People like ads up to 24% more when the product is positioned facing the center of the ad (vs outward) April 04, 2023 | [Read Online]( Products should face the center of your ads People like ads up to 24% more when the product is positioned facing the center of the ad (vs outward) [Thomas McKinlay]( [fb]( [tw]( [in]( [email](mailto:?subject=Post%20from%20Ariyh&body=Products%20should%20face%20the%20center%20of%20your%20ads%3A%20People%20like%20ads%20up%20to%2024%25%20more%20when%20the%20product%20is%20positioned%20facing%20the%20center%20of%20the%20ad%20%28vs%20outward%29%0A%0Ahttps%3A%2F%2Fariyh.beehiiv.com%2Fp%2Fface-products-toward-the-center) New to [Ariyh](? This is a 3min practical summary of a scientific study ð Join 17,292 evidence-based marketers that grow using science, not opinions ð [Subscribe now]( Todayâs insight is brought to you by⦠[Increw]( Want to grow or build your development team? [Increw]( will do that for you. Hassle-free and for ~50% the cost. Hereâs what you get: - A committed, fairly-paid, development team
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- Don't worry about payrolls, taxes and compliance The âcatchâ? Your team will be remote, and (probably) in a different timezone. If youâre fine with that, this is for you. [Learn more]( Or [Schedule an intro call]( P.S.: Tabish, one of Increwâs co-founders, is a long time friend. Youâre in safe hands. This is not a âtoo good to be trueâ service. Want to sponsor Ariyh? [Hereâs all you need to know](. ð Intro The creative of your ad has a huge impact on conversions. Weâve seen how placing your product [further or closer to a model]( can make your brand seem either prestigious or mainstream, and that [rational vs emotional messages]( work best in different positions. But thereâs another fundamental choice you face when finalizing your product images or ad creatives. Which direction should your product be facing? P.S.: If youâre a small brand, try [copying the ad creatives]( of large competitors. If youâre a large brand, make sure you change your creatives often to stand out. Previous insight: [When âscience-basedâ backfires]( (more insights [here]() People will like your ad more if your product is facing the center of your image Channels: Image Ads | Ads | Print Ads | Website
For: Both B2C and B2B
Research date: June 2015 ð Recommendation In your product image and ads, position the product so that it faces inwards toward the center of the image. This makes it easier for people to mentally process the ad and makes them like it more. [Position your products to face the center of your ad] ð Findings - People like ads more when the product advertised faces inward (vs outward).
- As part of 3 experiments across 15 product categories with 18 ads:
- Images of products facing inward were liked 24% more and processed 27% more quickly.
- Items on the left of the frame facing inwards were viewed 6% more positively than items facing inwards on the right side of the frame. ð§ Why it works - When we look at an ad, we [pay more attention]( to the center of the space, with our brain and eyes [naturally fixating]( there.
- When an object is facing inwards, the âfaceâ is closer to the center of the frame, as compared to when facing outwards. This means our eyes have to move less from their initial fixation point at the center of the image.
- Itâs also easier for us to process an object when [its face is visible](, as compared to its back.
- When itâs easier for our brains to process something, like an image, we tend to [look at it more positively](. ð Get your free [buyer psychology cheatsheet]( Want to further explore the intersection of behavioral science and marketing? [Why We Buy]( is the newsletter that explores the hidden reasons why people buy. Itâs a must-read for 42,000 smart marketers from companies like Apple, Spotify, Glossier, and AdWeek. Ariyh readers who signup in the next 72 hours will get the buyer psychology cheatsheet for $0. [Sign up and grab your cheatsheet]( This announcement was sponsored. Want your brand here? [Click here](. â Limitations - The researchers studied peopleâs preference for ads across many product categories, but didnât test whether that impacts peopleâs liking or choice of the product or brand itself, or its effect on sales.
- The study focused on images of products. Itâs not clear if this effect would hold for experiences (e.g. luxury cruise, spa), where there isnât a clear physical product to position.
- The effect is weaker for exciting products (e.g. a sports car), as compared to items considered safer (e.g. a minivan or sedan). In this case, it only works if the product is on the left side of the image facing inward.
- The research was run in the US with English speakers. The same preference might not hold for languages where native readers read right to left (e.g. Urdu, Arabic, Hebrew, Persian). ð¢ Companies using this - Marketers donât seem to be aware of the advantages of positioning products to face a particular direction. In an analysis of 156 print ads, only 30% faced toward one side.
- Some electronic brands (e.g. Samsung, Apple, Black and Decker) occasionally use this.
- The technique seems to be popular in car ads as well, with companies from Tesla to Honda positioning their vehicles at an angle. Toyota correctly positioned their car in this ad creative. [Toyota Corolla ad] â¡ Steps to implement - Review your product images and ads to check if youâre using photos of your products at an angle, or if the product is either directly facing the front or back of the image.
- Ask your product photographers, designers, and ad agency to make sure youâre using photos of your product at an angle, facing inwards.
- Photo-editing software can help you edit the direction your product faces in your existing images.
- In some rare cases - if your product is risky and exciting - the effect might work better if you position your product on the left facing the outside of the ad. Test it. ð Study type Online experiments ð Research [Is Your Product Facing the Ad's Center? Facing Direction Affects Processing Fluency and Ad Evaluation](. Journal of Advertising (June 2015) ð« Researchers - [James M. Leonhardt](. College of Business, University of Nevada, Reno.
- [Jesse R Catlin](. College of Business Administration, California State University, Sacramento.
- [Dante Monique Pirouz](. Wharton School of Business, University of Pennsylvania. 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. Correction to previous insight: Thank you Professor Shinhyoung Lee for pointing out an error in the â[Use gifts to reduce product returns](â insight. The results of 1 experiment should not have been translated to a 14% difference, since the results were on a Likert scale 4.98/9 vs. 6.10/9, and therefore not convertible. This has now been corrected. Rate todayâs insight to help me make Ariyh's next insights ð even more useful ð How was todayâs insight?
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