At 4:06 Rory Sutherland said, You can either 1: Find out what people want and work out a clever way to deliver it to them. 2. Or you can find out what you can deliver and find a clever way of making people want it. I think my fellow video watchers want important notes and highlights from this video so I'm going to deliver it to you with time stamps. Enjoy : ) 0:11 Richard Thaler won a Nobel prize on behavioural economics 0:19 Behavioural economics observes what people ACTUALLY do in PRACTICE. It's opposed to developing fictional mathematical models that DECIDES what people SHOULD do instead. Proper Economics is ridiculous. 0:46 Charlie Munger's quote, "If economics isn't behavioural, I don't know what the hell is?" 1:29 Funny example from the movie Airplane. 2:11 There are areas of life where complete logic and developing objective measures of reality works. 2:31 However, there are large areas of life where that's the worst thing you can do. 2:41 There's a distinction between how to do ATC and how to run a military. One require precision and predictability, the other requires the opposite. 2:59 You can't be logical and efficient if you do military strategy because you'll become predictable. 3:09 So there's an evolutionary reason why humans aren't logical and consistent because those that are would be predictable, a total sucker. 4:06 There are two ways you can create new, economical value. You can either 1: Find out what people want and work out a clever way to deliver it to them. 2. Or you can find out what you can deliver and find a clever way of making people want it. 4:26 The economic value is just as great either way. 4:41 Alphabet x looks for moonshots, where you take something and change it by an order of magnitude. Make something 10x cheaper, better, cheaper etc. 5:21 Improving objective reality by a factor of 10 has become increasingly harder. It's easier to improve subjective reality. 6:10 Instead of making trains 10x faster, how about we make them 10 times more enjoyable, like providing wifi. 6:40 For eg: if you hired supermodels to serve drinks, people would actually ask for the trains to be slowed down ;) 6:55 No one asks for psychological innovation. It's usually the last resort. :( 8:51 Economists assume people have perfect info and perfect trust. So they see marketing as an inefficiency that doesn't need to exist. So everyone knows exactly what they want to buy and how much they want to pay for. 9:28 For most of evolutionary history, we only had 10% of the info to make the perfect decision. 10:23 A change in perspective is worth 80 IQ points. 12:40 Yield management will allow you to get on trains earlier if you arrive earlier. It's a better and cheaper solution. 15:23 Train overcrowding problem. 10% of the people standing 10% of the time is not the same as 1 person standing 100% of the time. 16:06 If you solve the problem for the worst affected, you've solved the problem. 17:43 German physicist quote, "You're not thinking. You're merely being logical." 22:27 TVs are designed for higher apes. They only have three colours. The brain is fooled by it. Marketing is just like that. There's no point in being objective. Only perception matters. 26:32 Wine tastes better when you pour it from a heavier bottle. Pain killers are more effective if they are branded. They are more effective if you tell they're expensive. Chocolates taste sweeter if they are round. Your car drives better after you've got it cleaned. 50% extra free feels better than 33% off. 28:31 Reinforcing visual example 31:17 Our brain is designed to accentuate differences/ contrast between things. 31:45 Examples 32:15 Our perception of price is completely relative. 34:29 Nothing hot about chilies. Nothing cool about Menthol. 35:25 Nature just produces a fruit that feels hot since it can't really produce a hot fruit. 35:38 So there's the thing and there's the perception of the thing. And the only thing that matters is the perception of the thing. And the connection between the thing and perception is not exact. 35:56 Austrian economists believe value is highly subjective. Therefore they can be well disposed to marketing and advertising. 36:12 There is food itself and the context in which it's consumed. Ex Michelin-star meal in a restaurant smelling of sewage. So context matters. 36:22 There is no perceived objective thing in the human mind. Everything is mediated by environment, context and setting. And everything that's set is affected by who says it. Paying attention to something and the kind of attention you pay, changes the nature of the thing. 36:54 Treating humans like weighing scales is completely wrong. 38:03 Ed Shareen's Eg of however good a product is objectively if you market it poorly, it's worthless. 44:00 People themselves don't know why they feel a particular way. So they post rationalize. 45:30 Evolution didn't need to provide an explanation for emotions. And it relies on emotions over rational reactions. Cos emotions are inherited. Rational stuff needs to be taught. 47:00 People hate the uncertainty that comes with the delivery window. 47:40 London UG reduced uncertainty by providing boards that displayed when the train was coming. So you can create high level of satisfaction without high level of cost. 48:30 Elevator example. 53:30 Pills example 1:00:00 people actually make diet coke/ redbull and other medicinal wine taste disgusting so people perceived a medicinal value. 1:02:02 Airlines had to explain why their airline was cheap by highlighting the negatives. So marketers have the role of justifying higher price or destigmatising a lower one. 1:04:00 Wine example 1:06:00 Flight example 1:09:00 Ferrari example/ Framing 1:11:00 Real-life decision-making is 2 d. Avg vs. the worst-case scenario. 1:15:00 People buy from big brands to minimize risk. 1:19:00 Cooperation increases in repeated games. Long-term selfishness is indistinguishable from cooperation. Short-term selfishness is indistinguishable from conflict. 1:22:50 Costly signaling theory 1:23:45 Nobody sends a wedding invitation over email even though it's the most efficient way to send it. TV ads are popular because they are costlier. 1:25:00 We shouldn't think about advertising as messaging but as signaling. 1:26:30 Test counterintuitive things because your competitors won't. 1:27:10 Don't be logical becasue that's exactly what they'll expect you to do. Thank you!
Just came from a 3-day digital marketing conference, and 20mins of this guy's talk is already better than 95% of the speakers from that conference. Talk about imaginative content!
this totally blew my mind. I cancelled a marketing presentation and redid all the work I did over the weekend- phenominal content. I have now watched this three times in one day.
Ok. Sensuous imaginative content presents a problem for unitary accounts of phenomenal character (or content) such as relationism, representationalism, or qualia theory. Four features of imaginative content are at the heart of the issue: its perspectival nature, the similarity with corresponding perceptual experiences, the multiple use thesis, and its non-presentational character. This chapter rejects appeals to the dependency thesis to account for these features and explains how a representationalist approach can be developed to accommodate them. The author defends the multiple use thesis against Kathleen Stock’s objections but separates the putative non-presentational character of imaginative content into two elements. Loss of presentation is accounted for by the reduced representations involved in imagination and lack of potential response-dependent representational properties. Absence of commitment to reality is accounted for by representational properties characterized in terms of the absence of a certain kind of aetiology.
@FiddyMK Do you think a study in peddling shit and maximize consumption is a respectable job? Do you ever wonder how much recources an average marketing department wastes each year? (Including wasted shelf space for fancy packaging, those shitty "collectables" etc) For how much waste they're responsibe? How many humans do a bullshit job manipulating people that's polluting for profit and could have an actual job improving society? How much energy is wasted by consumers who have to process the data they receive including those questions at checkout and don't forget to scan your barcode to save money. (Surely they won't adjust prices according to metrics from that shopping data or resell the data to 3th party, right?(Brainpower/metabolism) How many happiness they take away from consumers, from lightpollution to selling new versions of the same product and acting like the older model you got is suddenly inferior. So yeah, this talk is without any doubt better than a bachelor degree in marketing. I don't need to be a chef to know that the soup tastes like shit.
@FiddyMK yes, i was in product development and had plenty of contact with marketeers, that's how i got that opinion about those people. But i never liked people that manipulated others for profit so whatever. I'd , love to go on a hike but the only forest nearby has a big golden M lighting up the trees... That market should be regulated a lot more up to the point where it's an improvement for the end consumer or not happening at all if it doesn't. Mr Sutherland had good examples where the company and consumer experienced improvements and plenty i didn't even consider as something a marketeer did. i didn't watch the video before commenting otherwise i might've worded some things differently however i do still believe that the world would be a lot better off without dodgy marketeers infesting every facet of our lives and polluting whatever to do so.
I just realized I have a great example of this, a brand I was working with had a month with low social media engagement, the client was concerned and we did multiple reports and number crunching to figure out what caused this to no avail, now this page's main attraction was desserts and recipes for desserts. I noticed during this particular month all the desserts were brown in color as opposed to the usual colorful stuff we usually post, this got me thinking maybe people just don't like dark colors desserts (might vary from culture to culture), so I suggested we avoid this as a practice and what do you know... the engagement (numbers) were back to normal.
GDS Summits 1 month ago Hi craig6t, we apologise for the quality of the filming and hope it did not spoil you enjoyment of what was a great speech. This was not up to the high standards we expect from our AV partners and many changes have been made since this was filmed. At the time we did consider not releasing the video but decided that the quality of the speaker meant it deserved to been seen. We thank you for your feedback as it is always valuable to us and hope you will be able to enjoy some of our more recent speaker presentations. ua-cam.com/play/PLWrSH-D08WW86Fkok62o8IUPAs1Jw36VM.html
GDS Summits Good editor could get this video and original presentation of speaker and make good video. It’s really pity, that we lose big amount of information due to bad cameraman skills
When I got my MBA and we had simulated exercises against other universities running a company (1 billion dollar market cap). I was really surprised how critical R and D and Marketing was to the success of the exercise. I also felt that they were the most innovative and imaginative. This is a fascinating lecture that I can't wait to dive more into from a research perspective.
Brilliant presentation, love this guy. One thing I would point out with regards to costly signaling theory, is that in the digital Ad space, less polished content that is clearly 'cheap' to produce often works better than high end looking stuff that is blatantly a (corporate) Ad. If you create content with a home-video feel to it, that registers as not-advertising, that is something that trumps the variance avoidance and trust building impulses of shoppers and overcomes 'banner blindness' and our own built in ad blockers. Traditional Ad agencies often struggle with that kind of content as it's contradictory to the high production values and tradition, but internet marketers with smaller budgets and smaller clients have pioneered such an approach, mostly out of necessity. There is no best or right approach though, it would always depend on the client and product of course. At any rate, I'm a big adherent of the idea behind the main lesson here, that perception matters at least as much as objective reality. The framing of offers and value propositions is vitally important part of digital marketing and eCommerce. I came to this video with skepticism that someone from Ogilvy would have anything useful to say on digital marketing, I was so so wrong.
Rory is a genius! This talk brilliantly combines ideas from marketing, psychology, business, logic and many more. For all marketers and leaders who seek to drive real impact, to enhance customer experiene and stand out, this talk is a must-see.
Brilliant perspective and insight. Young marketers must heed this knowledge and insight. Big data and analytics, can be helpful but it is not the be all and end all these days. Too much attention is paid to digital. Sutherland's lesson not "old school" thinking. The fundamentals must be learned and understood.
I've been a huge fan of Rory Sutherland ever since I saw his first TED talk. I'm not in the ad business, but just find his insights fascinating. Probably makes me a wiser consumer.
Thanks for sharing. Digital marketing & SEO work. Most people don't have the patience or take the time to learn it, let alone wait for the results. It's like planting seeds and farming.
Woke up to this playing randomly. Nothing I’d have usually watched as I’d have thought it had nothing interesting or relevant to my life. Omg this talk is amazing it’s gripped me and I’m now questioning my choices when I buy something. He’s right on everything. I’ve literally just bought something I know nothing about by choosing the more expensive one. Most expensive means much better not anymore
OMG This was amazing!!!! It popped up on autoplay after I watched a video for the book "Scientific Advertising". I am soooo impressed. I have spent a lot of money on courses that I didn't take nearly as many notes!!! I will be clicking the link to see the full video!! I liked and subscribed!!! THANK YOU for sharing!
Pure genius presentation. Genuinely aspects of marketing that I had never even thought of. There really should have been cost for receiving this content. Its that good. Camera man though....
Hi Oscar, we apologise for the quality of the filming and hope it did not spoil you enjoyment of what was a great speech. This was not up to the high standards we expect from our AV partners and many changes have been made since this was filmed. At the time we did consider not releasing the video but decided that the quality of the speaker meant it deserved to been seen. We thank you for your feedback as it is always valuable to us and hope you will be able to enjoy some of our more recent speaker presentations. ua-cam.com/play/PLWrSH-D08WW86Fkok62o8IUPAs1Jw36VM.html
This was actually a GEM of a Summit. I learnt a lot from this, tho I see the Camera's angle has been mentioned quite frequently. Nevertheless, the gained knowledge stands out from the other technical difficulties, thus it really proves "psychological insight is just as valuable as technological advancement". Cheers! :)
Amazing presentation... and he is spot on... his proper British accent added gravitas to his content... Image his same presentation given in a slow Alabama drawl
I'm only 22 minutes in and this guy is amazing. The idea that certain colors are being put together by what we're assuming based on what color spectrums are blending is amazing to me and I could relate this with audio since often you will hear the upper harmonic frequencies of sounds and your brain will assume the fundamental frequency due to hearing limitations in low and high range frequencies. Great post, I'm subscribes at over 1,500 and I know this will eventually blow up and be a hit so I am happy to be one of the early subscribers
In a world where all seems to be about Big Data, Rory also drives attention to the importance of Small Data. Watch this talk to understant how economics, how marketing and essentially all around us functions.
It's disappointing but I am choosing to like it. It's reassuring that so few people realize the value here. Makes it so much easier. There's truly not much competition, is there?
@Dani Terblanche "People would rather be entertained than informed" . it's the FACT. The Weird size of a person's BUM gets more likes. but hey that's EXACTLY what he's talking about.
Much respect for this church family and the elders. The way they handled this is a good example to others that experience something similar. I need to remember to pray for this church. We are all connected. 1Co 12:26 And whether one member suffer, all the members suffer with it; or one member be honoured, all the members rejoice with it. 1Co 12:27 Now ye are the body of Christ, and members in particular.
There is such a TRUE DEEP AND SIMPLE, yet complex, LOGIC to everything you explained. Only it is a logic far from being obstructive, which is the world of the short-sighted, many times in accounting or finance.
Once i got into this i found it surprisingly good. Thanks for the ideas, info and laughs. Our natural animal instincts have a great deal to do with the obsessive compulsive competitive behavior we exhibit as humans. Unfortunately it is not threatening our future. I hope we can educate, eventually for a science around natural instincts and eventually regulate so we don;t get carried away with our emotions when they are driven by natural instinct.
Great explanation regarding Digital Marketing. Digital Marketing is one of the fastest growing career for 2022 and it really helps with the new age companies to market themselves. Coming from a Digital Marketing agency myself I find these kind of videos very helpful for students. We create Digital Marketing videos on topics specific for "Small Business Owners" in our youtube channel to learn and implement from our Tips. Thanks for spreading the word regarding Digital Marketing.
This was genius. A must watch for marketers and entrepreneurs who are early in the game and thinking how hard it is to compete with bigger brands. Key take from this: don't compete, create.
My grandma was in marketing all her life with no degree and now I’m in the same boat. I did take a behavioral economics and group/work place psychology class, but I don’t have a degree and this was only 2 semesters in time. I do really well at my job but I’m about 30 minutes in and he for real just blew my mind a bit with her point of perspective.
At 4:06 Rory Sutherland said, You can either 1: Find out what people want and work out a clever way to deliver it to them. 2. Or you can find out what you can deliver and find a clever way of making people want it.
I think my fellow video watchers want important notes and highlights from this video so I'm going to deliver it to you with time stamps. Enjoy : )
0:11 Richard Thaler won a Nobel prize on behavioural economics
0:19 Behavioural economics observes what people ACTUALLY do in PRACTICE. It's opposed to developing fictional mathematical models that DECIDES what people SHOULD do instead. Proper Economics is ridiculous.
0:46 Charlie Munger's quote, "If economics isn't behavioural, I don't know what the hell is?"
1:29 Funny example from the movie Airplane.
2:11 There are areas of life where complete logic and developing objective measures of reality works.
2:31 However, there are large areas of life where that's the worst thing you can do.
2:41 There's a distinction between how to do ATC and how to run a military. One require precision and predictability, the other requires the opposite.
2:59 You can't be logical and efficient if you do military strategy because you'll become predictable.
3:09 So there's an evolutionary reason why humans aren't logical and consistent because those that are would be predictable, a total sucker.
4:06 There are two ways you can create new, economical value. You can either 1: Find out what people want and work out a clever way to deliver it to them. 2. Or you can find out what you can deliver and find a clever way of making people want it.
4:26 The economic value is just as great either way.
4:41 Alphabet x looks for moonshots, where you take something and change it by an order of magnitude. Make something 10x cheaper, better, cheaper etc.
5:21 Improving objective reality by a factor of 10 has become increasingly harder. It's easier to improve subjective reality.
6:10 Instead of making trains 10x faster, how about we make them 10 times more enjoyable, like providing wifi.
6:40 For eg: if you hired supermodels to serve drinks, people would actually ask for the trains to be slowed down ;)
6:55 No one asks for psychological innovation. It's usually the last resort. :(
8:51 Economists assume people have perfect info and perfect trust. So they see marketing as an inefficiency that doesn't need to exist. So everyone knows exactly what they want to buy and how much they want to pay for.
9:28 For most of evolutionary history, we only had 10% of the info to make the perfect decision.
10:23 A change in perspective is worth 80 IQ points.
12:40 Yield management will allow you to get on trains earlier if you arrive earlier. It's a better and cheaper solution.
15:23 Train overcrowding problem. 10% of the people standing 10% of the time is not the same as 1 person standing 100% of the time.
16:06 If you solve the problem for the worst affected, you've solved the problem.
17:43 German physicist quote, "You're not thinking. You're merely being logical."
22:27 TVs are designed for higher apes. They only have three colours. The brain is fooled by it. Marketing is just like that. There's no point in being objective. Only perception matters.
26:32 Wine tastes better when you pour it from a heavier bottle. Pain killers are more effective if they are branded. They are more effective if you tell they're expensive. Chocolates taste sweeter if they are round. Your car drives better after you've got it cleaned. 50% extra free feels better than 33% off.
28:31 Reinforcing visual example
31:17 Our brain is designed to accentuate differences/ contrast between things.
31:45 Examples
32:15 Our perception of price is completely relative.
34:29 Nothing hot about chilies. Nothing cool about Menthol.
35:25 Nature just produces a fruit that feels hot since it can't really produce a hot fruit.
35:38 So there's the thing and there's the perception of the thing. And the only thing that matters is the perception of the thing. And the connection between the thing and perception is not exact.
35:56 Austrian economists believe value is highly subjective. Therefore they can be well disposed to marketing and advertising.
36:12 There is food itself and the context in which it's consumed. Ex Michelin-star meal in a restaurant smelling of sewage. So context matters.
36:22 There is no perceived objective thing in the human mind. Everything is mediated by environment, context and setting. And everything that's set is affected by who says it. Paying attention to something and the kind of attention you pay, changes the nature of the thing.
36:54 Treating humans like weighing scales is completely wrong.
38:03 Ed Shareen's Eg of however good a product is objectively if you market it poorly, it's worthless.
44:00 People themselves don't know why they feel a particular way. So they post rationalize.
45:30 Evolution didn't need to provide an explanation for emotions. And it relies on emotions over rational reactions. Cos emotions are inherited. Rational stuff needs to be taught.
47:00 People hate the uncertainty that comes with the delivery window.
47:40 London UG reduced uncertainty by providing boards that displayed when the train was coming. So you can create high level of satisfaction without high level of cost.
48:30 Elevator example.
53:30 Pills example
1:00:00 people actually make diet coke/ redbull and other medicinal wine taste disgusting so people perceived a medicinal value.
1:02:02 Airlines had to explain why their airline was cheap by highlighting the negatives. So marketers have the role of justifying higher price or destigmatising a lower one.
1:04:00 Wine example
1:06:00 Flight example
1:09:00 Ferrari example/ Framing
1:11:00 Real-life decision-making is 2 d. Avg vs. the worst-case scenario.
1:15:00 People buy from big brands to minimize risk.
1:19:00 Cooperation increases in repeated games. Long-term selfishness is indistinguishable from cooperation. Short-term selfishness is indistinguishable from conflict.
1:22:50 Costly signaling theory
1:23:45 Nobody sends a wedding invitation over email even though it's the most efficient way to send it. TV ads are popular because they are costlier.
1:25:00 We shouldn't think about advertising as messaging but as signaling.
1:26:30 Test counterintuitive things because your competitors won't.
1:27:10 Don't be logical becasue that's exactly what they'll expect you to do.
Thank you!
So helpful, thank you
Thanks! Appreciate the time you put into this. Very helpful. Cheers!
This is amazing!! Thank you soooooo much!
Thank you
You are amazing
Just came from a 3-day digital marketing conference, and 20mins of this guy's talk is already better than 95% of the speakers from that conference. Talk about imaginative content!
what was the conference you attended?
and he has great pants!
this totally blew my mind. I cancelled a marketing presentation and redid all the work I did over the weekend- phenominal content. I have now watched this three times in one day.
Ok.
Sensuous imaginative content presents a problem for unitary accounts of phenomenal character (or content) such as relationism, representationalism, or qualia theory. Four features of imaginative content are at the heart of the issue: its perspectival nature, the similarity with corresponding perceptual experiences, the multiple use thesis, and its non-presentational character. This chapter rejects appeals to the dependency thesis to account for these features and explains how a representationalist approach can be developed to accommodate them. The author defends the multiple use thesis against Kathleen Stock’s objections but separates the putative non-presentational character of imaginative content into two elements. Loss of presentation is accounted for by the reduced representations involved in imagination and lack of potential response-dependent representational properties. Absence of commitment to reality is accounted for by representational properties characterized in terms of the absence of a certain kind of aetiology.
AGREED!!!
This video is better than a bachelor degree in marketing, period.
Better than a degree in economics too...
Yes! I am amazed as well! Just saw it)
Not with that cameraman!
@FiddyMK Do you think a study in peddling shit and maximize consumption is a respectable job?
Do you ever wonder how much recources an average marketing department wastes each year? (Including wasted shelf space for fancy packaging, those shitty "collectables" etc)
For how much waste they're responsibe?
How many humans do a bullshit job manipulating people that's polluting for profit and could have an actual job improving society?
How much energy is wasted by consumers who have to process the data they receive including those questions at checkout and don't forget to scan your barcode to save money. (Surely they won't adjust prices according to metrics from that shopping data or resell the data to 3th party, right?(Brainpower/metabolism)
How many happiness they take away from consumers, from lightpollution to selling new versions of the same product and acting like the older model you got is suddenly inferior.
So yeah, this talk is without any doubt better than a bachelor degree in marketing.
I don't need to be a chef to know that the soup tastes like shit.
@FiddyMK yes, i was in product development and had plenty of contact with marketeers, that's how i got that opinion about those people.
But i never liked people that manipulated others for profit so whatever.
I'd , love to go on a hike but the only forest nearby has a big golden M lighting up the trees...
That market should be regulated a lot more up to the point where it's an improvement for the end consumer or not happening at all if it doesn't.
Mr Sutherland had good examples where the company and consumer experienced improvements and plenty i didn't even consider as something a marketeer did.
i didn't watch the video before commenting otherwise i might've worded some things differently however i do still believe that the world would be a lot better off without dodgy marketeers infesting every facet of our lives and polluting whatever to do so.
I just realized I have a great example of this, a brand I was working with had a month with low social media engagement, the client was concerned and we did multiple reports and number crunching to figure out what caused this to no avail, now this page's main attraction was desserts and recipes for desserts. I noticed during this particular month all the desserts were brown in color as opposed to the usual colorful stuff we usually post, this got me thinking maybe people just don't like dark colors desserts (might vary from culture to culture), so I suggested we avoid this as a practice and what do you know... the engagement (numbers) were back to normal.
Rory Sutherland is smart AF! The "thinking outside the box" level is just amazing.
...thinking "shirt outside the pants"
Seems pretty obvious stuff to me. Pay real attention to what people do
Gotta rewatch. There are lots of golden nuggets on this presentation.
"It's much much easier to be fired for being illogical than it is for being unimaginative."
So much truth!
Now my life makes sense
Such a Marketing Guru!! It was like my entire Business Degree covered in less than 1hr 30Min
That good huh I have to set some time to watch it !
I watched 5 times and still find it extremely informative, brilliant.
There's alot of good stuff in this video
AMAZING presentation. Human psychology is the most important thing to understand as a marketer. Perception is key. Really enjoyed the mirror example
I really wish the camera man would have just zoomed out, and left it there. Good presentation, but the slideshow was almost always out of view.
do you expect much more for free?
GDS Summits
1 month ago
Hi craig6t, we apologise for the quality of the filming and hope it did not spoil you enjoyment of what was a great speech.
This was not up to the high standards we expect from our AV partners and many changes have been made since this was filmed. At the time we did consider not releasing the video but decided that the quality of the speaker meant it deserved to been seen.
We thank you for your feedback as it is always valuable to us and hope you will be able to enjoy some of our more recent speaker presentations. ua-cam.com/play/PLWrSH-D08WW86Fkok62o8IUPAs1Jw36VM.html
GDS Summits Good editor could get this video and original presentation of speaker and make good video. It’s really pity, that we lose big amount of information due to bad cameraman skills
@@trailerfitter2 lookin l opinion
Agreed, I wish I could see the screen. Regardless, great presentation!
This man is absolutely brilliant. Thank you for sharing!
Great talk. Thank you.
Indeed 😊
When I got my MBA and we had simulated exercises against other universities running a company (1 billion dollar market cap). I was really surprised how critical R and D and Marketing was to the success of the exercise. I also felt that they were the most innovative and imaginative. This is a fascinating lecture that I can't wait to dive more into from a research perspective.
Brilliant presentation, love this guy. One thing I would point out with regards to costly signaling theory, is that in the digital Ad space, less polished content that is clearly 'cheap' to produce often works better than high end looking stuff that is blatantly a (corporate) Ad. If you create content with a home-video feel to it, that registers as not-advertising, that is something that trumps the variance avoidance and trust building impulses of shoppers and overcomes 'banner blindness' and our own built in ad blockers. Traditional Ad agencies often struggle with that kind of content as it's contradictory to the high production values and tradition, but internet marketers with smaller budgets and smaller clients have pioneered such an approach, mostly out of necessity. There is no best or right approach though, it would always depend on the client and product of course.
At any rate, I'm a big adherent of the idea behind the main lesson here, that perception matters at least as much as objective reality. The framing of offers and value propositions is vitally important part of digital marketing and eCommerce. I came to this video with skepticism that someone from Ogilvy would have anything useful to say on digital marketing, I was so so wrong.
Rory is a genius! This talk brilliantly combines ideas from marketing, psychology, business, logic and many more. For all marketers and leaders who seek to drive real impact, to enhance customer experiene and stand out, this talk is a must-see.
27.15 ...."i don't have a 79p headache, i have a 3 pound 90 one". Such a brilliant example of human psychology in action. Genuis.
Brilliant perspective and insight. Young marketers must heed this knowledge and insight. Big data and analytics, can be helpful but it is not the be all and end all these days. Too much attention is paid to digital. Sutherland's lesson not "old school" thinking. The fundamentals must be learned and understood.
I've been a huge fan of Rory Sutherland ever since I saw his first TED talk. I'm not in the ad business, but just find his insights fascinating. Probably makes me a wiser consumer.
Same here, particularly liked the example of chips.
I felt guilty watching this for free. Felt like it should have been a charged as a workshop. Great talk!
Right/
Thanks for sharing. Digital marketing & SEO work. Most people don't have the patience or take the time to learn it, let alone wait for the results. It's like planting seeds and farming.
So much wisdom within a single talk.
I just completed a Bachelors in Digital Marketing yet this remains the most profound lecture on digital marketing I’ve ever heard.
I wonder what that is about
I'd venture to guess that the believability of a presentation's accuracy is directly proportionate to the peculiarity of the presenter's style.
What do you mea
@@samisheikh3157 the more unique the speaker looks & dresses, the more valid their talk will be
Woke up to this playing randomly. Nothing I’d have usually watched as I’d have thought it had nothing interesting or relevant to my life. Omg this talk is amazing it’s gripped me and I’m now questioning my choices when I buy something. He’s right on everything. I’ve literally just bought something I know nothing about by choosing the more expensive one. Most expensive means much better not anymore
One of the best presentations I have an opportunity to listen to for a long time, Thank you Mr. Sutherland.
OMG This was amazing!!!! It popped up on autoplay after I watched a video for the book "Scientific Advertising". I am soooo impressed. I have spent a lot of money on courses that I didn't take nearly as many notes!!! I will be clicking the link to see the full video!! I liked and subscribed!!! THANK YOU for sharing!
I could listen to this guy all day
I'm so glad this was recommended.
Stop winging for goodness sake. Rory's words/wisdom are priceless
Pure genius presentation. Genuinely aspects of marketing that I had never even thought of. There really should have been cost for receiving this content. Its that good. Camera man though....
Hi Oscar, we apologise for the quality of the filming and hope it did not spoil you enjoyment of what was a great speech.
This was not up to the high standards we expect from our AV partners and many changes have been made since this was filmed. At the time we did consider not releasing the video but decided that the quality of the speaker meant it deserved to been seen.
We thank you for your feedback as it is always valuable to us and hope you will be able to enjoy some of our more recent speaker presentations. ua-cam.com/play/PLWrSH-D08WW86Fkok62o8IUPAs1Jw36VM.html
@@WeAre_GDS Thank you for your response. The quality of the speaker made up for what was lacking from the video. Keep up the good work.
Watch the full video with all the presentation slides here: gdsgroup.com/rory-sutherland-2/
This was actually a GEM of a Summit. I learnt a lot from this, tho I see the Camera's angle has been mentioned quite frequently. Nevertheless, the gained knowledge stands out from the other technical difficulties, thus it really proves "psychological insight is just as valuable as technological advancement". Cheers! :)
Great talk. I could listen to Rory Sutherland all day
Amazing presentation... and he is spot on... his proper British accent added gravitas to his content... Image his same presentation given in a slow Alabama drawl
Been lucky enough to hear Rory speak, always entertaining and extremely inisightful, very clever guy
Just be thankful that this talk ( for paying businesses no doubt ) was recorded. Watch it twice at least.
At least
Every small business owner needs to see this.
I'm only 22 minutes in and this guy is amazing. The idea that certain colors are being put together by what we're assuming based on what color spectrums are blending is amazing to me and I could relate this with audio since often you will hear the upper harmonic frequencies of sounds and your brain will assume the fundamental frequency due to hearing limitations in low and high range frequencies. Great post, I'm subscribes at over 1,500 and I know this will eventually blow up and be a hit so I am happy to be one of the early subscribers
watching this after just finished reading his book “Alchemy” . I enjoyed the book so this is practically a summary of the book
Is it still worth reading the book?
@@michaelburton1970 the essential message of the book is mostly contained in the talk if you care more about the story probably read the book
Each sentence he speaks is packed with deep insights.
Thank you for the fascinating talk, Andy Serkis
Underrated hilarity. Thank you for this comment 😂😂
I love his way of presenting, and the sheer knowledge and value he's doing is incredible! 🚀
There are so many brilliant points in this talk!
What a mastermind - amazing presentation!
In a world where all seems to be about Big Data, Rory also drives attention to the importance of Small Data. Watch this talk to understant how economics, how marketing and essentially all around us functions.
The fact that this only has 470 views irritates me
Dani Terblanche, it’s now up to 10,284. 👍
It's disappointing but I am choosing to like it. It's reassuring that so few people realize the value here. Makes it so much easier.
There's truly not much competition, is there?
The number of veiws is affecting your perception of the video huh
Davy Roger yeah, he's only got 35k views so he can't possibly be saying anything interesting
@Dani Terblanche "People would rather be entertained than informed" . it's the FACT. The Weird size of a person's BUM gets more likes. but hey that's EXACTLY what he's talking about.
Amazing. Eye opening. No words can describe the significance of his insights.
incredible just found a guy that im going to watch for the rest of my life
I love this! I can't wait till I can attend in person talks like this. I am hoping the rest of my team gets as much out of this as I did.
Best. TED Talk. Ever. (Except not a TED Talk, of course.)
As a committed, math oriented, rationalist, I found this to be truly eye-opening.
😃
Mind blown. What an incredible presentation. Thank you
38:03 Air Fryer are used worldwide and it fly good
Much respect for this church family and the elders. The way they handled this is a good example to others that experience something similar.
I need to remember to pray for this church. We are all connected.
1Co 12:26 And whether one member suffer, all the members suffer with it; or one member be honoured, all the members rejoice with it.
1Co 12:27 Now ye are the body of Christ, and members in particular.
Super-informative presentation on marketing. Very valuable in the digital age.
This is fantastic and for free. Thank you!!!!
This guy’s insight is incredible!
This is the most insightful talk I have ever seen
Honestly, the most satisfying video ever! Not for a minute I got bored!
We believe that this talk is a must-heard.
Excellent presentation from Mr. Sutherland
There is such a TRUE DEEP AND SIMPLE, yet complex, LOGIC to everything you explained. Only it is a logic far from being obstructive, which is the world of the short-sighted, many times in accounting or finance.
This helped me a lot Sir. Thanks for capturing this and uploading on youtube.
This material is BETTER than having someone hand you a brick of GOLD. Many thanks!🙆♂️🙆♀️
This might be the best lecture I have ever ever heard!
He is just brilliant! thanks for sharing this presentation
Great talk Rory. Made quite a few notes from this. Thanks.
This is the best talk for beginner like me to learn and begin with. Thank you sir
Beautiful exposition..... Looking and seeing beyond the sense
Once i got into this i found it surprisingly good. Thanks for the ideas, info and laughs. Our natural animal instincts have a great deal to do with the obsessive compulsive competitive behavior we exhibit as humans. Unfortunately it is not threatening our future. I hope we can educate, eventually for a science around natural instincts and eventually regulate so we don;t get carried away with our emotions when they are driven by natural instinct.
I think I have to comment that Rory really kills it here. His talk was un-selfish and clear. Thanks.
Does this guy have a book? I’d love to dig into his ideas in depth.
@Freddy - The Great Affiliate Great recommendation... It's a really valuable asset
This guy is a genius!
I know he blew my mind several times. Esp. simple psychogical solutions are ignored.
Simply brilliant lecture and fantastic presenter
One of the most brilliant minds, not just in marketing.
Amazing amazing presentation! Learned a lot.
Interesting conversation beautifully discovered by me today!
Absolutely brilliant presentation!
One of the best talks I've ever listened to
This dude is the epitome of a British dude, he is also ace. Great video!
This Guy is brilliant!!! Enjoyed this immensely! Thoroughly entertaining! Thanyou!
Rory makes marketing very engaging therefore he lives his teachings
Important Video! Very glad I checked it out.
Great explanation regarding Digital Marketing. Digital Marketing is one of the fastest growing career for 2022 and it really helps with the new age companies to market themselves. Coming from a Digital Marketing agency myself I find these kind of videos very helpful for students. We create Digital Marketing videos on topics specific for "Small Business Owners" in our youtube channel to learn and implement from our Tips. Thanks for spreading the word regarding Digital Marketing.
"the science of what's wrong with logical thinking" I needed this talk today!
👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾 An excellent start to my new year, new career.
Guess we are in the same boat pal
How’d it go guys?
I am so glad I stumbled upon this video
Significant Video! Wouldn't surprise me if this video went viral.
I have been studying history, sociology and psychology for ages. Always hated economics. Never did I ever thought it can actually be fun. Thank you!
He apologizes for taking up our time but the information is gold
Does anyone have the whole transcript of this talk. Would love to have jt
You can usually pull the transcript from a desktop or laptop. :)
This was genius. A must watch for marketers and entrepreneurs who are early in the game and thinking how hard it is to compete with bigger brands. Key take from this: don't compete, create.
Grand Video! Wouldn't surprise me if this video went viral.
Brilliant speaker! Insightful!
Couldn’t stop watching. Thanks عجيب الفيديو للاخر
Brilliant talk. Many wonderful take-aways (Science based) Psychology focused. Hell yea.
Why did the camera person not include the supporting slides in the shot for half the video, is a mystery to me.
I ❤ Rory, but in every video... he's shown in THE worst way possible.
If you're interviewing him on camera, do better!
Huge Video! Very glad I checked it out.
The thing about trains around 12:00 blew my mind, government & companies need guys like this! 👏
I forgive the shotty camera work. He was clearly to focused on the words of this legend.
Haha...Nice outlook you got there, bless you ;)
Love you
Glad to finally run into someone I agree with. Hoping to get to this level sooner than later
My grandma was in marketing all her life with no degree and now I’m in the same boat. I did take a behavioral economics and group/work place psychology class, but I don’t have a degree and this was only 2 semesters in time. I do really well at my job but I’m about 30 minutes in and he for real just blew my mind a bit with her point of perspective.
Hi brandy
Would you mind if I asked few questions about behavioural economics