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Sunday, March 30, 2008
Jackie Gingrich Cushman :: Townhall.com Columnist
Justifying Past Purchases With New Research
by Jackie Gingrich Cushman
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With unemployment at 10.2%, what will happen by the end of Obama's first term?



Finally, a study backs up what we intuit. Seeing brand logos affect people’s behavior. Isn’t that the whole point of brand advertising? But wait, this study is not about brand advertising driving sales - this study is about brand images driving people’s behavior, whether or not they purchase the product, even if they do not realize they have seen the brand.

In the study, “Automatic Effects of Brand Exposure on Motivated Behavior: How Apple Makes you ‘Think Different,’” (Grainne M. Fitzsimons, Tanya L. Chartrand, and Gavan J. Fitzsimons); published in the April issue of “The Journal of Consumer Research,” the authors proved that seeing brand logos affected people’s behavior.

The study included four brands: Apple, IBM, Disney Channel and E!. All four brands were positively viewed, but for different attributes.

“Participants exposed to the Apple brand outperformed IBM-primed and control participants on a standard measure of creativity, and participants primed with the Disney Channel reported more honest responses to a social desirability test than those primed with E! logos or control participants. Results showed that this happened only when the participants had the same goal as the brand and they perceived that their goal in that area had not been met.”

The study found that brands “initiated goal-directed behavior only when the brands were associated with qualities desired by the individual.” Brands attributes and personal goals need to match for the brand to impact behavior.

Reading this research reinforced my latest purchases. I recently changed jobs (well, I quit a salaried position and started writing full time - but it sounds better if I say I “changed jobs”). Writing requires creativity. During the transition, I moved from the standard PC world to the Apple world. I am not one for long transitions. I now have an iMac, iPhone, iPod (make that 2) and MacBook Air (on which I am now typing).

My thought process went something like this: big transition - big change - big need to be creative/ independent/ and be able to leap tall buildings in a single bound (or something like that). To me, these thoughts provided sufficient justification for the transition to Apple.

Knowing that I would need copious amounts of training, I signed up for the Apple one-to-one program. This is a one-year, $99 program that includes up to an hour of personal training per week.

I read the study results after I had already purchased all of my Apple items. While I am only a focus group of one, I decided to determine if viewing the Apple logo had made me more creative.

So far I have: created my own Web site for the America to Anywhere for Arthritis (A2A4A) marathon training (www.a2a4a.com), created a podcast (also on the site), and sent my brother-in-law a happy birthday video of my children singing.

Score: creative 3, not 0

Last week, I went in for my fourth training session. The first three sessions had been focused on work-related items. This time I decided a little fun was in order. I took in our family’s video camera and my MacBook Air. After I arrived 10 minutes late (delay due to taking the kids to school), we spent 10 minutes looking for the firewire to connect the video camera to the MacBook Air, (I had forgotten it). Sony of course has a proprietary firewire, so we moved to plan B.

Score: creative 3, not 1

Plan B, learning to work more efficiently in Pages, the word-processing software included in iWorks. The program has incredible templates built into the program. These templates make it easy to add pictures, media and create newsletters, brochures, banners, etc.. I learned how to create a newsletter and add pictures with a mask, creating a picture in various shapes (not hard, but cool). I was being creative.

Score: creative 4, not 1 Continued...

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About The Author
Jackie Cushman is a freelance writer who lives in Atlanta, Georgia. Her column also runs later in the week in the Northside Neighbor.
 
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Hey What Gives?
Was it something I said what happened to my previous post?
Hey Jackie did you run with the "I" Force idea?
I was just kidding-however I did forward a copy to my lawyers Howey, Dewey & Cheatham.

MrBannanaGrabber
"I cannot figure out what is special about any of her columns."

**

Are you kidding? What is so special about her
columns is that typically they are not devisive, but informative. If only we could have more of
that. The world does not need another Ann
Coulter or Dick Morris. The country is mean
enough already.

In fact I like her columns so much (usually)
that I am thinking that maybe Newt would make
a good VP - running with Hillary. I am still
hoping she will be the next President.

To talk about my own experience w/brand images
dictating behavior - I went to the bookstore
about 6 months ago to buy books for a couple of
my grandchildren. To my horror, I discovered that Disney had bought out Baby Einstein. I had
already noticed earlier that they own huge portions of everything in a kids' entertainment
and books. I rarely object to the Disney product. They do a good to very fine job in
what they produce. But I have huge objections to
monopolies of this sort. So my behavior changed
in a negative way. I am not buying any more
Disney product and I got rid of my Disney stock.
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