Duping your guests into
believing a cheap wine tastes far better is a lot easier than you might
think – simply lie about how expensive it is.
According to researchers at the University of Bonn in Germany and the
INSEAD Business School, consumers actually enjoy products more if they
believe it is more expensive, with their perception of price causing
actual chemical changes in the brain.
“Studies have shown that people enjoy identical products such as wine
or chocolate more if they have a higher price tag,” said authors Hilke
Plassmann (INSEAD) and Bernd Weber (University of Bonn) in the
American Journal of Market Research.
“However, almost no research has examined the neural and psychological
processes required for such marketing placebo effects to occur.”
As part of the study, participants were told they would consume five
wines priced at $90, $45, $35, $10 and $5. In reality, subjects consumed
only three different wines with two different prices. The perception of
price was found to have a significant affect on taste prejudices and
how participants rated the wines, rating cheaper wine highly because
they believed it was more expensive.
The study concluded that preconceived beliefs about price may create a
placebo effect so strong that the actual chemistry of the brain
changes.
“Understanding the underlying mechanisms of this placebo effect
provides marketers with powerful tools”, said Plassmann and Weber.
“Marketing actions can change the very biological processes underlying a
purchasing decision, making the effect very powerful indeed.”
Source: http://www.thedrinksbusiness.com/
No comments:
Post a Comment