Data di Pubblicazione:
2019
Abstract:
If until a few decades ago to satisfy the demands of consumers was
enough to offer good products and improve the quality of services, today this does
not seem sufficient: the needs of consumers have changed and the cognitive needpurchase-
benefit scheme that inspired traditional marketing has given way to new
strategies aimed at providing the potential customer with an emotional experience,
relying on sensory stimulation. In the panorama of sensory or polysensual marketing,
a trend that is becoming more and more widespread in the various sectors of the
market, the strategies aimed at capturing the consumer by “taking him by the nose”
have proved to be among the most effective and innovative. Communicating with
customers through a direct and immediate language like the smelling one no longer
saves any kind of merchandise or place of sale, investing the most disparate fields. In
this way, by exploiting the extraordinary power of smells to indelibly imprint
themselves in the memory and to provoke immediate emotions, more and more
companies rely on olfactory marketing to influence consumers’ purchasing behavior.
enough to offer good products and improve the quality of services, today this does
not seem sufficient: the needs of consumers have changed and the cognitive needpurchase-
benefit scheme that inspired traditional marketing has given way to new
strategies aimed at providing the potential customer with an emotional experience,
relying on sensory stimulation. In the panorama of sensory or polysensual marketing,
a trend that is becoming more and more widespread in the various sectors of the
market, the strategies aimed at capturing the consumer by “taking him by the nose”
have proved to be among the most effective and innovative. Communicating with
customers through a direct and immediate language like the smelling one no longer
saves any kind of merchandise or place of sale, investing the most disparate fields. In
this way, by exploiting the extraordinary power of smells to indelibly imprint
themselves in the memory and to provoke immediate emotions, more and more
companies rely on olfactory marketing to influence consumers’ purchasing behavior.
Tipologia CRIS:
14.a.1 Articolo su rivista
Keywords:
Odors, smell, sensoriality, emotions, marketing, olfactory marketing/comunicazione, marketing, marketing olfattivo, comportamenti di consumo.
Elenco autori:
Cavalieri, Rosalia
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