2. WHAT IS SENSORY BRANDING?
It is promoting a product in a way that appeals to
the senses of a customer.
3. Sight - Visual Branding
• The most powerful and seductive sense.
• It can overrule other senses and override logic.
Visual Branding is association of a brand with a
color, shape, typography, logo, icon/symbol or
look appearance.
5. More On Visual Branding..
• Arrangement, infrastructure, aesthetics and
illumination of them are designed to attract
the customers and make them stay longer.
• Cloth stores use techniques like mannequins
to display their best offerings.
• Supermarkets keep fresh fruits and vegetables
on display to attract customers.
7. Sound – Auditory Branding
Human beings are naturally sensitive to sound &
meanings.
Experiments have shown that when music in
restaurants is played slower than the rhthym of
heart beats ~ we tend to eat slower.
• Iphone users are familiar with the ‘crumbling’
sound when you trash data.
• The jingle of Intel Inside and Microsoft are
pretty well known.
8. • Audi chose a combination of heart beat +
Piano + breath as it’s audio branding initiative.
• Mercedes Benz got the precise and appealing
sound for closing of a car door.
• Victoria’s Secret uses a special classical music
in it’s stores to support the premium image.
• Renault has a special ‘Hum’ of engine and the
‘Swish’ of windscreen wipers.
• Kellogs has the special crunching sound to
indicate the crispiness of the snacks.
10. SENSE OF SOUND
• Sound of a snapping door (= Safety) Spicy
rattle of exhaust-pipes and engine (=
Sportiness)
• ƒ‘Klick‘-noise when activating on/off switches =
Working)
• ƒ“Brubble“ sound of the Mini Cooper due to a
deliberate spark failure (= Driving Experience)
11. SMELL – Olfactory Branding
Singapore Airlines has used its scent called Stefan
Florida Waters, on its hot towels and on its flight
attendants. This way the plane smells fresh when you
board, and the scent is spread every time an attendant
walks past.
According to the airline this enhances the travelers
experience of a relaxed flight. After your holiday you will
want to book with them again.
12. The famous M&M World Store in London has a
surprisingly strong chocolate scent when you walk in.
13. Nike stores use a mixed flower scent to direct you
towards the more -expensive shoe designs inside.
The shops are light and often have white walls with
black decorations or images in neutral colors. This
makes you relaxed enough to pay up for their shoes.
14. TOUCH – Tactile Branding
• When you look at cotton what does it remind
you off? Softness.
• More than 65% of consumers prefer to feel
their products before buying.
15. Hoteliers are using concepts like targeting en-suite rooms,
meetings and conference rooms to express the sensory
element.
Use of soft feathered cushions, Tissue material used for
lamps and tables, use of minimum wood are focussed to
create the sensory experience.
• Textured book covers, labels and some printed shirts
• forms that are better adapted to our hands in bottles
of mayonnaise, sauces, beverages
• plush, furry fabrics pleasant to the touch
• mobile devices
16. TASTE – Gustative Branding
They have started roasting coffee beans within
the stores - richer sensory experience.
18. Nissan studied the effects of aromas on
human mental activity and introduced the
Forest AC system in its cars.
This AC system intermittently and alternately
furnishes two unique aromas, borneol and
leaf alcohol, to alleviate boredom and
stimulate the driver's brain
20. Sight: The shapes of the products are round and the colors are delicious.
Smell: The intoxicating and sweet scent is so pervasive that it carries out onto
the streets, so passersby know they can find a store close by.
Hearing: No music is playing within this cosmetic brand’s shops, but there is
an atmosphere of a ‘market,’ with the salespeople talking a lot and actively
promoting products.
Touch: The self-service products are arranged in many bowls that invite you to
dip your hand inside. Their packages are smooth and natural, and the products
themselves have unusual textures.
Taste: Products are visually and olfactorily associated with food, resembling
creamsicle, chocolate ice cream, etc.
21. Appealing to 4 of our Senses – Adidas
Shower Gel
• ƒAsymmetric shape: resembles a stiff muscle = Energy & Force
• ƒConfirmation via the language on the packaging
- active
- energizing
- sport fever
• ƒWhen holding it, the knobbed surface can be felt
• ƒSealing cap looks like a switch can turn the switch
„On“ und „Off“ ƒconnected to a “Click“-Sound = get
connected to an energy circuit
• ƒAgreeable smell
• ƒEvoced feeling: „When I use the Gel, I am
more potent and powerful.“