Science-based messaging doesnât work well for products bought for fun and pleasure - it can make people 30% less likely to choose your product March 28, 2023 | [Read Online]( When âscience-basedâ backfires Science-based messaging doesnât work well for products bought for fun and pleasure - it can make people 30% less likely to choose your product [Thomas McKinlay]( [fb]( [tw]( [in]( [email](mailto:?subject=Post%20from%20Ariyh&body=When%20%E2%80%98science-based%E2%80%99%20backfires%3A%20Science-based%20messaging%20doesn%E2%80%99t%20work%20well%20for%20products%20bought%20for%20fun%20and%20pleasure%20-%20it%20can%20make%20people%2030%25%20less%20likely%20to%20choose%20your%20product%0A%0Ahttps%3A%2F%2Fariyh.beehiiv.com%2Fp%2Fwhen-science-based-backfires) New to [Ariyh](? This is a 3min practical summary of a scientific study ð Join 16,933 evidence-based marketers that grow using science, not opinions ð [Subscribe now]( Todayâs insight is brought to you by⦠[Storyblok]( [Storyblok gives an ROI of 582%]( What ROI are you getting from your content? Thereâs a new content management system on the block: [Storyblok]( (yes, cringey pun intended). Research from Forrester found that, on average, Storyblokâs headless CMS delivered an ROI of 582% over three years. It pays for itself in less than 6 months. Sounds like a good deal? It is. Probably much more than your current CMS. [Dive in the study]( ð Intro Have you ever seen an ad for ice cream explaining the chemistry behind how itâs made? Or a sign at a flower shop telling you about the fertilizers used to grow your roses? You probably havenât - and itâs not by chance. While science-focused messaging works well for many products, for others it backfires. P.S.: When it comes to ways to improve your business, nothing beats âscience-basedâ. You and 16,932 other Ariyh readers know that. Want to reach this audience (or know a friend who does)? Iâve [opened up new sponsorship slots]( up to July 2023. They usually sell out fast. Previous insight: [When $.99 pricing works best]( (more insights [here]() Science-based messaging backfires for products that are bought for fun and pleasure Channels: Messaging | Ads | Copywriting | Content | Brand positioning
For: B2C
Research date: May 2022 ð Recommendation If people buy your product mainly for fun or pleasure (a dessert, a sports car) avoid science in your messaging, it comes across as cold and hurts sales. If people buy your product mainly for its functionality or its effectiveness at something specific (e.g. a moisturizer, a camera), science-based messaging helps you appear more competent. ð Findings - For products bought for emotional reasons, science-based messages make people less likely to choose the product. If products are being bought for functionality or specific uses, scientific messaging can work effectively.
- As part of a series of 5 studies, researchers found that people:
- Were 30.48% less likely to choose a cookie when a science-based message was used to describe it (âscientifically developed to have a luscious chocolatey tasteâ vs âluscious chocolatey tasteâ)
- Said they were 12% less likely to buy a smoothie when it was introduced as having a ârigorous scientific development processâ - The effect weakens or disappears:
- If the messaging focuses on how science helps with the utility or effectiveness of the product.
- When itâs clear why science was important for the productâs development
- For âscience-loversâ (e.g. people who donât consider science to be âcoldâ, trust scientists, or work in STEM) ð§ Why it works - Products bought for fun are generally [perceived as warm](, while science and the scientific process is [considered to be cold](, but competent.
- When thereâs a [mismatch]( between a productâs messaging and how we perceive a product, it turns us off from the product.
- [For example](, adding an organic label to unhealthy foods can cause them to lose value, because of the mismatch of healthy ingredients in a âtreatâ. ð¥ï¸ Design outstanding websites with no code Want your websites to look unique and professional - without wasting time and budget? Try out Readymag and [publish your first website for free](. Hereâs some of what you get: - Add any content you want (text, video, buttons, etc.)
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- And publish it all in one click [Create your website for free]( This announcement was sponsored. Want your brand here? [Click here](. â Limitations - The experiments focused on items like cookies where science is not naturally very relevant to people - the effect doesnât apply to products where science-based innovation is relevant.
- The effect may be stronger or weaker in different cultures based on how people perceive science (see science as more positive = effect is weaker). ð¢ Companies using this - Many brands emphasize scientific messaging when talking about the productâs utility, while focusing on oneâs senses when discussing feelings.
- Products like body washes, creams, and makeup either focus on practical benefits or emotional appeals, but rarely mix the two. - In the food industry, a distinction appears with:
- Science-based messaging used to highlight health or taste benefits.
- Emotional messaging used to highlight the feelings or senses of the taste and experience of the food. Nivea correctly uses scientific messaging when talking about the benefits of its Hyaluronic Acid Serum. [Nivea cream] â¡ Steps to implement - Link your messaging to peopleâs motivations for buying from you - is it for fun or because youâre competent?
- If people use your product because of how it makes them feel or because itâs fun, focus your messaging on that.
- If your product is used for its effectiveness at something particular, focus your messaging on that. - If you must use science-based messaging for fun products, try to make the science relevant. For example focus on:
- The feelings the product gives people (e.g. if youâre selling a sports car, talk about how itâs engineered for better acceleration to give a more thrilling ride)
- The use of your product, positioning it away from a purchase for fun or pleasure alone (e.g. highlight a specific chemicalâs role in combating bacteria in a body wash). ð Study type Lab and online experiments. ð Research [Get Your Science Out of Here: When Does Invoking Science in the Marketing of Consumer Products Backfire?](. Journal of Consumer Research (May 2022). ð« Researchers - [Aviva Philipp-Muller](. Beedie School of Business, Simon Fraser University
- [John P. Costello](. Mendoza College of Business, University of Notre Dame
- [Rebecca Walker Reczek](. Fisher College of Business, Ohio State University Remember: This is a scientific discovery. In the future it will probably be better understood and could even be proven wrong (thatâs [how science works](). It may also not be generalizable to your situation. If itâs a risky change, always test it on a small scale before rolling it out widely. Rate todayâs insight to help me make Ariyh's next insights ð even more useful ð How was todayâs insight?
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