Think Eyetracking at Insight Show 2008

Share

 

Natasha French demonstrating eyetracking with SuperVisual.

Natasha French demonstrating eyetracking with SuperVisual.

Last week we enjoyed two great days at the Insight Show, the UK’s only dedicated exhibition for market research experts. With around 2000 visitors from the market research sector, it was the ideal platform to showcase our services, share our unique software (SuperVisual), build relationships, and raise our profile within the industry.

Our stand was well received and our team were on hand to deliver advice and information regarding eyetracking and our services. We gave a number of eyetracking demos to show visitors; putting out the message that Think Eyetracking has a unique offering to help other market research agencies, creative agencies, and end clients.

Robert Stevens

Robert Stevens

Rob Stevens’ (Director and Co-Founder of Think) presentation on how eye-tracking can be used to identify high cognitive engagement and moments of increased suggestibility in consumers was well attended. The presentation explored eyetracking as a neuromarketing approach and the importance of combining implicit and explicit research techniques.He explained the benefits of combining eye-tracking with traditional market research methods.

Tristan Gadsby

Tristan Gadsby

Tristan Gadsby of Virgin Holidays joined Rob and provided a client perspective.His case study impressed the audience with details of how Think eyetracking has helped Virgin Holidays with both their online and offline marketing efforts.

We thank all of the people that came and chatted to us at our stand and who attended Rob and Tristan’s presentation.We look forward to working with many of you.

Why Think Eyetracking?

Share

Think helps deliver on the promise of marketing;

Create and maintain profitable relationships with consumers.

To date marketing has not delivered on its promise; approximately 80% of all new products launches fail to meet pre-launch expectations.

How can a multibillion dollar industry that employs lots of smart people and ideas get it so wrong?

The answer is simple, if not obvious: market research has largely ignored the importance of consumers’ subconscious minds. Consumers are rarely aware of what they are doing and why they are doing it – cognitive scientists have a rule of thumb “unconscious thought is 95 percent of all thought”, some believe this may be a serious underestimate. I know this may be hard to believe, so think for a moment about your daily commute today, how much of it do you remember?

Probably very little, if you take the same route to work each day. This is because your subconscious mind takes you there on autopilot; there is no need to engage your executive, conscious mind unless something novel or unexpected happens. If you need more convincing go and shop your usual weekly or monthly grocery shop at a new store. Pay attention to how it feels to need to engage your executive mind to find items when you are used to using your habitual mind. It is frustrating!

To date, market research has addressed the conscious or executive mind with questionnaires, focus groups, satisfaction surveys and the like. The problem is the conscious mind is at best only partially responsible for the many decisions people make on a daily basis. One unfortunate but real consequence of this is that 43% of smokers relapsed again within 12 months after undergoing surgery to remove cancerous parts of their lung (according to study by Walker, 2006). This is not the action of a rational conscious executive mind. It is the action of an unconscious habitual mind, stuck on a bad autopilot setting.

There is a disconnect between what people say and what they actually do, we believe this disconnect is symptomatic of the two different states of mind. It’s not that consumer lie on purpose, they usually answer truthfully, but using their executive mind and that is only part of the way we all make decisions. At Think we believe we have found a way to bridge the chasm between the executive and habitual minds to help market research deliver on the promise of marketing.

We rarely consciously control our eyes, this fact gives us the ability to see into some of the processes of the powerful habitual mind with eye tracking. Combining this with our experience, dedicated software, and methodologies, allows us to peer into the consumers’ minds to understand which (if any) mind is being engaged.

Our proven approach combines eyetracking with traditional market research to gain deeper understanding of how consumers engage with visual and written creative work on habitual and executive levels.

It’s the beginning of something special.