Monday, January 31, 2011

Fascinating Scents


In her book, “Fascinate: Your 7 Triggers to Persuasion and Captivation,” famed brand consultant and author Sally Hogshead lets us in on a little branding secret. She says that successful brands “fascinate” people, meaning that they appeal to them on an non-logical, purely emotional level, by activating one or more of the following triggers: lust, mystique, alarm, prestige, power, vice, and trust.


Depending on how a company wants to position itself, it focuses its marketing message on arousing one primary emotional trigger, which may be supported by a few more. As scent marketers, we are all familiar with appealing to the emotional, limbic side of prospects through the only sense that directly affects emotions and memory: scent. In order to for our solutions to be successful for our clients, the scents must match the emotions that the client is triggering in their overall marketing.


Lust – Lust isn’t just sexual arousal; it is anything involved in the anticipation of pleasure, including things that are beautiful, delicious or cool. Companies that use lust as their main trigger include Apple, Sharper Image, Godiva, and all jewelry stores.


Because lust focuses on the senses, it is the emotion that is easiest to express in scent. Lustful scents include florals like rose, ylang ylang and jasmine and with woodsy base notes like sandalwood, Spanish moss and white amber. Yummy fragrances like vanilla and chocolate also stimulate lust, as does the warm and sexy smell of musk.


Mystique – Mystique is an emotion that attracts because of what is left unrevealed, inciting curiosity. It pairs well with lust, just as a negligee both conceals and reveals. Any company that uses a secret formula or rare or exotic ingredient, like Coca Cola and many skincare lines, is using mystique.


Spicy, exotic smells evoke the feeling of mystique, such as exotic florals, cinnamon, musk, tobacco, ginger, pepper and woodsy smells like balsam and cedar. Also, any scents in which the individual elements are hard for a person to identify work for mystique.


Alarm – Alarm is the most difficult emotional trigger to express in scent. It is the emotion that people experience when they become aware of the negative consequences of inaction, like one time offers and buying identity theft protection.


The closest scent to the alarm trigger would be alert, sharp scents such as rosemary and bitter orange.


Prestige - Companies that use prestige appeal to customers’ desire to be members of an elite group and to enjoy the rank and respect that go with it. High quality and high price distinguish these brands. All luxury brands use this trigger.


Prestigious smells tend to be complex, with florals balanced with subtle spices and wood scents.


Power – Power and prestige often go hand in hand. Companies play the power card by either controlling the environment and making customers give up control, or by giving them the feeling of having power and confidence.


Power invoking scents include cool greens, herbals and citrus.


Vice - Vice is our attraction to the forbidden or dangerous, and works well in combination with lust. Any company that uses the concept of rule breaking or overindulgence in its marketing is using the vice trigger. Harley Davidson and all liquor companies fall into this category.


Smells that inspire vice as part of a branding strategy include very sweet smells like cotton candy, chocolate and juicy fruit scents.


Trust – Trust is the last and one of the most powerful emotional triggers. It is the hardest to establish, but it also creates a long term and loyal relationship with customers. Banks, universities and most established market leaders regardless of industry use this trigger to advantage.


Scents that foster trust include any kind of baked good smell like chocolate chip cookies, bread and apple pie as well as vanilla and cinnamon.

Thursday, January 27, 2011

Choosing the Right Scent


You wowed them with your sales presentation and convinced them of the effectiveness of scent marketing by showing them the relevant research. Your prices are within budget and the client is ready to implement a scent strategy. One of the key factors in the success of their program is the implementation.


Pleasant - Research has shown that people react positively to scents that they find pleasant, and negatively to unpleasant smells. So, look for smells that are widely accepted as pleasant such as vanilla, citrus, freshly cut grass, linen, ocean and lavender. Think about doing a small “sniff test” to determine if your customers like the suggested scent.


Nostalgic – Because the sense of smell is connected directly to the memory center of the brain, smells evoke certain memories. In a study comparing recall related to the senses, researchers found that smell brought forth the subjects’ strongest memories, more positive emotional association with the memories and earlier memories than either sight or hearing. Nostalgic scents might include pipe tobacco, leather, freshly cut grass, baking bread, and the perfume of a loved one. Nostalgic scents make people feel comfortable and happy.


Gender specific – In a much-cited study on the use of scent to boost retail sales, researchers diffused a vanilla scent in the women’s department of a clothing store and rose maroc into the men’s department. Sales on the scented days almost doubled compared to unscented days, but when the scents were switched, sales actually decreased.


Cultural – Different cultures have different scent preferences, many of them related to the smells of their natural surroundings and foods. For example, Indonesians tend to prefer fragrances with adehydic notes, which are present in spices used in the area’s food. Americans associate musk with sexuality, but in France, it is a common scent in baby products. Cultural differences also affect group’s affinity with fragrance in general. A study by Yankelovich Partners for Heart & Soul found that African American women are more than twice as likely as those of other races to buy fragrance, and 75% of them buy muliple scents to be worn on different occasions. Hispanic women are also big fragrance buyers, as wearing perfume is considered to contribute to both their cleanliness and femininity.[1]


Congruent – In a study of scent use in a grocery store, scents that customers perceived as “going with” the product increased sales (baked bread smell in the bakery section, strawberries in the produce section), but incongruent scents depressed sales.


Intensity – Many marketers consciously choose a low intensity for their scent because they want the effects to be subliminal. A study done in a shopping center with a low intensity citrus scent noted that while the scent was noticed by very few shoppers, the average amount of money spent increase by $55 per person on scented days versus unscented. Others are concerned about triggering backlash such as pickets of Abercrombie & Fitch saying that their scent dispersal was too intense and “unhealthy” for the employees.


[1] “Marketing Fragrance to Minorities is Lucrative But Not Specialized”, Minority Markets Alert, October 1998

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Breathe Deeply and Relax


Between work and family obligations, traffic, difficult people, relationship challenges and environmental stresses, is it any wonder that people are anxious and stressed out? If your company provides a break from life’s hectic schedule, why not take it one step further and help your customers relax by infusing calming scents in your environment? Great places for relaxing fragrance include hotel lobbies and guest rooms, spas and salons, doctor’s offices, dentist’s offices, hospitals and retail stores. Here are some of the top scents for calming and relaxation:

Lavender – The scent of this purple flower has been used for centuries to calm anxiety, fight depression and enable restful sleep.

Bergamot – Derived from citrus fruit rind, this lovely scent is refreshing and uplifting.

Sandalwood – This woodsy scent comes from sandalwood trees that are at least 40 years old. It calms, relieves nervous tension and helps you relax.

Mandarin – Another citrus like the bergamot, mandarin is gentle and can help with sleep difficulties and lift your mood. Children, especially enjoy and benefit from this scent.

Jasmine – The heady scent of this white flower has been shown by German scientists to be just as effective in inducing sleep as prescription medications.

Use these scent alone or in combinations to create an atmosphere of calm and refreshed spirit.

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Something Smells Healthy: Using Scent Technology for Wellness


Many scent marketers concentrate on pitching hotels and retail establishments because of the direct correlation between scent and a positive retail experience, including more time spent in the store or hotel and repeat business. But have you considered expanding your prospecting to medical establishments and other places where wellness is an issue? Hospitals, doctors’ offices, nursing homes and other healthcare facilities can benefit from using scent.


Anxiety Management

In one study at the Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, researchers administered either a vanilla scent in humidified air or non-scented humidified air to patients undergoing an MRI as part of a diagnostic workup for cancer. The study found that the administration of the scent produced a 63% drop in the patients’ anxiety levels.[1] In addition to diagnostic testing, there are a number of other medical situations where scent can be used to reduce patient anxiety, including before surgery, in dentist offices, in pediatricians’ offices and even hospital waiting rooms.


Immune System Support

Scientists at the University of Tokyo discovered that the fragrant compound linalool, found in sweet basil, thyme, cinnamon, citrus and mangoes not only works on the nervous system to produce a calming effect, but also positively impacts the immune system. Although the study used rats as subjects, scientists extend the results to apply to humans as well. Rats subjected to stress, when exposed to the linalool, showed no depression of their white blood cell counts, like the rats in the control group. In addition, the rats who inhaled the linalool scent had far fewer stress genes activated than the rats who were not exposed to the fragrance.[2] This study suggests that people who sniff linalool, which is commonly used in aromatherapy and as a fragrance in soaps, shampoos and other personal care products, can stay healthier.


Germ Killing

Some of the latest in scent technology has less to do with fragrance and more to do with killing bacteria, fungus spores and viruses. There are new products that can be used to completely sanitize the area, killing even resistant microbe strains like that responsible for staph infections. Staphylococcus is common in hospitals, and is incredibly hardy, having been found to survive on polyester (the fabric used for hospital privacy curtains) for almost three months[3]. Current precautions against this menace is swabbing beds, tables and other surfaces with an ethanol and ammonia blend, which has a strong unpleasant smell and fumes that are unhealthy for patients and sanitation workers to breathe.


So, expand your horizons and include healthcare facilities in your prospecting.



[1] “Fragrance Administration to Reduce Anxiety During MR Imaging,” Redd WH, Manne SL, Peters B, Jacobsen PB, Schmidt H., Psychiatry Service, Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, New York, NY, July-August 1994, http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/7949692

[2] Stress Repression in Restrained Rats by Linalool Inhalation and Gene Expression Profiling of Their Whole Blood Cells. J. Agric. Food Chem., 2009, 57 (12), pp 5480–5485 Akio Nakamura, Satoshi Fujiwara, Ichiro Matsumoto’ Keiko Abe

[3] Neely AN, Maley MP (February 2000). "Survival of enterococci and staphylococci on hospital fabrics and plastic". J. Clin. Microbiol. 38 (2): 724–6. PMID 10655374. PMC 86187.

Thursday, January 20, 2011

Dos and Don'ts of Selling a Scent Solution


Although research has shown over and over again that scent, used correctly, produces a marked increase in sales, the use of scent for branding and enhancing the retail experience is not yet commonplace. The general lack of knowledge about scent marketing makes it important for scent solutions companies to approach prospects in the right way, or risk turning them away from using scent in their marketing at all. Here are some tips.


Do listen to the client. What kind of experience is the client trying to create for its customers? Ask questions about the client’s positioning like “ Is X Company firmly established in its market or is it a newcomer?” and “When your customers think about X Company, what emotions do they experience?” “Do you want them to continue to think of X Company in this way, or are you looking to arouse different emotions and experience in the customer?” “Do you want to use scent to brand X Company or to instigate certain behaviors such as buying more, relaxing or becoming more alert?”


Do consider the capabilities of the person operating the equipment. The last thing you want is for the equipment to break because of user error, so find out who will be using it and make sure that the operation and care of the equipment is in line with that person’s technical ability and position. Provide training if necessary.


Do educate the client about the optimum intensity of the scent for their space. Abercrombie & Fitch, one of the most well-known companies using scent marketing, was picketed by consumers angry about the high intensity of aroma in their stores, which they claimed made customers and employees sick and dizzy. One sure way for a scent marketing program to fail is by having either too intense or too faint a smell.


Don’t fall in love with one solution. Every client is different, and they have different needs. Even if you believe that one equipment line is the best, be open to the client’s budget and specific requirements, and give them the solution that works best for them.


Don’t ignore the other players. The company paying for the solution is not the only people who have to be on board with your proposal. Right up front, ask your contact at the client company who else should be involved and include them in your pitch from the beginning. There may be an advertising agency that wields significant input into marketing decisions, or with product companies, there may be retail chains that you should invite to your presentations. First, present the available research on the effectiveness of scent marketing to establish that scent should be used, and then engage them in choosing the scent. This will make them feel like they have a voice in the process and turn them into your advocates instead of your adversaries.

Welcome to Scent Marketing Today

I would like to welcome you to Scent Marketing Today, a service of the Independent Aroma Group. In this blog, we will be talking about scent and its applications, scent technology and products, the players in the industry, and scent marketing case studies and tips.We welcome your comments and feedback. If there is a topic that you would like to learn more about, just let us know.

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