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Neuromarketing Study Supports the Effectiveness of Direct Mail

Editor’s note: Today’s post was written by Sharon Markovsky and was originally posted on her blog,  Practical Discussions of Marketing. It is reprinted here with permission.

I was reading an article summarizing the findings of a new neuromarketing study conducted by Royal Mail through Millward Brown, employing the University of Bangor’s psychology department and fMRI (functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging), which sheds some light on how the marketing medium used can be just as important as the message when it comes to building an emotional connection with consumers.

And, I have to say I am pretty excited with the findings.  They support the case I made in a prior blog, Direct Mail Is a Viable Option for Small Business, that direct mail can be an effective part of a company’s marketing mix—thus, direct mail is not dead!

While the research conducted was qualitative in nature, only 20 subjects studied, the results are nonetheless very important.  Without getting into my “research geek” mode, which I am apt to do, here’s the crux of what they found:

  • Physical media—direct mail based material—generated more activity in the parietal cortex, an area closely associated with the integration of visual and spatial information; suggesting that print-based material is more ‘concrete’ for the brain, and can act as a cue for memory.   The print marketing methods were “seen” as more “real” by the brain because of the multisensory nature of the materials.
  • Direct mail-based material was also associated with responses which suggest greater ‘internal’ thinking – suggesting that this material is processed more in relation to subjects’ own feelings and memories.
  • Online materials on the other hand elicited responses associated with greater difficulty in maintaining attention on the task. Researchers noted that online materials proved harder to focus on; and engaged areas of the brain associated with greater filtering of irrelevant information in order to attend to the task, such as the temporo-parietal junction.

So what?

As a marketer, you need to choose wisely when it comes to the media you use for customer and, more importantly, prospect communications.

  • Print media may be more effective for complicated or detailed messages; online seems better suited for short, easy to read and less comprehensive messages.
  • Print media may be more effective for the first or introductory communication from a brand campaign, an online message appears better suited as brand awareness/consideration reinforcement tool.

Thanks to Royal Mail, Millward Brown and the University of Bangor’s psychology department for putting together such a great and useful neuromarketing study!

Editor’s note: With Dukky’s integrated platform and shareable PURLS, you get the best of both worlds- the deeper engagement of direct mail and the viral reach of digital.

This entry was posted on Friday, March 19th, 2010 at 9:48 pm and is filed under Direct Mail Marketing. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

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