šŸ’Ž On consuming the product (not the brand)

The foolhardy researcher who dared question the cola dogma was Read Montague of Baylor College of Medicine. In 2005 Montague conducted a scientifically controlled, double-blind version of the Pepsi challenge. Participants received two unlabeled cups containing Coke and Pepsi. They were asked to drink them and indicate which tasted better. The resultā€”an even split between the two drinks, with no correlation between the brand of cola participants claimed to prefer beforehand and the one they chose in the study. Tasters could not distinguish between the two. These results horrify Coke and Pepsi lovers. They insistā€”science and double-blind tests be damnedā€”that they would have been able to tell the difference.

Excerpt from: Elephants on Acid and other bizarre experiments by Alex Boese

šŸ’Ž On the fluidity of our buying behaviour (depending on mood and occasion)

Our ‘beliefs’ about brands are nowhere near as stable and consistent as we think. As Ehrenberg-Bassā€™s work with re-contact surveys has shown, individual opinions about brands are much more volatile than top-line tracking data suggests.

The overall percentage of people who agree ‘Pepsi tastes better than Coke’ might stay the same from survey to survey. But that doesnā€™t mean that individual respondents are answering the same way each time. Look at the data more closely, and youā€™ll see that people answer research questions in a ā€™probabilisticā€™ way. They may lean slightly in favour of one brand or another, but they donā€™t have fixed beliefs.

Behaviour patterns are similarly fluid and messy. We like to think that people divide into distinct buying groups. But look at long runs of data, and youā€™ll find that real-life buying behaviour is much more ā€™agnosticā€™. Buyers of premium brands also buy Own Label; low-fat buyers also buy full fat; Coke buyers buy Pepsi.

Our opinions about brands fluctuate depending on mood and occasion. And so do our brand choices. In the morning, we feel healthy and go for low fat. In the afternoon, we want chocolate.

Excerpt from: How not to Plan: 66 ways to screw it up by Les Binet and Sarah Carter

šŸ’Ž On removing anxieties about buying a product (Dr Pepper)

But weirdly, Iā€™ve never asked for Dr Pepper in a bar because you know theyā€™re not going to have it and thereā€™s that mild embarrassment about asking for something they havenā€™t got, and feeling like a bit of a twat. However, if you ask for Coke and they donā€™t have it, itā€™s their fault not yours, the whole dynamicā€™s completely different. The only place that itā€™s socially acceptable not to sell Coke is a total health farm weirdo place full of organic produce, and even then itā€™s a bit irritating. Theyā€™ll have loads of those Fentimans Victorian-style lemonades, and even then itā€™s a bit irritatingā€”come on, just sell Coke for crying out loud! Everywhere else has to sell Coke and itā€™s their fault if they havenā€™t got it. An aversion to little things like minor forms of embarrassment stop me from being a maximiser and asking for Dr Pepper, and Iā€™ll always ask for Diet coke if Iā€™m in a pub or a bar unless they have some massive sign saying ā€˜We Sell Dr Pepperā€™, in which case I would obviously ask for Dr Pepper.

Excerpt from: Rory Sutherland: The Wiki Man by Rory Sutherland