it Finder is dissimilar to note writer = 33 % return it Other Common uses Sales people finding “connections”

Weapon 4: Social Proof Human behaviour: “we view a behaviour as more correct in a given situation to the degree that we see others performing it” Again, usually a helpful strategy, but makes us vulnerable –e.g. canned laughter effect

Common uses: “salting” tip jars religious events: have ‘plants’ in audience come forward “largest selling!”; “rated #1”; “fastest growing”; “4 out of 5 dentists…” Use of “average people” in ads –relate to them (and product) –effect of similarity

Remember Albert Bandura? Children learn through … uses principle to cure children of dog phobia: –child watches other children playing with dogs –works if watching on TV –works better if more children play with dog social proof effect!

Weapon 5: Authority In general, we obey those in authority. e.g. Stanley Milgram study Also more likely to obey those we trust. Common uses: advertisers portray trustworthy experts (often actors) –e.g. Sanka ad

Need to ask if person is really an authority –e.g. street orders study Advertisers also try to fake “truthfulness” to boost authority, credibility –“Joslin Insurance is the place you’re going to hate … less” –“Avis: we’re number 2, but we try harder” –Buckley’s! “Tastes awful, but it works!”

Weapon 6: Scarcity Human thought: “Opportunities seem more valuable when their availability is limited” e.g. rare coins, sports cards Supporting study  2 year old and toys Common uses: “warnings” in ads –“supply is limited!” –“call in the next 20 minutes!” –“after, November, they’re gone!”

Dade County, Florida phosphate detergent ban, 1971 –public smuggling –changed attitude towards detergent with phosphates “poured better, gentler, better in cold water” Real estate: “goosing them off the fence” –tell customers of another “potential buyer” Used car salesperson –“double-booking” technique

Your (optional) assignment: Find one ad: print, TV, radio, Internet –bring it in if possible Analyze how the ad is working, its techniques –try to incorporate concepts we’ve studied –can include others as well Work on your own or with a partner DUE DATE: