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    What's this?
The smells that make shoppers spend more
Lighting and music play a role in how much people spend, but new research indicates that certain smells can inspire shoppers to spend more.

By

BusinessNewsDaily
Tue, Nov 27 2012 at 4:48 PM
 3

Related Topics:

Green Business, Research & Innovation, Science
nose

Simple smells are powerful motivators when it comes to spending because smells like citrus or pine don’t require much mental processing on the shopper’s part and frees their brains to focus on shopping. (Photo: Shutterstock)

While holiday shopping this year, you might want to pay more attention to how things smell in the stores you're visiting. Those scents just might make your spend more. While lighting and music can play a big role in how much people spend, new research indicates that certain kinds of smells can also inspire shoppers to spend more.
 
Simple smells, as opposed to complex blends of scents, are powerful motivators when it comes to spending, researchers at Washington State University found.
 
That is because simple smells — such as citrus or pine — don’t require much mental processing on the shopper’s part and frees their brains to focus on shopping.
 
"What we showed was that the simple scent was more effective," said Eric Spangenberg, one of the study's authors and dean of the Washington State University College of Business.
 
For the study, researchers developed two scents: a simple orange scent and a more complicated orange-basil blended with green tea. For 18 days, the researchers watched more than 400 customers in a home decorations store as the air held the simple scent, the complex scent or no particular scent at all.
 
The study revealed that the 100 consumers who shopped in the presence of the simple scent spent on average 20 percent more money.
 
In a series of experiments, researchers had students solve word problems under the different scent conditions. They found that the students solved more problems, in less time, when the simple scent was in the air, compared to when the complicated one or no scent at all were used.
 
Spangenberg said the research underscores the need to understand how scents are affecting customers.
"Most people are processing it at an unconscious level, but it is impacting them," he said. "The important thing from the retailer's perspective and the marketer's perspective is that a pleasant scent isn't necessarily an effective scent."
 
Recently published in the Journal of Retailing, the study was co-authored by Andreas Herrmann from Switzerland's University of St. Gallen; David Sprott, a Washington State marketing professor; and Manja Zidansek, a marketing doctoral candidate.
 
Follow Chad Brooks on Twitter @cbrooks76 or BusinessNewsDaily @BNDarticles. We're also on Facebook & Google+.
 
Related on BusinessNewsDaily and MNN:
  • Americans’ Biggest Financial Mistakes
  • 10 Worst Black Friday Moments
  • 13 Iconic Brands Still Made in America
  • MNN: Humans can smell emotions
 
This story was originally written for BusinessNewsDaily and is republished with permission here. Copyright 2012 BusinessNewsDaily.

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anonymous
Mateo Jan 22 2013 at 6:48 AM
For me, it's more a question of Who do I feel like being today? If that makes any sense And I ulsaluy commit to one thing for the day, at least, so I try to choose something that doesn't get old after a few hours. Unless, of course, I've fallen in l-o-v-e in which case, I want to be embalmed in it and asphyxiate my surroundings on the principle of love me, love my perfume ! I've discovered strange, but true that orientals, as a rule, bore me more than greens/florals/incense/
.... More
citrus. Maybe it's because I have an association in my mind that orientals are for nefarious purposes, such as seduction?So it's not something to wear when I want to blow em away with my writing ;-)
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anonymous
F. Schrodinger Dec 03 2012 at 7:07 AM

If I smell a scent as I enter a store I leave immediately. Those smells are nauseating. So much for the "buying more" theory.

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starbuck
Starbuck Nov 30 2012 at 5:37 AM

I don't care if they are simple or complicated. They will drive me out of a store in a heartbeat. Nothing like going shopping and buying a migraine. I'd rather not shop at all. Not to mention, the effort at manipulation of shoppers is just plain irritating.

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