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7.3 Visualate-to-Innovate

Affiliate-to-Innovate: 60,000 LinkedIn Innovators in Groups Can Use NEW Discussion Forums

Now_get_thinked_groups_announcme_14 LinkedIn just released a valuable new feature that allows Group members to engage in discussions about innovation, creativity and other interesting topics. Articles from Innovator's Digest will be linked to some provocative questions in Group Discussion areas. 
Get ThinkedIn by joining in our innovation conversations via the LinkedIn Groups that now include over 60,000 innovative minds.

Click Below to Join Our Top 24 LinkedIn
Innovation Groups & Join the Discussions!

  1. InnovationPeople Network Group
  2. Marketing, PR, Word of Mouth & Buzz Innovators Group
  3. Green & Sustainability Innovators Group
  4. Sales & Selling Innovators Group
  5. New Product & Service Innovators Group
  6. Meeting & Event Design Professionals Group
  7. Experience Economy "Pine & Gilmore" Innovators Group
  8. Fundraising & Philanthropic Innovators Group
  9. Learning & Education Innovators Group
  10. HealthCare, Medical, Pharma & Biotech Group
  11. Brand Innovators & Branding Leadership Group
  12. Technology & Mobility Innovators Group
  13. Communication Innovators Group
  14. Innovation Idols Group
  15. Futurists & Anticipatory Scientists Group
  16. TRIZ Innovation Tool Group
  17. Portfolio Magazine's ThinkTank Panelist Group
  18. Leadership & Change Management Innovators Group
  19. Chicagovators Group of Chicagoland Innovation Leaders
  20. SolutionPeople Innovators Group
  21. Thinkubator Creative Meeting Environment Innovators
  22. David Allen's "Getting Things Done" Group
  23. illumination.com Innovators Group
  24. InnovatorsDigest.com Innovation Network

Do you want your free subscription to Innovator'sDigest? Click HERE to subscribe and receive innovation news that includes questions used for LinkedIn Innovation Group Discussions.

Brand-ate to Innovate: The Pepsi/Coke Challenge

The Pepsi Challenge was a marketing tour de force. It proved that in a blind taste test, most consumers prefer Pepsi. So why hasn’t that analytical proof pushed the needle in Pepsi’s favor? Read Montague, Director of the Human Neuroimaging Lab at Baylor College of Medicine, has shown the true power of branding on the brain.

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Montague decided to repeat the Pepsi Challenge, but added a twist of technology. Using a non-invasive technique called Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) he was able to reveal which parts of the brain are active in real time.

When Montague and his team gave a taste of an unnamed soda to his volunteers he found that more people preferred Pepsi. On the scan, images of the ventral putamen, one of the brain’s key reward centers, had a response that was five times stronger than for people who preferred Coke.

The surprise came when Read repeated the experiment. This time, telling volunteers which brand they were tasting. Nearly all the subjects then said they preferred the Coke. Moreover, different parts of the brain fired as well, especially the medial prefrontal cortex, an area associated with thinking and judging. The subject’s brains were proving that their experience of the Coke brand influenced their preferences.

The work of Montague and other studies proves that branding goes beyond images and memory recall. The medial prefrontal cortex is a part of the brain known to be involved in our sense of self. It fires in response to a stimulus -- an image, name or concept -- that resonates with who we are. Something clicks, and we are more likely to buy.

The science of neuro-marketing is now in its infancy. But what it has proved is that branding isn’t the latest marketing ploy, but a glimpse into how our brains are affected by smart messaging and marketing.

Marty Baker - President of Inotivity
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