The perfect brand strategy is to admit imperfection
Richard Shotton
Author of The Choice Factory and founder of Astroten, a consultancy that applies findings from behavioural science to improve marketing.
An esteemed professor of psychology, Johannes Haushofer, posted his CV on twitter last week to much acclaim. It was certainly a CV with a difference. Rather than the normal bragging list of successes, it outlined his failures.
The CV included sections on the degree programs he didn’t get into, funding he failed to secure, papers rejected by journals and, even, meta-failures. Haushofer’s aim was to balance the record. “Most of what I try fails,” he said, “but these failures are often invisible, while the successes are visible”.
The frank admission caused quite a stir on twitter and was picked up approvingly by national press titles, such as The Guardian and The Independent.
The pratfall effect
Brands should heed Haushofer’s example. A series of academic studies suggests that admitting weaknesses might be an effective tactic. Eliot Aronson, from the University of California, was the first academic to investigate this bias, now known as the "pratfall effect".
Aronson recorded a colleague answering a series of quiz questions. The colleague, having been primed with the answers, answered 92% of them correctly. At the end of the quiz the colleague then pretended to spill a cup of coffee over himself.
The recording was played to a large sample of students, who were then asked how likeable the contestant was. However, Aronson split the students into cells and played them different versions: one with the spillage included and one without. Overwhelmingly, the students found the clumsy contestant more likeable.
So why do these imperfections make people more attractive? And more importantly how can brands apply these insights?
Why brands should apply the pratfall effect
It might be that admitting weaknesses makes brands seem more human. In an age where many prefer the authentic to the mass produced this might boost appeal. Or could it work because everyone assumes that brands are fallible.
If a brand is open about its failings it can convince consumers that its weaknesses lie in inconsequential areas. Claiming perfection leaves consumers fearing the worst and perceiving the brand as a braggart.
This theory partially explains the success of budget airlines. At launch they openly admitted that the trade-off for cheap prices was a compromised service: no reservations and a small luggage allowance. If they hadn't admitted as much, consumers may have assumed the cost-cutting had come at the expense of safety.
Counter-intuitively, the perfect brand strategy may be to admit imperfection.
First published at https://www.iabuk.net/blog/the-perfect-brand-strategy-is-to-admit-imperfection#HMRYYUJkgFYJy4D3.99
For more blogs follow me : @rshotton
Author of The Choice Factory and founder of Astroten, a consultancy that applies findings from behavioural science to improve marketing.
8 年Thanks for the feedback Marcos- much appreciated. Which are the social media examples that you particularly like?
Co-Managing Director at Spark Foundry
8 年Big fan of your posts, Richard, this one especially. There are great social media examples where brands who hold their hands up receive a lot of support and loyalty from fans - making their mistake the most success part of the campaign. Anyway, it's great stimulus for brands looking to build a more human aspect to their work.
CEO at Adido - Travel marketing speaker / trainer
8 年Nice post Richard. I guess there is a fine line between admitting failure and admitting to lies/errors. I'm thinking of VW particularly here. If they were to poke fun of their failure to cheating on emissions tests then I don't think this would do down well. Whereas other businesses who've made genuine mistakes (that haven't affected safety for example) can probably get away with holding their hands up a bit more.
Author of The Choice Factory and founder of Astroten, a consultancy that applies findings from behavioural science to improve marketing.
8 年Interesting point Vic - the research from Aronson suggests that the key concern for a brand is that they are seen as competent before admitting a weakness. If a brand is seen as incompetent admitting a flaw makes them appear even worse.
Retired academic, ex media agency board director, market researcher.
8 年But is when you admit it the key? If a brand does this is it being transparent, or a hostage to media fortune?