Daily Research News Online

The global MR industry's daily paper since 2000

NeuroFocus Tracks Perception of Luxury

July 7 2010

US-based neuromarketing agency NeuroFocus has developed the Luxury Perceptual Framework (LPF), to detect consumers' perception of what constitutes 'luxury' in terms of clients' brands, products, packaging, in-store marketing, advertising and customer service.

Dr A K PradeepNielsensponsored NeuroFocus captures consumers' responses at the subconscious level through EEG-based full-brain measurements. Last month, the firmintroduced the N-Matrix 3D virtual shopper insights system, to enable companies to test product designs, packaging and entire store layouts in three dimensions.

Founder and CEO Dr A K Pradeep says that its new LPF model has revealed that in times of economic uncertainty, the brain seeks out 'little moments of luxury' - or small amounts of pleasure and satisfaction in daily life.

The framework comprises eight dimensions which define a consumer's perception of luxury:

  • MORE - offering more than what is normally regarded as 'necessary or needed' causes the subconscious to make the association with luxury.
  • VARIETY - offering a variety of features to choose from is perceived by the subconscious mind as a representation of luxury.
  • PURPOSE - linkage to a socially respectable cause provides the luxury of a 'sense of nobility'.
  • RARE and UNIQUE - the subconscious aspires to possess what is perceived as the unique, rare or unavailable.
  • TIME and LABOR - that someone has labored to make something specific for a consumer, evokes a subconscious perception of luxury.
  • ME - the concept that something is personalized attaches a luxury valuation to it.
  • CARE and DETAILS - the attention to small details triggers a response within the subconscious that links directly to luxury.
  • AESTHETICS - higher aesthetic value is automatically equated with luxury.
'Smart marketers who look for ways to fulfill our universal but deeply-submerged yearning for luxury, especially in difficult economic times, are likely to reap rewards in terms of purchase intent and brand loyalty,' Pradeep explained. 'The LPF forms a fundamental game plan for the battle of the brand and the 'little moments of luxury' that NeuroFocus uncovered, can gain an outsize marketplace advantage.'

Web site: www.neurofocus.com .

All articles 2006-23 written and edited by Mel Crowther and/or Nick Thomas, 2024- by Nick Thomas, unless otherwise stated.

Select a region below...
View all recent news
for UK
UK
USA
View all recent news
for USA
View all recent news
for Asia
Asia
Australia
View all recent news
for Australia

REGISTER FOR NEWS EMAILS

To receive (free) news headlines by email, please register online