Why Are We Loyal to Certain Brands? - YouTube

Channel: unknown

[0]
[â™ȘINTRO]
[3]
A few years ago, Microsoft rolled out the “Bing It On” challenge.
[6]
You’d enter a search term and get side-by-side comparisons of Google’s results page and
[10]
Bing’s results page — both unbranded.
[13]
Visitors to the site get to vote for the one they like best.
[16]
Of course, a lot of us know what Google looks like.
[19]
The idea, though, was that you might look at Bing’s user interface and discover you
[23]
liked it okay... or even better than Google.
[25]
And, I mean, there are a lot of brands out there that do basically the same thing as
[29]
their competitor: Starbucks, Dunkin.
[31]
Pizza Hut, Domino’s.
[32]
Target, Walmart.
[33]
I know to some of you those were fighting words.
[35]
I hope all you super Domino’s-loving people don’t get mad at me for saying it’s basically
[39]
Pizza Hut...or the other way around.
[41]
I’m sure it’s different for you.
[43]
So why do we care so much?
[45]
Part of the answer seems to be social identification, which is our sense of belongingness to a group.
[51]
Brands become part of our identity — or at least, part of the identity we aspire to.
[56]
Think of the Mac vs. PC commercials that portrayed Mac as a hip, young kid and PC as an old guy
[61]
who couldn’t keep up.
[63]
Or Canon Rebel ads, which seem to tell us that we, too, can be outdoorsy and adventurous.
[68]
With groups of people, social identification has been found to increase our feelings of
[72]
pride and self-esteem, and make us more willing to cooperate with others in our group
[76]
or donate to a cause.
[78]
But it seems like we can identify with brands, too, and that makes us more willing to trust
[83]
and invest in them.
[84]
That’s why companies make ads that seem to share our values and aspirations.
[88]
But while our attraction to and identification with a brand seems to increase things like
[93]
trust and word-of-mouth recommendations, it doesn’t fully account for brand loyalty.
[97]
Psychologists think another big part of brand loyalty is habit.
[100]
A lot of studies have shown that we prefer things that are familiar.
[104]
This is the mere exposure effect: the idea that simply being exposed to something again
[108]
and again makes us like it more.
[110]
On top of that, there’s the sunk cost fallacy, which is when we keep throwing money, time,
[114]
or effort at something just because we’ve already put a lot of money, time, or effort into it.
[119]
Even if we might be better off with something else.
[121]
Basically, we’re not always very good decision-makers when some sort of comfort or recognition is involved.
[126]
Consider, for a moment, jam.
[128]
The stuff you smear on toast.
[129]
In a study from 2000 that’s become somewhat famous, across two Saturdays, 502 shoppers
[134]
at a grocery store encountered one of two displays of jam: one with 6 flavor choices
[140]
or another with 24.
[142]
The display with more jams seemed more attractive to shoppers.
[145]
More of them approached it to try a sample.
[147]
But the people with more choices ultimately bought less jam. 30% of samplers at the six-flavor
[153]
display bought jam, while only 3% at the 24-flavor display did.
[157]
The researchers recognized that there could’ve been other factors, like different kinds of
[161]
shoppers approaching different displays, or people not having time to sample enough options
[165]
to make a decision.
[166]
But they did do two more experiments with slightly different setups that involved choosing
[169]
an essay prompt and picking chocolate from either a big or small selection.
[174]
And they generally found that people liked having a lot of options, but the choice felt
[178]
overwhelming and sometimes hard to manage.
[180]
So, like, why bother with all the options?
[183]
Choosing to buy the same products could help you avoid things like uncertainty, stress,
[187]
and the worry that you’re making the wrong choice.
[189]
But our brains seem to go even further: once we get to know or like a product, we double down on it.
[195]
A 2004 study had 67 participants do a couple different taste tests of Coke and Pepsi.
[200]
In anonymous tests, when the drinks weren’t labeled, there were mixed preferences for
[204]
Coke and Pepsi.
[205]
Then, there was a taste test between Coke that was labeled as Coke, and another mystery
[209]
cup that contained Coke or Pepsi.
[211]
And participants liked the labeled Coke better, even when they expressed different preferences
[217]
beforehand, or both cups had Coke inside them!
[220]
These tests were repeated in an fMRI machine,
[223]
and different regions of the brain were activated in each one.
[226]
Anonymous trials activated the ventromedial prefrontal cortex, which we think is involved
[230]
in lots of things, including decision-making, processing risk, and mood.
[234]
Activity in that brain region was different enough between drinking Pepsi and Coke that
[238]
the researchers could even predict what participants would say they preferred afterwards, based on taste.
[243]
But trials with labeled Coke also affected activity in other regions, like the hippocampus,
[247]
which is involved in learning and memory, and the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, which
[251]
seems to be involved in working memory.
[253]
The researchers concluded that different parts of the brain seem to be involved with what
[257]
participants thought tasted better, and what they preferred because of cultural influences.
[262]
Just labeling Coke seemed to activate more memory-related brain regions and bias people’s judgments.
[268]
It’s like the participants remembered things about Coke’s brand, and those feelings had
[271]
a bigger influence on their behavior than tasting the sodas.
[274]
This study’s results go hand-in-hand with what’s called the choice-supportive bias:
[278]
our tendency to remember good qualities of brands we’ve chosen to like, and forget
[283]
all the bad aspects of them.
[284]
There’s even evidence that marketing messages work better when they’re about a brand that
[288]
we already like, which kind of makes sense.
[289]
If we already like something, we want to rationalize why.
[292]
And ads are ready-made warm and fuzzy messages that help with that.
[296]
But when it comes down to it, brand loyalty is only partially because of catchy jingles.
[300]
It’s mostly all about us.
[302]
Thanks for watching this episode of SciShow Psych!
[304]
To learn more about the weird things our brains do, you can go to youtube.com/scishowpsych
[307]
and subscribe.
[309]
[â™ȘOUTRO]