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Category Archives: Emotional Engagement

Designing for Emotion Chapter 4 – Emotional Engagement

By Tori Beechum in Aaron Walter, Chapter 4, Design Blitz, Designing for Emotion, Emotional Engagement, PR Publications, PR Publications Weekly Blog Post from Designing With Emotion February 15, 2014

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This week my publications class read in Aaron Walter’s book, “Designing for Emotion,” about designing with emotional engagement. This chapter was very informative. The top three keys I took away was: surprise, anticipate and prime. What does this mean?

Well with any type of design you was your audience to be able to connect with it so your probably have added some personality to it. Now it is time to surprise your audience. It is very interesting that Walter teaches this because I think most would agree that surprises keep you wanting to come back for more to see what else is in store. It is simply very hard to resist when the surprise was pleasant.

Anticipation can be a very hard concept to apply. I think you should anticipate once you know what your audience likes, but it is very important to be careful about what you try to add to a website. Twitter is a good example of this. The makers of twitter decided there needed to be a new interface in hopes of gaining a new audience and to keep those who were already users interested. The makers made a big leap by presenting a new interface but continued to give the audience a chance to keep the old interface unlike its competitor Facebook, which makes users change to the new interface designs. I think that people respond better when given a choice and it somewhat keeps people wanting to use your services when they know they can create it however they want it.

Finally priming is when we send positive emotional experiences and people can deeply engage with it.  Walter gave a great example of the mail chimp site. He said that mail chimp added the speech to the chimp and people like it because it was out of the ordinary. He compared this to the old Microsoft Word paperclip, Clippy, who would ask users midway trough their document if they needed help and etc. That got really old and mail chimp wanted their comments to be different were it was more helpful than annoying. This idea was so great, Walter said many people tweeted about it and mail chimp gained exposure because of its talking chimp.

One thing that I totally agree with it the use of open interaction. The gaming world is really capitalizing off of it because people like to be able to create their own fantasies rather than have a closed interaction that lays everything out for you. What I did not agree with was when Walter said that if you have a “when you create emotionally engaging experiences, a marketing budget is no longer necessary.” I think it’s important to have that back-up plan just in case. What if your audience doesn’t like a new step that you’ve taken and your company starts to get less attention. You have to figure out a new way to engage.

Overall this was a very interesting chapter and I think it is worth the read if you’re interested in learning about how to emotionally engage with your audiences.

-Tori

 

Originally posted at Tori Beechum - PR Pubs

Chapter 4 Blog Post

By Claire White in Designing for Emotion, Emotional Engagement, JMC 3433, PR Publications February 15, 2014

In Chapter 4 of Designing for Emotion by Aarron Walter, it talks about having emotional engagement and how we must constantly surprise our audience. I completely agree. We as designers need to remember that our audience has a short attention span and we must surprise our audience to keep their attention.

The one thing that I disagree with is Wufoo’s approach with handwritten letters. I agree that a caring, handwritten note creates brand loyalty, but I think this only works if your target audience and customers are repeat customers. Most people go to a website to order something, and never return because they got what they needed. In this case, if a customer received a letter from the company, I would imagine that the letter would be thrown in the garbage with the junk mail. I do on the other hand, believe that it could be an amazing tool for those companies with already loyal customers. If your buyers have visited before, I think that a handwritten note could only help your customer see the human side of your company so I think it would work.

Originally posted at Claire White

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