Take a glance at these two advertisements for bottled water, and ask yourself:
1. Which one makes you feel happier?
2. Which one would more inspire you to lay out N150 for a bottle of water?
A recently published series of studies suggests that your answers may depend on how you define happiness. Six studies reported in the Journal of Consumer Research
suggest that: If you are someone who focuses on the future, you’re
likely to define happiness as excitement, and to choose products that
promise novelty and buzz. If, on the other hand, you are someone who
focuses on the present, you are likely to define happiness as being
calm, and to choose products that promise relaxation and balance.
In one of their experiments, the research team
(headed up by Cassie Mogilner of Penn’s Wharton School) had some people
focus on the future, by unscrambling sentences such as “matters future the.” Other people focused on the present by unscrambling sentences such as “matters present the.”
After being primed to think about the present or the future,
participants were shown two different versions of the same ad for
bottled water: One showed a drop of water on a soothing green background
with the words “Pure Calm,” the other showed the same drop of water in bright orange with the words “Pure Excitement.”
As shown in the figure, those who had been contemplating the present
preferred the calming product, those who had been thinking about the
future preferred the exciting version.
What determines how you define happiness in the first place? The
answer depends partly on how old you are. Consider two more ads -- for
luxury automobiles.
Which one of the ads is likely to appeal to a young and ambitious
person, and which is likely to appeal to an older grandparental type.
The researchers found that older folks were more likely to define
happiness in terms of calmness, to focus on the present, and to prefer
more laid back zen-style ads and the products they advertised. Younger
people were more likely to define happiness in terms of excitement and
novelty, to focus on future possibilities rather than the here and now,
and to prefer more exciting ads and products.
Earlier research linked the different definitions to cultural
background. European American students define happiness more in terms
of high arousal positive feelings, whereas Hong Kong Chinese students
think of happiness in terms of peaceful and serene feelings. If we put
those various sets of findings together that must mean that as we jumpy
Euro-types grow older, we move closer and closer to a calm and peaceful
Eastern Zen consciousness, and that the first step toward enlightment is
signaled by a change in your taste in bottled water advertisements.
Source: Psychology Today



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