California brand ‘Got
milk?’ created a number of controversial advertisements, insinuating that their
milk helps reduce the symptoms of PMS! Although several men may have found
these advertisements amusing, women on the other hand probably didn’t. Presumably,
more women take charge of the food shopping, so this advertisement is more likely
to have persuaded women to avoid this milk, rather than buy it. In fact, it
caused such a stir that a petition was created to have them removed, resulting
in them being pulled. The creators of this advertisement should not have
insulted a large proportion of their consumers, and instead may have wanted to
opt for use of flattery.
The effectiveness of
flattery was shown by Hendrik, Borden, Giesen, Murray and Seyfried (1972). 400
participants were either asked via mail to complete a small request (one page
questionnaire) or a large request (seven page questionnaire). This created the
two effort conditions of small and large. A cover letter was given to the
participants, which either included adjectives that flattered the respondent
and/or the solicitor of the questionnaire, or included no flattering
adjectives. Therefore, this created four letter conditions: double ingratiation
(both flattered), ingratiation of solicitor, ingratiation respondent, and standard
polite (neither flattered). In total this created eight conditions, and for
each the number of returned questionnaires was counted and termed to be
complying with the request.
The results, as shown in
table 1, revealed that ingratiation tactics had little effect on return rate
when the task required minimal effort. Conversely, such tactics had a powerful
effect in the high-effort conditions. Both the standard polite and double
ingratiation letters yielded low return rates of .10 and .08 respectively.
However, when ingratiation terms were included, applying to either the
solicitor or to the respondent, the return rates increased to .24 and .29
respectively. This highlights the effectiveness flattery can have on
compliance, and this link can be extended to persuading consumers to purchase a
particular product.
In the case of the ‘Got
milk?’ advertisement, choosing to flatter the consumer may increase the likelihood
of choosing the product. How much effort is required to pick a particular brand
of milk is up for debate, but no doubt flattering over insulting the consumer
is the way to go!
Hendrik, C., Borden, R., Giesen, M., Murray, E., & Seyfried, B. (1972). Effectiveness of ingratiation tactics in a cover letter on mail questionnaire response. Psychonomic Science, 26, 349-351.
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