Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Copyright © 2005 Millward Brown Valuing the Power of the Senses The 5! Senses Research Speaker name Location and Date.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Copyright © 2005 Millward Brown Valuing the Power of the Senses The 5! Senses Research Speaker name Location and Date."— Presentation transcript:

1

2 Copyright © 2005 Millward Brown Valuing the Power of the Senses The 5! Senses Research Speaker name Location and Date

3 Copyright © 2005 Millward Brown Martin's Challenge

4 Copyright © 2005 Millward Brown Agenda The 5! Senses research People and the senses The power of the senses Case studies Putting a value on the senses

5 Copyright © 2005 Millward Brown The 5! Senses Research

6 Copyright © 2005 Millward Brown "Why do you love me?"

7 Copyright © 2005 Millward Brown 13 countries 26 focus groups 3,500 surveys

8 Copyright © 2005 Millward Brown People and the Senses

9 Copyright © 2005 Millward Brown 33 How many senses do you think there are? 2110 53 3 5 21 10 33

10 Copyright © 2005 Millward Brown Vision ranks number one for most people Sensitivity to Senses % ranking most aware

11 Copyright © 2005 Millward Brown Are we taught to appreciate sight? Sensitivity to Sight % ranking sense most aware

12 Copyright © 2005 Millward Brown Actual recall Reported sensitivity 0% 60% Smell Taste Sight Sound Touch Recall of sensory experiences suggests less bias to vision

13 Copyright © 2005 Millward Brown Women claim to be more sensitive to smell Sensitivity to Smell % ranking sense most aware

14 Copyright © 2005 Millward Brown 0% 100% Smell Taste SightSound Touch But recall data suggests that men are equally susceptible

15 Copyright © 2005 Millward Brown The Japanese are more aware of the senses Country comparison: colas, hifi, cars and fast food 0% 100% Smell Taste Sight Sound Touch

16 Copyright © 2005 Millward Brown The Power of the Senses - Experience -

17 Copyright © 2005 Millward Brown Memories Brand Choice

18 Copyright © 2005 Millward Brown The senses are keys to untidy and over-stocked cupboards

19 Copyright © 2005 Millward Brown Creating and confirming expectations Pre- purchase Experience Post- purchase Experience Purchase Experience Reinforce expectations Set expectations Confirm expectations

20 Copyright © 2005 Millward Brown The sensory brand experience Pre- purchase Experience Post- purchase Experience Purchase Experience Reported by friends Experienced in the past Seen/heard in ads Anticipation Pleasure Satisfaction Smells good Tastes good Feels good Looks good Sounds good

21 Copyright © 2005 Millward Brown A positive experience alone is not good enough % Seriously Consider Positive DistinctiveNot 9076 Neutral DistinctiveNot 5734 Negative DistinctiveNot 1528

22 Copyright © 2005 Millward Brown More than just a great experience LeadershipClarity Great Experience Business Model Brand Success

23 Copyright © 2005 Millward Brown The Power of the Senses - Emotion -

24 Copyright © 2005 Millward Brown Emotions direct our attention and shape our assessment of brands

25 Copyright © 2005 Millward Brown Taste most likely to create feeling of satisfaction Satisfaction Indexed to Average Across 17 Brands

26 Copyright © 2005 Millward Brown Fast food rates high, but Dove differentiates itself Satisfaction Indexed to Average Across 17 Brands

27 Copyright © 2005 Millward Brown McDonald's creates a cheerful feeling Cheerful Indexed to Average Across 17 Brands

28 Copyright © 2005 Millward Brown The Power of the Senses - Loyalty -

29 Copyright © 2005 Millward Brown Loyalty differs widely – even among regular brand users

30 Copyright © 2005 Millward Brown More associations, more loyal -- chicken or egg?

31 Copyright © 2005 Millward Brown Template path model Leadership Great Experience Clarity Choice

32 Copyright © 2005 Millward Brown Choice Leadership Clarity Great Experience Model based on 17 brands

33 Copyright © 2005 Millward Brown The Power of the Senses - The Financial Value -

34 Copyright © 2005 Millward Brown Soap

35 Copyright © 2005 Millward Brown Touch is more salient and distinctive for Dove 0 100 Smell Touch SightSound Taste

36 Copyright © 2005 Millward Brown Dove Relaxing

37 Copyright © 2005 Millward Brown Irish Spring Energizing

38 Copyright © 2005 Millward Brown Irish Spring depends more on smell Impact on brand consideration

39 Copyright © 2005 Millward Brown Smell $63,000,000 Touch $34,000,000 Sight $14,000,000 Ch-Ching

40 Copyright © 2005 Millward Brown Fast Food

41 Copyright © 2005 Millward Brown Sight is more salient for McDonald's 0 100 Smell Touch SightSound Taste

42 Copyright © 2005 Millward Brown Burger King smell Pleasure

43 Copyright © 2005 Millward Brown Smell plays a much stronger role for Burger King Impact on brand consideration

44 Copyright © 2005 Millward Brown Taste $1.5 Billion Smell $1.5 Billion Ch-Ching

45 Copyright © 2005 Millward Brown McDonald's in Japan

46 Copyright © 2005 Millward Brown Weaker memories of McDonald’s 0 100 Smell Touch SightSound Taste

47 Copyright © 2005 Millward Brown 1 in 4 dislike the noise at McDonald's

48 Copyright © 2005 Millward Brown MOS Burger… experience and clarity Leadership Business Model Brand Success Clarity Great Experience

49 Copyright © 2005 Millward Brown Brand Success Clarity Great Experience Business Model Leadership McDonald's… low prices and leadership

50 Copyright © 2005 Millward Brown Conclusion

51 Copyright © 2005 Millward Brown It makes sense Unique brand experience Distinctive brand identity A reason to buy


Download ppt "Copyright © 2005 Millward Brown Valuing the Power of the Senses The 5! Senses Research Speaker name Location and Date."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google