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How marketers target your nose - YouTube
Channel: Vox
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Marketing is everywhere, screaming for your
attention in lights
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and in your headphones.
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But while traditional marketing assaults your
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eyes and ears, there’s another industry
quietly fighting for your attention — and
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they’re doing it through
your nose.
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Scent marketing is the idea of using
scent and incorporating to all the touch points
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of the customer experience.
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it's very subconscious –
so it's not like a logo or something where
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you can see and everybody sees it the same
way.
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depending on people's experiences and their
upbringings, and their history, they might
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perceive the scent to be a little bit different.
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It's more emotional
Chances are, you’ve already experienced
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scent marketing -- and know it can have a
profound impact on your mind.
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Research has found that combining scent with
visual marketing strengthens our memory of
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it in the long term, which can affect how
we feel in a very physical way:
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For example, an ambient coffee scent can emulate
a feeling of alertness even if you haven’t
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had any coffee, and scents that we commonly
attribute to cleanliness – like lemon or
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tangerine – could make a messy store seem
cleaner.
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Various research over the years also found
that shoppers in scented environments may
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linger longer, perceive the merchandise as
better and are more willing to pay higher
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prices.
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And when casinos started pumping smells into
the air to negate the stench of cigarettes
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they saw slot machine usage double.
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People are actually more comfortable, they
feel warm they feel invited, they feel welcomed.
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It's really about creating an amazing experience
for customers when they walk in
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Using scent to enhance an experience is actually
pretty common
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For example, Museums have used "scentscaping"
to intensify their exhibits – like adding
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the smell of gunpowder to a civil war exhibit
and hospitals use scentscaping to create
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a more soothing environment for patients – but
scent marketing is a bit more complicated
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Scent marketing and branding is about using
one scent for the whole experience
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If you're a millennial the first thing coming
to mind might be...
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Abercrombie and Fitch – or Hollister.
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These stores are the most extreme form of
scent marketing called billboard scenting.
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Every store smells the same regardless of
where you are, and chances are
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It’s really overpowering – like an oversized
billboard.
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But when you separate that scent from the
store you can start to understand exactly
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what they want you to feel
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It smells very masculine.
Male clothing store.
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Sexy.
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Manly.
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Smelling this, kind of, weirdly, makes me
feel intimate.
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Believe it or not – to an ex-boyfriend I
had.
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It smells like an Abercrombie model
The scent matches the visual branding – and
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there’s a careful process behind that
We have to learn a lot about the brand, the
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history, what sets them apart.
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It's a Men’s spa?
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Woman's spa?
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Is it in a country club?
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Is it in a luxury hotel?
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Who their target demographic is – the people
that are coming in.
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And then it's really about understanding their
aspirational attributes. and then capturing
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those qualities and turning them into a scent.
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In most cases, the scent is carefully diffused
through the store – sometimes through stand
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alone systems and sometimes directly through
the HVAC systems.
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It’s a delicate process designed to release
just a hint of aroma into the air
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Because in general, overpowering people with
an aroma isn’t a good thing.
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This is why with most places you won’t even
realize there’s a particular smell, unless,
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of course, it’s completely out of place.
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In the same way that scent marketing can generate
a positive experience, when the aroma doesn’t
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match the demographic, location or brand identity
the public reaction is often negative:
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In 2006, Got Milk?
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Ads dispersed at bus stops in San Francisco
were equipped with cookie scented strips.
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While chocolate chip cookies smell delicious,
placing that scent at a bus stop completely
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backfired – and the company pulled the scent
marketing one day after releasing it.
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Then, in 2008, Starbucks had to put the sale
of breakfast sandwiches on hold.
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The sandwich smell was competing with the
coffee aroma, ruining the ambience.
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Think about that: If a coffee shop doesn’t
smell like coffee, would you still start your
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morning there?
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Once you start to be conscious of it you'll
notice that it's everywhere.
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when you walk into certain banks, when you
walk into certain malls, when you walk walk
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into stores all types of businesses are using
it.
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And if it’s working properly, scent marketing
is helping create a positive experience for
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both the business and the customer.
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The reason why people stay longer in a store
is because it's a better experience.
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So they're happier.
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Maybe their mood is lifted and who doesn't
want to have their mood lifted and be happier?
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Hey, thanks for watching The Goods and thanks to our sponsor American Express.
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AmEx has a credit card feature that gives you choices
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for how to make payments, big or small, called
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And "Plan It" can help you split purchases over
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You can check it out at americanexpress.com/payitplanit.
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And thanks again to American Express, their support made this series possible.
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