Reader Tony Kirton, a
specialist in brand management and former marketing executive
in BMW, Audi and Volkswagen has brought to my attention an engaging podcast series on the brain. He believes that new insights into
the workings of our brains are certain to lead to a transformation in how we
organize and run companies and market our products. I agree with him without reservation.
I read my first book about the brain in 1979: The
Brain – The Last Frontier by neurologist Richard Restak. Restak’s
book changed the direction of an unending curiosity about human behavior that
grew out of my desire as a landscape architect early in my adult life to better
understand the behavior of end users of my park, playground and community
designs.
By 1985, I had become fully immersed in marketing.
The foundation of my evolving views on marketing was brain science. Serving
the Ageless Market, which I wrote in the late 1980s, was the first business
book to discuss connections between marketing and brain science.
For the better part of two decades I was nearly
alone in calling for a new vision of marketing that was grounded in brain
science because it was radically changing our understanding of free will,
consciousness, memory, motivations and indeed, connections between the mind and
the brain.
Now, at long last, such a vision is gaining
traction. There is even a new branch of marketing called neuromarketing. Not
to be outdone by marketers, practitioners of the dismal science have spawned a
new branch of economics called neuroeconomics. Then, covering both
fields – and others as well that deal with brain matters – is the new field
called neuroethics.
In a Los Angeles Times article , “Searching
for the Why of Buy” Robert Lee Hotz talks about the revolutionizing insights
into the human brain’s workings made possible by new scanning technology. He wrote,
“Much of what was traditionally
considered the product of logic and deliberation is actually driven by
primitive brain systems responsible for emotional responses — automatic
processes that evolved to manage conflicts between sex, hunger, thirst and the
other elemental appetites of survival.”
New ways of looking at human (consumer) behavior
through the lens of brain science are as radical a departure from past beliefs
about behavior as was the shift from seeing the earth as flat to seeing it as
round some five centuries ago.
Individuals and companies that ignore how brain
research is changing our notions about human behavior are in great danger of
being vanquished by competitors who have studied the matter and learned how to
put their new knowledge to work.

This could emerge as a fascinating area if we to understand the working of the brain and human behaviour.
Could show much promise
Posted by: Dale | May 23, 2009 at 09:40 AM
Brilliant! It makes so much sense to apply the science of how the brain works to marketing. The next frontier. . . Thanks for your fascinating work!
Posted by: Tom Troughton | June 23, 2009 at 10:23 PM