The latest wave of our automotive tracking study shows the emissions scandal still clouding VW’s German prospects. What does it mean for the future of German cars and alternative technologies?
How do you launch a new brand? We answer one of our most frequently asked client questions. A look at early stage brand growth through a Fame. Feeling and Fluency lens.
Sakeru Gummy’s “Long Long Man” series of ads is the perfect example of a Fluent Device.
Christmas in April? It is if you’re a planner or marketer. As brands plot their Xmas campaigns for 2018, we offer some unseasonal advice on how to pick emotional winners.
Subscription services have been a huge consumer success story this decade – can emotional communication and fluent innovation help them take the next step to growth?
The UK’s new “sugar tax” is part of a wave of regulation hitting food and drinks brands. When laws change, can Fluent Innovation help keep consumers sweet?
A fun March Madness bracket starring Fluent Devices, the distinctive assets people love to love.
We look into our ad testing database for the most emotional 6s ads. Are they great stories… or something a bit more basic?
“The paradox of success is you need failure to achieve it” – but there’s more than one type of failure you have to manage…
How McDonalds is using its golden arches to add a creative twist to Brand Fluency.
John Kearon reports back from the Insight Show with thoughts on change, diversity, and the power of weirdness.
For International Womens Day, we look at five 5-Star winners that celebrate women from our 2017 and 2018 ad tests.
With over 100 million viewers and a 5 million dollar price tag for a 30 second spot, it is imperative that brands advertising on the Super Bowl spend their money wisely.
What gets North Americans feeling emotional? “Dogs and kids”, a cynical observer might say, and it’s true that each year’s FeelMore North America list brings a new crop of adorable children and puppies. But plenty of ads use those elements without emotional success, and this year we’ve seen some small but interesting shifts in the overall sentimental picture.
Our fourth quarter blog post from the Super Bowl, focusing on teasers and the NFL’s own “Dirty Dancing” ad.
Our third quarter LIVE TESTING Report focusing on Budweiser and Tide.
Our second Super Bowl Live Blog – and more 5-Star successes for Winter Olympians.
Our first Super Bowl blog post.
The early results of our Super Bowl testing are in – and Pepsi and Bud Light have cause to celebrate. Pepsi’s revival of its 1992 ad with Cindy Crawford, and Bud Light’s viral “Dilly Dilly” ads, have both registered strong results on System1’s tests. Together they throw a spotlight on one of the most important, but least known, aspects of advertising success: Fluency.
What are brands focusing in on with their ads for this year’s Super Bowl? How have the ad previews/teasers performed so far? Which brands are back for another Super Bowl spot, and which are rookies?
Last year we broke new research ground by testing every Super Bowl ad LIVE, announcing the results on video, on Twitter and on our website as they came in. It was a lot of work, a lot of fun, and a wild, hectic celebration of the great emotional ads every Super Bowl brings. So, of course, we’re doing it again
The 2017 FeelMore50 list launches today. ust to remind you, the FeelMore50 is a list we publish every year of the best emotional advertising. We ran self-funded tests on over 700 ads which won awards, enjoyed viral success, or made the news over the course of last year. The fifty with the best results appear on the site. Here are five big things to take away.
Every year, we test and rank hundreds of TV and digital commercials, in a search for the most emotional ads of the year. It’s the FeelMore50 list, the only industry ranking that reflects the real emotional response of real people. The latest rankings – covering 2017 – are coming to our FeelMore50 website on Thursday.
Brands tend to approach innovation by thinking about “unmet needs”. Instead of persuading a customer to buy something new because it meets their needs, we think you’ll have better results seducing a customer into buying something new because it feels good and has fluency. We call this probing of the market for seductive opportunities Product Landscaping.
The results are in! With over 50 ads tested as part of our FeelMore Xmas live project, it’s time to reveal which brands hit the emotional spot this Christmas. The good news is it’s been a bumper year for UK ads.
“NOW it’s Christmas!” – that’s a quote from one of our respondents giving an enthusiastic response to Coca-Cola’s “Holidays Are Coming” ad. When the red Christmas trucks roll out, the festive season has truly begun in the minds of a generation of ad watchers.
Budget airline Ryanair has a history of courting controversy and thumbing its nose at received branding wisdom. Founder Michael O’Leary’s business strategy has always been to go on the offensive, mock critics and brazen out problems, and he’s been highly successful. So Ryanair’s latest crisis – around the sudden cancellation of hundreds of flights this autumn and winter – hasn’t been accompanied by many predictions of doom.
Festive feasts have always figured in Christmas advertising, of course. But with Christmas ads getting more media spotlight than ever, and with pressure to compete with the “big guns” like John Lewis and M&S, supermarkets and restaurants face a new dilemma. How do you showcase your festive food and also make your advertising emotional?
The John Lewis Christmas ad may not top our charts every single year, but since we’ve been testing Christmas ads its seasonal blockbusters have only once slipped below the 3-Star boundary. This year is no exception – it’s 2017 ad, Moz The Monster, scored 4-Stars in our ad test, indicating an ad set to achieve continued share growth for John Lewis
This week saw the Christmas ad season kick into gear with our first 4-Star and 5-Star ads. One is a cheerful 30-second spot with a very basic storyline, the other is a high-budget storytelling epic starring a character loved by British kids for generations. Step forward, Toys’R’Us’ “Geoffrey The Part-Time Reindeer” (5-Star) and M&S’ “Paddington And The Christmas Stranger” (4-Star).
Drawing even more heavily on the principles of behavioral science has led to some really intriguing research into answering this complex, though simply written, question: Knowing what we know now about behavioral science and System 1, what can we do? How are companies finding the Behavior Bullseye at the IIeX Behavior Conference?
The UK Christmas Ad season began on November 1st, as Currys PC World released three ads showing off the best new tech in store this year. The theme is members of staff taking the items home to try them out – and landing in amusing situations because of it.
For as long as I have worked in this industry – both as a Marketing Leader and Ad Agency boss – there’s been a tension between creativity and the bottom line. The tools and channels change, but the arguments don’t. “Research ruins ideas!” “Awards are meaningless!” “Data makes us soulless number-crunchers!” “Social is self-indulgence!”
Last year nothing symbolised the UK’s Christmas advertising crop better than the humble mince pie. The festive treat took a starring role in commercials by Waitrose, Aldi, and M&S (whose gently comedic “Mrs Claus” was the most emotional Christmas ad of the year). It summed up the trends we saw last year.
Especially for young people, instant ramen is the snack that fuels the world. The inventor of the instant noodle, Nissin founder Momofuku Ando, is a heroic business figure. In Japan he has his own museum and was the star of a top-selling “business manga”, a comic adapting the Cup Noodle story.
Is your agency helping you reach 5-Star Advertising? This coveted 5-Star ranking is based on System1 Research’s pioneering behavioral science work to predict long-term profitability by ranking ads on a 1- to 5-Star scale based on emotional impact.
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