By Martin Lindstrom
http://www.fastcompany.com/1779611/priming-whole-foods-derren-brown
Derren Brown, a British illusionist famous for his mind-reading act, set out to prove just how susceptible we are to the many thousands of signals we're exposed to each day. He approached two creatives from the advertising agency Saatchi & Saatchi for the "test." On their journey to his office, Brown arranged for carefully placed clues to appear surreptitiously on posters and balloons, in shop windows, and on t-shirts worn by passing pedestrians.
Upon their arrival, the two creatives were given 20 minutes to come up with a campaign for a fictional taxidermy store. Derren Brown also left them a sealed envelope that was only to be opened once they'd presented their campaign. Twenty minutes later, they presented and then opened the envelope. Lo and behold, Derren Brown's plans for the taxidermy store were remarkably similar to the ad campaign, with an astounding 95% overlap.
An interesting experiment, you may say, but hardly a trick you'd fall for. But bear this in mind--it's more than likely you were well primed the last time you went shopping.
Let's take for example Whole Foods, a market chain priding itself on selling the highest quality, freshest, and most environmentally sound produce. No one could argue that their selection of organic food and take-away meals are whole, hearty, and totally delicious. But how much thought have you given to how they're actually presenting their wares? Have you considered the carefully planning that's goes into every detail that meets the eye?
In my new book Brandwashed, I explore the many strategies retailers use to encourage us to spend more than we need to--more than we intend to. Without a shadow of doubt, Whole Foods leads the pack in consumer priming.
Let's pay a visit to Whole Foods' splendid Columbus Circle store in New York City. As you descend the escalator you enter the realm of a freshly cut flowers. These are what advertisers call "symbolics"--unconscious suggestions. In this case, letting us know that what's before us is bursting with freshness.
Flowers, as everyone knows, are among the freshest, most perishable objects on earth. Which is why fresh flowers are placed right up front--to "prime" us to think of freshness the moment we enter the store. Consider the opposite--what if we entered the store and were greeted with stacks of canned tuna and plastic flowers? Having been primed at the outset, we continue to carry that association, albeit subconsciously, with us as we shop.
The prices for the flowers, as for all the fresh fruits and vegetables, are scrawled in chalk on fragments of black slate--a tradition of outdoor European marketplaces. It's as if the farmer pulled up in front of Whole Foods just this morning, unloaded his produce, then hopped back in his flatbed truck to drive back upstate to his country farm. The dashed-off scrawl also suggests the price changes daily, just as it might at a roadside farm stand or local market. But in fact, most of the produce was flown in days ago, its price set at the Whole Foods corporate headquarters in Texas. Not only do the prices stay fixed, but what might look like chalk on the board is actually indelible; the signs have been mass-produced in a factory.
Ever notice that there's ice everywhere in this store? Why? Does hummus really need to be kept so cold? What about cucumber-and-yogurt dip? No and no. This ice is another symbolic. Similarly, for years now supermarkets have been sprinkling select vegetables with regular drops of water--a trend that began in Denmark. Why? Like ice displays, those sprinkled drops serve as a symbolic, albeit a bogus one, of freshness and purity. Ironically, that same dewy mist makes the vegetables rot more quickly than they would otherwise. So much for perception versus reality.
Speaking of fruit, you may think a banana is just a banana, but it's not. Dole and other banana growers have turned the creation of a banana into a science, in part to manipulate perceptions of freshness. In fact, they've issued a banana guide to greengrocers, illustrating the various color stages a banana can attain during its life cycle. Each color represents the sales potential for the banana in question. For example, sales records show that bananas with Pantone color 13-0858 (otherwise known as Vibrant Yellow) are less likely to sell than bananas with Pantone color 12-0752 (also called Buttercup), which is one grade warmer, visually, and seems to imply a riper, fresher fruit. Companies like Dole have analyzed the sales effects of all varieties of color and, as a result, plant their crops under conditions most ideal to creating the right 'color.' And as for apples? Believe it or not, my research found that while it may look fresh, the average apple you see in the supermarket is actually 14 months old.
Then there's those cardboard boxes with anywhere from eight to ten fresh cantaloupes packed inside each one. These boxes could have been unpacked easily by any one of Whole Foods' employees, but they're left that way on purpose. Why? For that rustic, aw-shucks touch. In other words, it's a symbolic to reinforce the idea of old-time simplicity. But wait, something about these boxes looks off. Upon close inspection, this stack of crates looks like one giant cardboard box. It can't be, can it? It is. In fact, it's one humongous cardboard box with fissures cut carefully down the side that faces consumers (most likely by some industrial machinery at a factory in China) to make it appear as though this one giant cardboard box is made up of multiple stacked boxes. It's ingenious in its ability to evoke the image of Grapes of Wrath-era laborers piling box after box of fresh fruit into the store.
So the next time you happen to grab your wallet to go shopping, don't be fooled: retailers for better or for worse, are the masters of seduction and priming--brandwashing us to believe in perception rather than reality.
Discussion Questions:
ReplyDelete1 - This article addresses the issues of "priming" the customer to get them to more readily buy the items in your store. Do you consider this method of priming an asset or a liability in the effort to educate consumers about their nutritional choices?
2 - Do you think the existence of a store like Whole Foods (which in some cases shows no true characteristics of sustainability), hinders the spread of information about responsible food choices to consumers, and as a result, their ability to make more responsible choices about the food they buy?
3 - Do you think it is the responsibility of the large food system players (the Wal-Marts, the Monsanto's, etc.) and the politicians to fix the current flaws in our food system, or do you believe the responsibility lies more with the consumers and their ability to "choose with their wallets" and educate themselves about food?
1. Priming can be an asset or liability, because people will buy what they came into the store to buy; however, if Whole Foods desired to advertise a new healthy food, the attractive display would serve to attract customers and introduce them to the product. Conversely, advertising a food just to make a profit would have a negative impact on consumer awareness.
ReplyDelete2. No, stores like Whole Foods do not hinder responsible decision making. Unlike other large chains, at least the appearance of a Farmer's Market reinforces the idea in customer's.
3. Monsanto and Walmart are more concerned with making a profit than with consumer health, therefore I do not think we can rely on them to repair the flaws in the system. Consumers are a more powerful force because they can influence corporations, farmers, and politicians alike.
1. Priming customers, regardless of the way it's done, hinders the education of consumers about their food choices. Deception in advertising and marketing only hides the truth about the background and nutritional value of foods being sold. Constantly being exposed to these falsities only reinforces the mistakes people make when buying food.
ReplyDelete2.I agree with Ben that even though Whole Foods does not always promote sustainability, the fact that stores like it exist is a step in the right direction. People who shop at Whole Foods are making the choice to shop where the food being sold is better, though not always perfect, rather than going to a store where food may be cheaper, like Wal Mart. That choice shows that people are making a more conscious effort to make better food decisions, but that consciousness cannot stop simply because a store claims it is better.
3.Customers are the ones who really bear the burden of educating themselves about food. The food industry is extremely complex and is influenced by many political, social and economic factors. In a perfect world, everyone would work for the greater good of both people and nature. However, because the industry is largely concerned with money making, it is really up to the consumer to use their agency to find out the truth, and by doing so create change.
1. I agree with Sam. I think that priming consumers does not help the consumers choices in picking nutritional options. Whenever I go into Earthfare, I know exactly what I am there for. But I always wander towards the front display and realize that oh my! I need to buy these pumpkins! I obviously have no need for tiny pumpkins, but it gets me every time!
ReplyDelete2.I also agree with Ben F. and Sam. Most consumers are choosing Whole Foods over another large chain supermarket such as Wal-Mart. They probably prefer Whole Foods for their (questionable) sustainability and natural/organic foods. So they are choosing the "better, more responsible" supermarket over the others is definitely a start towards real sustainability.
3. I think that in a perfect world the large corporations should fix the flaws, but since they're only concern is how much profits they can make it will never happen. Even if consumers put pressure onto them or the government it will only skew the ideas of what is "right." This is clearly shown in the ability of the industry to twist the meaning of what organic/free-range/etc is.
1. By priming consumers, you are limiting their knowledge about their food choices. By having larger displays people are attracted to them, and then are not as willing to educate themselves about healthier options that may be out there for them but do not push with massive advertising techniques.
ReplyDelete2. Stores like Whole Foods, though not as sustainable as a local Farmer's Market, does do a good job at atleast trying to be better about it than other larger distributors.
3. I strongly believe that if the consumers stop demanding tyhe unsustainable food, the big companies will cut down on supplying them with it. I believe that if more people would take the time to educate themselves about their food, a lot of people would make the change and start demanding a more sustainable diet.