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Website Psychology incorporates three areas of research. Color Psychology, Psychological
Triggers and Critical Thinkings own Psychological process. Using Psychology,
sales are optimized, customer interaction and retention is enhanced, and return
visits are increased.
What exactly does all this mean? Lets take a look at the three parts of Website
Psychology.
Color Psychology
Color psychology is under-rated. Web designers do not take color into consideration
when creating a web site. The reason? Color is just color too many.
However, color affects everything we do. The way we perceive others. Whether
we are comfortable in a room. What we eat, how we dress, if we stop or go at
the nearest stoplight. We do not realize the true impact color has on us, consciously
and subconsciously.
Take orange for instance. If you are on a diet, orange increases appetite encourages
relaxation and sleep. Blue decreases appetite, lowers the body temperature and
eliminates the flight to fight response. As a sales tool, orange is pivotal
for persons making a buying decision. It makes products more attractive and
appears more affordable.
Without realizing it, web designers often use color in a way that is detrimental
to the web sites productivity. The web sites color should be chosen after a
demographic profile is done. It should also depend on the product being sold.
If the company has an existing logo, the color of the logo must be taken into
consideration. The color can be incorporated into the site. However, a balance
must be achieved between the logo and the colors for the sites productivity.
Large corporations long ago discovered the true importance of color to their
products. Consider for a moment Coke and Pepsi. The predominant color for both
is red. Walk into any grocery store and the majority of the packages are
red. The reason? The taste buds become more sensitive, appetite improves, and
reactions become automatic.
Color Psychology is used on you every day. So are Psychological Triggers.
Psychological Triggers
If turkeys moo are they cows too?
What kind of question is that? Its the kind that made you stop and think.
It grabbed your attention. Probably made you shake your head and say, Huh?
Without realizing it, you just reacted exactly as you were meant too.
That, my friend, is psychology at work. Psychological triggers cause you to
act or react in a way that is predictable. Your mind responds to them either
consciously or subconsciously. Proper use and placement can lead a customer
through a web site. Even to the point of purchase.
One of the most powerful psychological triggers is why. Kids love
to ask the question why. Why is the sky blue? Why do birds fly? Why cant
I have a pony? Anyone who has kids or has been a kid knows these questions well.
We are curious by nature. Asking why in a header is similar to
flipping the curiosity switch. Our brain tells us that we must know more!
And so we delve deeper into a sites content. Searching for the answer our mind
seeks.
Budweiser, in their infinite wisdom, came up with the slogan of Why ask
why? Drink bud dry. That simple phrase increased their sales exponentially.
Psychology is amazing when applied.
Website Psychology
Color Psychology and Psychological Triggers are powerful tools. Used together
they are unbeatable! They have the ability to increase the productivity of any
site, no matter the design or navigation.
Now, Website Psychology would not be the same without the third process. It
takes psychology a step further. You can reach people through color and triggers.
That has been proven repeatedly. You can also control whether people read the
content of the site or not.
The challenge has always been memorability. People do not always bookmark sites,
nor do they return to every site they bookmark. Why? Because once the site is
bookmarked it is forgotten. A niche must be created in the mind inspiring
people to return.
Specific words are used causing the mind to remember the site. It is because
of this process sites are bookmarked, remembered, and passed on. Grammatically
challenged web sites can be just as successful as perfectly written sites.
Website Psychology is a new field. It is because of this fact that people have
not heard about it, and do not understand its importance. Any website can be
successful, but it takes more than a product, an idea, and a web designer to
make it happen.
About the Author:
Wynn Wilder is a Website Psychologist and owner of Critical Thinking. |