Home Invoking Emotional Advertising to Engage Your Audience

Invoking Emotional Advertising to Engage Your Audience

All brands are looking to engage more closely with their target audience and existing customer base. Captivating your intended customer requires connection on a deeper emotional level. Rapport with your objective means using emotion in an authentic way throughout your marketing in a way that can stir that in others.

One tactic, emotional ads, has a significant lasting impact on consumers on both a conscious and subconscious level, according to research. Here’s how emotion can motivate consumer purchase decisions.

According to the Numbers

One study found that emotional ads experience close to twice as many dollars return on investment compared to an ad that doesn’t use emotion. Those ads with emotional content had a 31% increase in sales while straight forward ads only had a 16% increase.

Emotions That Trigger Consumer Action

Certain emotions create more of an impact on consumers than others, triggering them to potentially buy or take another action.

According to a Nielsen survey, 50% of consumers in North America feel that humor has the most impact on them and resonates better in ads. (3)

In contrast, stories that include some type of injustice or discrimination can incite consumers to action. Ads with surprising information tend to be more memorable ,while those that offer a positive message with hope also engage consumers. Other types of effective emotional ads involve excitement or nostalgia.

How to Measure the Emotional Success of Emotional Ads

There are many tools that help a company assess the emotional engagement of consumers to the emotional ads they saw. These tools include neuromarketing, which incorporates medical imaging tests like an MRI or EEG to study how the brain reacts to certain content.

Eyetracking develops heat maps from consumer eye movement while looking at print or video content. A net promoter score (NPS) uses a scale system to assess immediate customer engagement.

Examples of Emotional Advertising

To better understand how emotional advertising is used by brands, there are a number of examples that illustrate a best practices approach.

In 2013, Dove created and launched the “Real Beauty Sketches” campaign. The emotional ads highlighted the beauty of all types of women across age, ethnicity, and size. The campaign achieved close to 30 million views in 10 days and 15,000 new YouTube subscribers in just a couple of months.

In 2014, Airbnb had a campaign that focused on homeowners opening their homes to guests to illustrate what it would feel like to stay in an Airbnb as well as what it would be like as a host.  The Airbnb campaign aligned with the company’s championing of the everyday person and appealed to those who wanted to help others. Three years later, the company realized over 60% growth in guest arrivals.

Gillette’s “Perfect Isn’t Pretty” campaign for the 2016 Summer Olympics spotlighted individual athletes and the personal and professional struggles they experienced on the way to becoming Olympic athletes. It resonated on an emotional level, touching people who also felt compelled to improve their lives. A TV ad from Gillette campaign reached 30 million YouTube views during the Olympics.

Lessons Learned

Emotional ads are a highly effective tool to engage and connect with your audience. To learn more about how to include the best emotions in your content ads, check out this infographic on the power of emotional ads from Point Park University Online.

About ReadWrite’s Editorial Process

The ReadWrite Editorial policy involves closely monitoring the tech industry for major developments, new product launches, AI breakthroughs, video game releases and other newsworthy events. Editors assign relevant stories to staff writers or freelance contributors with expertise in each particular topic area. Before publication, articles go through a rigorous round of editing for accuracy, clarity, and to ensure adherence to ReadWrite's style guidelines.

Brad Anderson
Former editor

Brad is the former editor who oversaw contributed content at ReadWrite.com. He previously worked as an editor at PayPal and Crunchbase.

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