An insight that men bought carpets based on durability was wrong. Women were the primary buyers, and their top criterion was color. By redesigning the retail space to emulate a makeup counter—with softer lighting, curves, and lifestyle imagery—sales skyrocketed 350% in six weeks.
In a study, a faint chocolate smell was pumped into a store. While none of the 105 shoppers interviewed afterward consciously noticed the scent, the featured chocolate brand's share jumped by 41%. This demonstrates that subconscious sensory cues can bypass rational thought and directly influence purchasing decisions.
While visually arresting, displays like perfect pyramids of beer cans can paradoxically hurt initial sales. Research shows that the first shoppers are often reluctant to take a product because they don't want to be the one to mess up the perfect arrangement. This highlights a critical balance between attention-grabbing design and approachability.
Human vision has two modes: sharp central focus (foveal) for details like text, and wide peripheral vision that scans for general signals like shape, color, and movement. Since peripheral vision detects things first but cannot read, visual marketing must grab attention with imagery before communicating details with text.
