1
/
of
1
Kogan Page
Decoding the Irrational Consumer: How to Commission, Run and Generate Insights from Neuromarketing Research
Decoding the Irrational Consumer: How to Commission, Run and Generate Insights from Neuromarketing Research
Regular price
€64,95 EUR
Regular price
Sale price
€64,95 EUR
Shipping calculated at checkout.
Quantity
Couldn't load pickup availability
Decoding the Irrational Consumer is written to help marketing practitioners demystify neuromarketing, a relatively new field of marketing research used to understand consumer response to marketing stimuli.
Decoding the Irrational Consumer presents in plain terms the key theoretical tools required to implement neuromarketing studies and achieve desired research outcomes. Marketers and researchers will learn how to effectively and confidently brief data processors, and confer with neuroscientists and technicians. They will gain keen understanding of recent developments in behavioural science and data-processing technology, as well as sophisticated neuromarketing tools used to understand subconscious responses including behavioural economics, eye-tracking, implicit response measures, and facial coding. The author discusses when to apply these techniques and others, how to combine them effectively and how to correctly interpret resulting data to generate valuable insights that aid in decision making. The book is also suppotrted by an online guide for students and lecturers with helpful chapter summaries.Author: Darren Bridger
Publisher: Kogan Page
Published: 08/25/2015
Pages: 224
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 0.71lbs
Size: 9.21h x 6.14w x 0.48d
ISBN: 9780749473846
About the Author
Darren Bridger works as a consultant to marketers, advising on using and analysing data that tap into consumers' non-conscious thinking and motivations. He was one of the original pioneers of the consumer neuroscience industry, co-founding both the world's first full-service agency, Neuroco, and the first agency dedicated to serving the public relations industry, MindLab International, then joining the world's largest agency, Neurofocus, as its second employee outside of the US.
Share
