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🎓 Make people want to ‘grab’ your product

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Strategically position graspable objects in your creatives. People will feel a sense of ownership of

Strategically position graspable objects in your creatives. People will feel a sense of ownership of your product, and will be more likely to buy it.                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                 [Open in app]( or [online]() [🎓 Make people want to ‘grab’ your product]( Strategically position graspable objects in your creatives. People will feel a sense of ownership of your product, and will be more likely to buy it. [Thomas McKinlay]( Oct 25   [▷  Listen]( [Save]()   New to [Ariyh]( Join 14,241 evidence-based marketers for 3min practical insights 💡 from the latest scientific research 🎓 to get better marketing results 📈 --------------------------------------------------------------- Today’s insight is brought to you by… [Storyblok]( Get your free copy of the eCommerce Marketing Atlas, a 70-page blueprint on how to run a modern ecommerce business. A practical handbook of everything you need to have covered, from customer journeys to SEO to conversions to content automation. All filled with real-life examples and quick tips. [Download the PDF]( --------------------------------------------------------------- Want to sponsor Ariyh? [Here’s all you need to know](. 📝 Intro Hold tight. This study is going to blow your mind. In one of the experiments, scientists tripled signups for a loyalty program by strategically positioning a vegetable peeler in an image advert of the program. How? Let’s take a look. P.S.: In this study I talk about positioning objects in a way that’s convenient for right-handers. The more correct way would be to say ‘position objects for each person’s dominant hand’. But [90% of the world’s population is right-handed]( so you are better off simply catering to them. I know, left-handed people [always get ignored](. I’m left-handed myself. Here’s some consolation though. Turns out the research that found that [left-handed people die younger]( is [probably (and hopefully) wrong](. --------------------------------------------------------------- Previous insight: [Use ‘you’ in your copy to boost results]( (100+ more insights [here]( Strategically position objects that seem easy to grab in your ads Channels: Ads | Image Ads | Website | Marketing communications For: Both B2C and B2B Research date: October 2019 📈 Recommendation Products can be either: - Graspable objects: that people can easily grab and hold in their hand (e.g. mug, baseball bat) - Non-graspable objects: anything else - physical or non-physical (e.g. car, newsletter, SaaS software) You can increase sales of any product by strategically positioning graspable objects in your marketing creatives (e.g. ads, website, email banners). If your product is a graspable object, position it in a way that people can easily imagine grabbing it with their right hand (e.g. to the right side of an image, with the handle facing right). If your product is not graspable, position a graspable object (even if unrelated to your product) in the field of vision of the product you are selling (e.g. image of a car, logo of your SaaS). It will make your product feel graspable. 🎓 Findings - [Previous research]( found that people like products that they can take and hold (“graspable” objects) more when they are on the right side of their body or when the handle is pointed toward the right. For example: - Mugs, wine glasses, and yogurt cups are graspable objects - A bottle of detergent on a store shelf would sell more when placed with the handle on the right, rather than the left - This study found that graspable objects can be placed strategically to increase preferences for non-graspable products in the same field of view (e.g. a painting, an ad for accounting software). For example: - A mug with a handle facing to the right, placed in an ad for a wall-mounted clock - A pen on the right side of an ad for accounting services - For example, as part of 8 experiments: - 7,962 visitors to a shopping center walked by different versions of a poster advertising its loyalty program. The ad also contained a vegetable peeler, with the handle pointing toward the viewer - 0.6% of people signed up when the peeler was on the right side of the image - 0.2% signed up when the peeler was on the left - A painting was shown with a glass of wine next to it. People were asked how likely they were to buy the painting - 13.9% more said they would buy it when the glass was to the right of the painting, compared to the left of it - 16.2% more said they would buy it when there was a glass on the right, compared to no glass - On average, across 5 of the controlled experiments, the effect increased purchase intentions by about 7.5% to 8.75%. In one of the experiments, people were 13.9% more likely to say they would buy a painting when it had a wine glass placed to its right, compared to when the glass was placed to its left 🧠 Why it works - When we see an object that we could easily grasp with our dominant hand, we have a stronger feeling that we own it. - Once we feel stronger ownership of a product, we like it more, are more likely to buy it, and are willing to pay more for it. We would not want to lose it, largely due to our [loss aversion](. - This feeling of ownership of a graspable object spills over to a non-graspable product if they are in the same field of vision. --------------------------------------------------------------- 🧭 Brought to you by [Ahrefs]( I’m proud to have Ahrefs sponsor Ariyh, by far my favorite company for SEO tools (and probably the [best source of SEO tips and resources](. If you want to track and improve your SEO, they have a great tool to do that - at no cost. I use it myself. You can try it out below. [Audit your website at no cost]( --------------------------------------------------------------- This announcement was sponsored. Want your brand here? [Click here](. ✋ Limitations - In most of the experiments, people were asked to not use or move their hands when looking at the ads and images. It’s possible that when people have their right hand occupied (e.g. using their phone) the effect changes or disappears, because they can’t grasp the object they see with an occupied hand. - The study focused on psychological ownership as the driver of this effect, but it is likely that there are other unexplored reasons that drive it. - It’s unclear where the line is that defines when an object is ‘graspable’. Is a smartphone in itself graspable? If it’s attached to a selfie stick, does it become more graspable? 🏢 Companies using this - No companies or advertising agencies appear to be using this technique yet. ⚡ Steps to implement - If your product is graspable, make sure to position it in a way that makes it easy for right-handed viewers to imagine grabbing it. - If your product is not graspable, think of graspable objects that would fit well in the scenario you are depicting. For example, you can set an advertisement of a luxury car on a golf course and include a graspable golf club on the right side of the image. - Apply this effect whenever you are displaying your product, and in some cases even your brand. For example in ads, on your website, or in email banners. - You can also drive a similar effect by [showing a hand touching your product](. --------------------------------------------------------------- 🔍 Study type Lab and online experiments and field experiment (with two versions of a poster used to advertise a loyalty program at the entrance of a hypermarket) 📖 Research [On the other hand…: Enhancing promotional effectiveness with haptic cues](. Journal of Marketing Research (October 2019). 🏫 Researchers - [Virginie Maille](. KEDGE Business School - [Maureen Morrin](. Rutgers University–Camden - [Ryann Reynolds-McIlnay](. Oregon State University Remember: This is a scientific discovery. In the future it will probably be better understood and could even be proven wrong (that’s [how science works](. It may also not be generalizable to your situation. If it’s a risky change, always test it on a small scale before rolling it out widely. --------------------------------------------------------------- Rate today’s insight to help me make Ariyh's next insights 🎓 even more useful 📈 How was today’s insight? [Loved it]( | [Great]( | [Good]( | [Meh]( | [Bad]( - 📘 Want to optimize your pricing? Get [Ariyh’s Science-based Playbook of Pricing & Promotions]( - 📣 Want to advertise on Ariyh? [Here’s all you need to know]( - 🎓 New to Ariyh? -> Subscribe below or read 100+ other [3-min marketing insights]( [Subscribe]() If you liked this post from [Ariyh]( why not share it? [Share](   [Like]( [Comment]( [Share](   © 2022 Thomas McKinlay 08007, Barcelona, Spain [Unsubscribe]() [Get the app]( writing](

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