A study carried out using facial creams by the University of the
Basque Country shows that people who use cosmetics buy cosmetic products
primarily due to emotional reasons. The scientists carried out personal
surveys on 355 women aged between 18 and 50, who were selected in a
random sample. The candidates were asked to evaluate various aspects of
their perceptions of the functional and emotional factors of the
cosmetics they used, as well as their degree of satisfaction with them.
“The study showed that both the emotional and utility aspect of cosmetic brands had a significant impact on consumer
satisfaction, but that the emotional component has a greater effect,”
Vanessa Apaolaza, a researcher from the UPV and lead author of the
study, which has been published in the African Journal of Business Management,
quoted. Some of the main positive emotions aroused by beauty products
include “the sensation of wellbeing gained from eliminating or reducing
feelings of worry and guilt, which is the factor with the greatest
impact,” the author explained.
Overall, the results indicated that “consumer
satisfaction is greatest when the cosmetics brand helps to strengthen
positive emotions through the perception of ‘caring for oneself’ and
removing feelings of worry and guilt about not taking care of one’s
appearance,” says Apaolaza.
Paradoxically, in order for the brand to provide this positive
emotional experience, it must first cause consumers to have negative
feelings about themselves, such as concern about and dissatisfaction
with their appearance. “One way of achieving this is by subtly telling
them they are ugly — something that many cosmetics adverts achieve
implicitly and very effectively by showing images of unusually beautiful
women,” the study pointed out. “The theory of social comparison has
been used in various research
studies to explain how using very attractive models in advertising can
affect consumers,” says Apaolaza. “The basic premise of these studies is
that consumers compare their own level of physical attractiveness with
that of the models used in adverts, and that these comparisons give rise
to negative effects in the way they perceive their own physical
attractiveness and on their self-esteem. These effects are most
heightened among people with the greatest awareness of their public
image,” she adds. The study points to the need to eliminate these
negative emotions and to soothe women’s worries about looking good as
one of their main psychological motivations for buying cosmetics.
There are many such instances that can be quoted here, one that
caused huge wave in the market during early 2000’s was the launch of the
Unilever’s Dove campaign for real beauty. This campaign aroused a huge
debate and also tested Dove’s message authenticity. On one hand Dove
encourage women to think they are beautiful, but on another they showed
through their commercial that women need make up to showcase their
beautifulness.
Our emotions often dictate our decisions. In our buying behaviour, we
make emotional decisions and justify them rationally. These emotions
are in part learned and in part instinctive,” points out Apaolaza.
For example, one thing that could explain the importance assigned to
the unconscious emotional desire “to be attractive to the opposite sex,
to be sexually attractive,” and which encourages people to buy
cosmetics, can be found in one of the most basic programs of the human
being, explained in the Darwinist approach to attraction — beautiful
faces and well-formed bodies are important biological indicators of a
person’s value as a sexual partner.
Of the emotional brand-related components studied, “the positive
feeling gained from experiencing greater success in social interactions”
has the greatest impact on pleasure, the author says.
From a utility perspective, the researchers found that the design of
the bottles or containers (attractive, making the product or brand seem
technically superior, exceptional and unique) also has an impact on
purchasing decisions.
“These results serve as a recommendation to the market to use
persuasive strategies focused more on emotional aspects than functional
ones,” the researcher concludes
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