STANFORD, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--
Whether targeting customers or prospects, marketers sometimes use
pronouns that suggest a partnership between their brand and the people
they’re talking to. Think of “Together, we can make a difference,” the
slogan Whole Foods uses to promote bag reuse, or Wells Fargo Bank’s
“Together we’ll go far” slogan. A set of experiments in press at the Journal
of Consumer Research, which examined messages from banks and a
health insurer, shows that these types of messages do shape attitudes
toward brands, but not always as marketers intend.
Study coauthor S.
Christian Wheeler, Associate Professor of Marketing at the Stanford
Graduate School of Business, had good reason to believe that
personal pronouns could have strong effects. Marketing scholars have
long known that people ascribe personalities and other human-like
qualities to brands. In fact, a seminal
paper by Stanford marketing professor Jennifer Aaker distills five
human traits, such as ruggedness and sincerity, which we recognize in
brands. What’s more, a long line of research, including Wheeler’s own,
has shown that subtle cues can affect thoughts, feelings, and even
behavior. So it makes sense that using the pronoun “we,” which implies
intimacy, could increase a sense of closeness between the consumer and
the brand. “And in actual close relationships between people, it works,”
Wheeler says. But his experiments, which he conducted with PhD student Aner
Sela (now a marketing professor at the University of Florida) and Gülen
Sarial-Abi at Koç University in Turkey, reveal that the chummy “we”
doesn’t work if it’s inconsistent with the actual relationship.
The research shows that although the “we” works well in actual
relationships between people and companies, it backfires if customers
don’t expect a congenial relationship with a particular type of company;
in those cases the “we” arouses suspicion, tarnishing perceptions of the
brand.

One of the team’s first discoveries came from an experiment involving
Wells Fargo Bank. The researchers had participants read a passage of
text, supposedly taken from an ad for the bank, and asked them to rate
their attitudes toward Wells Fargo and their likelihood of recommending
the bank to others. The text was the same for all participants, except
for one subtle but crucial difference: one version used the phrase “you
and Wells Fargo” throughout, while another used the word “we” instead.
(For example, in part of the message some participants read, “Together,
we make whatever decisions necessary to ensure your life goes
uninterrupted,” while others read that “Together, you and Wells Fargo”
do.) As a control condition, a third version simply used “Wells Fargo,”
with no mention of the customer. Which version led to the most favorable
attitudes toward the brand?
The answer depended entirely on whether the reader was already a
customer of Wells Fargo. For customers, the “we” message got the best
results, apparently reinforcing the sense of closeness they already felt
about the brand. But for non-customers, the choice of pronoun didn’t
matter. A study using the Stanford Federal Credit Union found the same
pattern. “I would bet that if you had people read those messages and
recall which pronouns were used, they wouldn’t be able to tell you,”
Wheeler says. “All you’re doing is changing two words that are
linguistically equivalent to one another.”
So why did “we” fail to work its magic on non-customers? The researchers
found that non-customers simply didn’t care enough about the brand to
pay attention to such subtle linguistic differences. More interestingly,
when they were made to think carefully about the marketing
message (by being told in another experiment that they were part of a
small group whose opinions matter), non-customers actually formed better
attitudes toward brands after reading “you and the brand” rather than
“we.” This finding suggests that what comes across as out of line in
social situations is also inappropriate for brands. “When you’re meeting
a stranger in a professional context, you use more distance-implying
language,” Wheeler points out. “The same thing seems to be true for
communicating with [prospective] customers.”
Even for existing customers, expectations of closeness affect
perceptions of pronouns. A close relationship with brands, as with
people, is warm, caring, having shared goals, and the like; what’s more,
people tend to expect closer relationships with some types of companies
(like their neighborhood banks) than with others (like their health
insurers, whom they view as adversarial). In line with this reasoning,
the researchers found that customers of Wells Fargo responded more
favorably to “we” messages than to “you and the brand” messages, whereas
the opposite was true of customers of Aetna, the health insurer.
Customers don’t expect a company in Aetna’s industry to act like they’re
your friend. And, as Wheeler puts it, “When brands act in ways we don’t
expect, that raises a red flag.”
The broader lesson, of course, extends to other industries. “I’m a big
proponent of tailoring your marketing when you can,” says Wheeler,
pointing out that personalized email and advertising on social media
offer the opportunity to create separate messages for customers and
prospects. The “we” message can work well for everyone if readers aren’t
particularly engaged. “But if people are thinking carefully, then it
becomes much more important to do it right, and doing it right means
knowing the relationship expectations for your company, and that depends
on what industry you’re in.”

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To dig deeper on this story, visit: http://www.gsb.stanford.edu/news/research/pronouns-personal-wheeler.html)

Stanford Graduate School of Business
Helen Chang, 650-723-3358
chang_helen@gsb.stanford.edu
Source: Stanford Graduate School of Business
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