Marketing & Strategy Innovation

Sensory Marketing in Retail

by Roger Dooley on 2 December, 2010 - 15:37

Here’s an interesting little video that highlights what supermarkets and other retailers are doing to engage all the senses of their shoppers.

The camera crew visited a redesigned Coles supermarket as well as a tea shop and Air Aroma, a scent marketing firm. A few of the sensory appeal techniques the video illustrates:

Sight: Open store layouts to allow viewing other departments. Well-lit, very attractive displays of produce. Customers can see bakers, butchers, etc. at work.

Touch: Placing products in close proximity to the shopper with no barriers to allow handling.

Sound: Fishmongers, bakes, and butchers are encouraged to be noisy in hawking their wares.

Smell: Aromatic products are out in the open. In addition, “designed” scents are pumped into the air ducts.

Taste: Product sampling is encouraged by staff, and easy access is provided.

The strategy is based on the idea that a customer whose senses are fully engaged will stay longer and buy more. In the tea shop the camera crew visited, there’s also a reciprocity effect at work: a customer who spends 15 minutes sampling teas often feels obligated to make a purchase.

Retail environments like supermarkets, coffee and tea shops, restaurants, etc. are clearly well-positioned to appeal to all five senses. But all too many businesses don’t even make an attempt to get beyond visual appeal – are you doing all you can to maximize sensory engagement? Do people know what your brand smells or sounds like?

Image by: Vincent Ma

Original Post: http://www.neurosciencemarketing.com/blog/articles/sensory-marketing-in-retail.htm

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1 comment

Richard May says:

22 Feb 2012, 10:03

Not all businesses are able to engage the senses of customers fully. What about businesses dealing with IT? Or businesses selling software? There is only so much that they can do. In such cases, if they cannot engage the senses, they can try engaging the customers' emotions, via advertisements.

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