An in-depth neuroscientific study sponsored by the Postal
Service Inspector General's office (OIG) found direct mail ads to be
superior to those viewed online in eight out of nine categories. Digital ads
seized the attention of consumers quicker, but physical ads held that attention
longer, elicited a greater emotional reaction, and played a more direct role in
ultimate purchase decisions.
Noting that advertising mail accounts for 31% of USPS
revenues—some $20 billion last year—the OIG's office partnered with Temple
University's Center for Neural Decision Making to provide the Postal Service
with ammunition to promote use of the mails in multichannel marketing
strategies along with digital methods. The results OIG received could end up
making a reasonable case for marketers to consider anchoring their multichannel
strategies around mail.
Temple showed a mix of 40 email ads and postcards to
laboratory study subjects, using three monitoring methods to gauge the effects
the ads had on them. Eye tracking measured visual attention; fingertip sensors
monitored heart rate, respiration, and sweating to reveal emotional engagement;
and MRIs performed scans to uncover deep brain activity.
Postcards were judged superior to email ads in four of nine
ad attributes measured: engagement time, emotional reaction, recall, and
building subconscious desire for a product or service. Email ads led in just
one attribute: focusing a customer's attention. The two methods tied in three
areas (see box).
The MRI scans found that the postcards triggered the ventral
striatum of the brain, the center of desirability and value. On that evidence,
Temple researchers concluded that physical ads have a deeper and longer-lasting
effect than digital ads on instilling desire for products and services.
Based on study results, the OIG offered these suggestions in
making better use of direct mail in the marketing mix:
Test the piece for maximum reaction. Take
neuromarketing a step further by doing your own studies to determine how
specific elements of a direct mail piece—whether color, shape, or use of white
space—elicits the best reaction from consumers.
Explore sequencing options. Neuroscience could
also be used, says OIG, to determine the most effective sequence of media
elements in a campaign. Does email followed by direct mail work best, or vice
versa? Should other media such as television be included?
Consider digital print technology. Test whether using
augmented reality or QR codes in mail pieces ramps up conversion rates in
multichannel campaigns. A previous OIG study found that such methods resonated
well with younger digital natives.
Similar results were handed down in a neuromarketing study
undertaken in 2009 by Royal Mail in the U.K. It, too, found that physical media
generated deeper brain activity than digital media.
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