In the act of shopping for technology products, consumer behavior is most often driven by either “good enough” or more emotional needs such as membership, status, and pleasure; instinctive, System 1 decision-making. Most consumers have relatively little understanding of what goes on ‘under the hood’ so they rely on mental shortcuts such as brand recognition and positive emotional connections (e.g. trust) in order to-additional claims and features, “violators” that signal something new, explanations of an innovation in functions, a clarification of a change that doesn’t mean anything to most consumers, or sustainability messages.
Much of this information is conveyed cognitively in text, requiring the shopper to stop and deliberate, defaulting to System 2 selection rather than making a gut, intuitive decision.
Although all this information may be important, our data also proves that around 50% of shoppers make their decision ‘in the moment’ and are only processing a maximum of 3-4 elements on a pack, often even those at an unconscious level! So, you want to make sure you emphasize the Benefits that count for influencing shopper behavior. In our decades of packaging research, we have found that what consumers “see” tends to be the brand mark, product name, a main visual, and one additional message! With limited real estate, you have to be disciplined with what to include to make a pack successful at driving shopper choice.
In our 4S criteria for effective packaging (Be Seen, Shoppable, Seductive, and Selected), here are the best practices you need to follow when prioritizing the hierarchy of elements:
There is such a thing as oversimplifying in the desire to make a pack look premium or luxurious by eliminating too many words and visual elements. This can present a Barrier in tech products where a sales assistant isn’t there to explain what the product does. The key is prioritizing the most critical elements that will communicate Benefits and influence shopper choice. Strike the balance in a simple pack design with compelling images that communicate Benefits effectively and you can win at the shelf!
Simplicity may be hard to achieve in pack design, but with a behavioral framework we can measure if you are getting it right for effectiveness, conversion, and the potential to drive sales. Contact us today to find out how we can help!
THE AUTHOR
Simon Wyld is the Senior Vice President out of Behaviorally’s Los Angeles hub working with the Customer Success team. Simon has a strong passion for designing and implementing behavioral science-based market research solutions with a strong focus on the tech sector. Originally from England, he now lives in LA with his wife, twin kids, and pup. On weekends, you can catch Simon golfing!
Click here to connect with Simon on LinkedIn.