Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
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Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
Social marketing, PR insight & thought leadership - from The PR Coach
Curated by Jeff Domansky
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Half of people 'remember' fake facts that never happened

Half of people 'remember' fake facts that never happened | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

A new study casts some doubt on something very personal: our memories.  


About  one in two people are highly prone to ‘remembering’ events that never happened, researchers from the University ofWarwick have found. 


Dr Kimberley Wade in the Department of Psychology proved  that if people are told about a completely fictitious event from “their lives,” they start to imagine it, and about half of people are willing  to accept it as reality. 


She and her colleagues recruited 400 participants, asking them to “recall” several different types of false memories – such as taking a childhood hot air balloon ride, playing a prank on a teacher, or creating havoc at a family wedding.  


To some extent, more than 50% of them claimed they remember it – 30% of participants appeared to fully ‘remember’ the event while 23% showed signs that they accepted the suggested event to some degree....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

A new study casts some doubt on something very personal: our memories. Research for the curious.

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7 Psychological Insights to Help You Develop a Powerful Facebook Strategy for Business

7 Psychological Insights to Help You Develop a Powerful Facebook Strategy for Business | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

What is the most powerful tool in your marketing arsenal? Is it keyword research? Copywriting? Beautifully designed ad campaigns? Maybe…


I’m not going to keep these techniques a secret.


 I wanted to share with you the psychological insights I learned so you can dramatically improve your game by leveraging Facebook marketing more effectively.


So, what are the most important psychological “hacks” you can start using today to improve your social media marketing?...

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Add emotions and get better Facebook results.

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6 Factors of Persuasion and How They Relate to PR - Business 2 Community

6 Factors of Persuasion and How They Relate to PR - Business 2 Community | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

Our CEO recently broadcast a link to Secrets of the Science of Persuasion, a whiteboard presentation by Robert Cialdini and Steve Martin (no, not that Steve Martin). In it, Cialdini and Martin discuss six factors of persuasion and include scientific validation of the concepts.As I watched, I wondered how these factors might relate to PR and media pitching. Here’s what I came up with..

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Adding a little Psychology 101 to your PR and marketing can bring you better results.

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Why the Remain Campaign’s Persuasion Strategy Backfired

Why the Remain Campaign’s Persuasion Strategy Backfired | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

For supporters of Britain staying in the EU, a simple question remains this morning: How did we fail to persuade voters of our position? Steve Martin, director at Influence at Work in London and best-selling author of several books on persuasion, spoke with HBR about the ways in which the Remain advocates’ message failed to get through, or even backfired. Martin was joined by Joseph Marks, a behavioral scientist on his team.

HBR: From a persuasion science point of view, how do you explain the vote for Britain’s exit from the EU?
Steve Martin: There seems to have been a focusing effect. The Leave side made sure that immigration became a focus. Not only a focus but the focus. And once that’s a focus it’s hard to get other messages through. What we see is all there is. Danny Kahneman said that clearly. We can only pay attention to a limited number of things and if we see that immigration story every day, that’s what affects us more than a rational argument that predicts what would happen if we left.

But they saw the economic arguments every day, too. Why couldn’t the Remain side focus the voters on that?
Joseph Marks: I think both campaigns were built around fear of loss. One was what we’re losing in terms of immigration coming in. And one was loss to the economy and your pocket. Normally that wins. That’s number one. But right now, you can see that immigration issue as happening now, in the present, whilst the economy is doing well. In the optimism literature, we’ve seen that people are generally optimistic about their own futures when the economy is good, so that’s maybe how the economic argument lost to something that feels more pressing to people. So ironically the very people who helped get our economy on track created an environment that makes it harder to communicate their message of potential negative impacts of leaving the EU. The health of the economy created a good economic environment that had a disproportionate influence over decision making at that moment....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Valuable lessons from Brexit for marketers and politicians alike.

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Why the Myers-Briggs test is totally meaningless

Why the Myers-Briggs test is totally meaningless | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it
It's no more scientifically valid than a BuzzFeed quiz...The Myers-Briggs Type Indicator is probably the most widely used personality test in the world.An estimated 2 million people take it annually, at the bequest of corporate HR departments, colleges, and even government agencies. The company that makes and markets the test makes somewhere around $20 million each year.The only problem? The test is completely meaningless.
Jeff Domansky's insight:
Millions of INTPs are crying in their beer tonight.