Warc, 11 June 2014
LONDON: Even though the marketing industry celebrates
emotional intelligence, its understanding of how to make best use of emotions
in the digital age is inadequate, according to an Admap Prize-winning essay.
Most brands have not adopted a strategic approach to
emotional intelligence and have failed to observe that the digital age has made
people more impulsive and emotionally unrestrained, argues Sarah Morning, an
associate planning director at creative agency Dare.
Her essay, entitled "We need to talk about Henry: why
we need to learn to manage emotions in the digital age", won the Silver
award in the Admap Prize 2014, where entrants were asked to write on the
subject of how brands are built in the digital age.
Morning suggests the digital age has increased the range and
intensity of emotions that are expressed publicly and that only a few global
brands – notably, Apple, Coca-Cola and Google – have mastered the art of
emotional management in their communications.
Apple, for example, has put great emphasis when developing
its products on assessing how users responded emotionally to its touchscreen
controls and icon designs.
Meanwhile, Google has already positioned its platforms as
"emotional management and regulation tools", Morning says, and is
developing wearable technology that will allow it to infer a user's changing
emotional state over a period of time.
And Coke has been adept at using the digital age to
encourage an emotional response to its product placement.
By deliberately associating itself with scenes of global
conflict in shows like Homeland, the brand successfully encourages people to
imagine the loss of Coke's traditional association with happiness and other
positive emotions, she suggests.
Emotions are the key drivers behind human decision-making as
they have always been, Morning added, but the difference today is that the
"emotional capabilities needed to succeed have moved up a level".
Julie Kollman, global head of insights at SABMiller and an
Admap Prize judge, commended Morning for her "bold and brave"
approach, but questioned whether marketers would think along these lines.
She said: "This paper advocates using emotion
strategically, to actively manage and regulate, even manipulate, people's
emotions for a defined purpose. It is a bold and brave approach – with great
examples of success. But will marketers be bold enough to think this way?"
Data sourced from Admap
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