logo
Log in using TwitterLog in using Facebook Forgot login?Register
News & Features Media & Communications Research Proves That Most Customers Prefer Certainty to Creativity

Research Proves That Most Customers Prefer Certainty to Creativity Featured

Written by Bob Apollo on Tuesday, 13 September 2011 10:36
Rate this item
(0 votes)
How many times has a customer said that they are looking for creative ideas from you? Or that they value innovation? Stop a moment. That may not be how they really feel. We're generally inclined to believe that creativity is a good thing. But according to researchers from Cornell, University of Pennsylvania, and the University of North Carolina, creative ideas actually make many people uncomfortable...

Thanks to Andrew Bruce Smith who brought the study to my attention (from a PR perspective) through the CIPR Conversation. You can download the full academic report here, but in summary, the study found that:

  • Creative ideas are by definition novel - and novelty can trigger feelings of uncertainty that make most people feel uncomfortable
  • As a consequence, many people are inclined to dismiss creative ideas in favour of ideas that are purely practical - tried and true
  • The bias against creativity is so subtle that people are generally unaware of it - causing them to reject even high-quality innovative ideas

Jack Concarlo of Cornell - one of the co-authors of the paper - poses the question “How is it that people say they want creativity but in reality often reject it?” I’d like to go beyond the scope of the initial research and offer a handful of thoughts that may be relevant to the B2B buying decision process.

Creativity, Innovation and the Adoption Curve

Experience suggests that creativity and innovation are more highly valued by organisations that are see themselves as early adopters than those who see themselves as mainstream buyers or laggards when it comes to technology adoption.

To the left of the chasm, being seen as being an innovative, creative organisation can be helpful in winning these early adopter customers - but you are unlikely to be successful in crossing the chasm to mainstream markets unless you change the balance of your messaging from innovation to safety.

Innovation and the Absence of Existing Solutions

It seems that acceptance of innovation is also associated with the need to solve a critical problem - or exploit a high-value opportunity - for which there are no existing solutions. Innovative ideas thrive where there are high levels of pain and serious consequences associated with allowing the status quo to prevail.

But you need to be aware that your creative and innovative messages are likely to resonate most strongly with that small subset of your addressable market that are on a burning platform and simply cannot afford to stay where they are.

Creativity and the Burden of Proof

The study also showed that even objective evidence of the validity of a creative idea might not motivate people to accept it. Given how many apparently rational decisions have a strong emotional element to them, this should not be too surprising.

But is also suggests that in order to successfully promote a creative or innovative idea to a potentially (if unknowingly) sceptical audience we should take care to ensure that we address both the rational and emotional sides of the decision - as well as establishing believable proof points of our claims.

Execution Trumps Creativity

In most - particularly post-chasm - B2B sales and marketing situations, certainty (and sound execution) trumps creativity. It might be a good idea to review your current marketing campaigns - and the natural biases of your PR and marketing agencies. Are they balancing any needed creativity with the necessary focus on solid, effective execution? And are they positioning you as the safe, proven choice?

Bob Apollo

Bob Apollo

Bob Apollo is the founder and principal consultant behind Inflexion-Point Strategy Partners, one of the UK’s leading B2B sales and marketing performance improvement specialists. Bob works with promising early stage companies to help them “Cross the Chasm” from early adopters to mainstream markets, and with established organisations to refocus their sales and marketing activities and revitalise revenue growth.

LinkedIn Profile: http://uk.linkedin.com/in/bobapollo

LinkedIn Building Scalable Businesses Group

Twitter: @bobapollo

Website: www.inflexion-point.com/Blog/

Add comment


Security code
Refresh

Latest Comments

Community Coffee Lounge

Welcome to the Entrepreneur Country Coffee Lounge.

coffee_lounge

With a host of viral videos, games, cartoons and puzzles, its your time to relax.

entrepreneurcountry magazine

May                                                April
Click to view the full digital publication online                   Click to view the full digital publication online

Click here to view the latest issue of Entrepreneur Country Magazine with Charlie Mullins, Paddy Ashdown, Julie Meyer & more.

Related Media

Facebook/Twitter

Entrepreneur Country Polls

Did this budget help British Businesses or paper over the cracks?
 
 
Total votes: 8
Category: Better Business