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Imagine Pepsi without Coke. Impossible, right?
Martin Lindstrom
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Martin Lindstrom
Age: 54
Born: 1970
Born: January 1
Author
Writer
DK
Martinas Lindstromas
Without
Right
Pepsi
Coke
Impossible
Imagine
More quotes by Martin Lindstrom
Spinning out of my neuromarketing work where, based on scanning the brains of 2,000 respondents' brains using fMRI, we learned that there's a huge correlation between religion and branding - and thus the way that brands intend to generate customer evangelism are to be constructed.
Martin Lindstrom
If we define value as emotions - and emotional engagement...i.e. love!
Martin Lindstrom
I think it is fair to say that the end goal might be a demand yet your focus when building brands should rarely focus on this objective.
Martin Lindstrom
Brands must make use of the inclination of consumers to be persuaded by friends.
Martin Lindstrom
Opinion free brands simply will struggle to survive in the future - of that simple reason that we increasingly want to associate ourselves with opinionated and authentic brands.
Martin Lindstrom
The reality is that a brand can no longer afford to be friends with everyone.
Martin Lindstrom
A brand is an emotional construct. It helps you to project an image to the world which you'd like to own.
Martin Lindstrom
Products are produced in the factory brands are produced in our minds.
Martin Lindstrom
If marketers could uncover what is going on in our brains that makes us choose one brand over another-what information passes through our brain's filter and what information doesn't-well, that would be key to truly building brands of the future.
Martin Lindstrom
The world's holy texts are built on ancient oral traditions.
Martin Lindstrom
Fear can come across in absence of sharp corners, locked windows in hotel rooms, locks, passwords, security...fairytales (the type of storylines)...in fact everywhere.
Martin Lindstrom
Storytelling has driven faith and religious practice, keeping them alive for millennia. Just as every hymn, icon, and stained-glass window in a church links to a story, brands have the potential to build holistic identities.
Martin Lindstrom
Remember, that the logo is really the dot on top of the i.
Martin Lindstrom
In a world where authenticity increasingly is in focus, consumers are seeking more than brands who focuses on revenue - consumers want to support brands with a purpose - one that justifies an emotional engagement.
Martin Lindstrom
Think about it - what's the first thing you do when waiting for someone who's late? Grab your smartphone and do something with it ...anything with it - so that you don't look like a loser. However by doing so we've lost our ability to be present - to observe, to connect with others and most importantly to be bored.
Martin Lindstrom
If you were to close your eyes and walk into a place of worship, the sounds and smells would alert you to where you were: ringing bells, incense, the rumble of a massive organ. Most brands are lacking these sensory stimuli.
Martin Lindstrom
Where big data is all about seeking correlations - and thus to make incremental changes - small data is all about causations - seeking to understand the reasons why.
Martin Lindstrom
I did however realize that only 4% of the world's population turns creative when in contact with water and thus we dialed this dimension down and changed direction.
Martin Lindstrom
The consumer has become increasingly sophisticated in the way they obtain and digest information - of the simple reason that they've become comfortable about building and maintaining their own personal brands. This has thickened their filter and as a result made them become more critical towards advertising and communication.
Martin Lindstrom
Online marketing rarely is able to appeal to more than two senses - yet offline often (if utilized the right way) represents the option of multi sensory appeals.
Martin Lindstrom