Mentioning a past mistake with a similar product, makes endorsements and reviews up to 59% more effective. June 18, 2024 | [Read Online]( Admit mistakes to sound more persuasive Mentioning a past mistake with a similar product, makes endorsements and reviews up to 59% more effective. [Thomas McKinlay]( [fb]( [tw]( [in]( [email](mailto:?subject=Post%20from%20Ariyh&body=Admit%20mistakes%20to%20sound%20more%20persuasive%3A%20Mentioning%20a%20past%20mistake%20with%20a%20similar%20product%2C%20makes%20endorsements%20and%20reviews%20up%20to%2059%25%20more%20effective.%0A%0Ahttps%3A%2F%2Ftips.ariyh.com%2Fp%2Fhttps-tips-ariyh-com-p-admit-mistakes-to-sound-more-persuasive) New to [Ariyh](? This is a 3min practical summary of a scientific study ð Join 28,036 marketers who use science, not flawed opinions ð [Subscribe here]( Todayâs insight is brought to you by⦠[Super Clear]( I want to shout out a design studio called [Super Clear](. The design leader behind it ([Alexander Vilinskyy]() helped me design and build Ariyhâs new website, and he previously worked with Grammarly, Spark, PDF Expert, wikiHow, and 100+ others. I absolutely loved working with him and his team. If youâre building an AI product, or thinking of building one, itâs worth having a quick chat with him. Heâll make sure your product not only works great but also feels right. [Have a chat with Alex]( Want to sponsor Ariyh? [Hereâs all you need to know](. ð Intro You just received a video endorsement of your software from a big tech influencer. You canât wait to use it as part of your marketing material. Excited, you open it up and watch it. Youâre slightly shocked though, when you see that the first minute of the video is spent talking about your direct competitor. Even though the conclusion of that part is that âI was wrong to like it, I found something betterâ, it feels off. Arenât you going to give free publicity to your competitor? Youâre tempted to ask the influencer if you can edit out that initial part when using the clip. Research from Yale and University of Toronto shows that you shouldnât. P.S.: The [tone of your voice can make you more or less persuasive](. For example, sounding emotional made people 29% less persuasive. Want to access hundreds more insights like these? [Explore Ariyh insights here](. Recommendations and reviews that admit past mistakes are more persuasive Topics: Reviews | Social media
For: B2C. Can be tested for B2C
Research date: October 2019
Universities: Yale University | University of Toronto ð Recommendation Encourage reviews, endorsements, or recommendations of your product to include an admission of past mistakes when buying a similar product (e.g. the shoes I bought last month are already breaking, that was a mistake). Include this in suggestions or guidelines when working with influencers, or in placeholder text when asking for customer reviews. The recommendation or review will be persuasive. ð Findings - When a product review or endorsement admits a previous mistake reviewing a similar product (e.g. I said the last moisturizer I bought was amazing, but after a few days it gave me bad acne), it makes their current review more persuasive. - As part of a series of 4 experiments, and an analysis of 5,727 reviews on Sephoraâs website, researchers found that: - People rated Sephora reviews as more helpful if they mentioned a previous mistake using phrases like âmy badâ, âmy faultâ and âmistookâ - When people read a product review by a reviewer who admitted a mistake (vs didnât): - A pair of headphones was chosen 34% more often - A speaker was chosen 12% more often - A florist was chosen 47.3% more often - When given the choice between a pack of Altoids mints or $1, people chose the Altoids 58.6% more often when shown a review mentioning a previous mistake in using another brand alongside 9 other reviews - The effect only holds when a reviewerâs original mistake is in the same product category as the product theyâre recommending. ð§ Why it works - We assume people try to [learn from their mistakes](. - So we think reviewers who previously made a mistake have more expertise with that type of product. - Since we consider them to have more expertise, their advice is more persuasive and we hold it in higher regard. - In general, when a review [shows expertise](, [exerts confidence](, or uses [more specific language](, we consider it more [helpful and useful](, making us more likely to follow their advice. ð Hit a wall with Social and Search? Optimize your media mix with [Taboola]( Banner blindness is real and it affects your performance. Avoid it, by blending your ads natively into existing content. Native advertising works wonders on CPA costs when complemented with your Meta and Google ads. The best part? You can do so seamlessly, across 9k+ publishers and let [Taboola](âs algorithm find the lowest CPA for you. [Contact Taboola to start your campaign]( This announcement was sponsored. Want your brand here? [Click here](. â Limitations - Participants in the experiments were given two options to choose between after looking at reviews. In reality, shoppers would face multiple options to choose between, as well as the option not to choose any item. - Other factors in a review, like the brandâs reputation, the reviewerâs credibility, and the irrelevance of the mistake (e.g. this dress was too small for me), might override the positive impact of admitting a mistake. - The research focused on relatively low-stakes choices (choosing a pair of headphones, a florist, etcâ¦). For high-stakes decisions (e.g. expensive purchases, a place to stay on vacation, a health-related product) itâs unclear if a reviewer admitting past mistakes would increase othersâ confidence in their expertise. Admitting to mistakes on these purchases could be viewed as bad judgment, leading to reviews being less persuasive. ð¢ Companies using this - Companies and review sites donât appear to intentionally highlight product reviews that admit mistakes. Instead, they tend to highlight overly positive reviews. - Influencers sometimes mention and admit previous mistakes, with celebrities such as Anthony Bourdain and Kim Kardashian going as far as apologizing for previous endorsements. However, itâs unclear whether they consciously use this as a tactic to make other endorsements more persuasive. Tech influencer and reviewer Brandon Butch posts a video about the M3 iMac, highlighting issues that arose after his first review. â¡ Steps to implement - Look through reviews of your products to identify reviews where the reviewer admits to a mistake on a previous item theyâve bought in the same category. - Highlight these reviews as much as possible - move them to the top of the page, as the [first review people see]( has an outsized influence on customers. - You can also create a âFeaturedâ, âHighlightedâ or âUsefulâ section to make these reviews more prominent. - When youâre seeking reviews - best done around [10 days after the purchase]( - encourage people to [make comparisons]( to similar products in their reviews to try and get people to mention past purchase mistakes. - If youâre an influencer putting together a brief for influencer content - donât be afraid to admit mistakes. Openly discuss mistakes made with previous purchases in the category and try to frame these as learning experiences (e.g. these headphones have great bass, but when I tried listening to podcasts I realized they werenât great at voices, so now I test them for this too before buying). ð Study type Lab and online experiments and market observation (analysis of 5,727 product reviews posted on Sephoraâs website) ð Research [Featuring Mistakes: The Persuasive Impact of Purchase Mistakes in Online Reviews](. Journal of Marketing (October 2019) ð« Researchers - [Taly Reich](. Yale University. - [Sam J. Maglio](. University of Toronto Scarborough Remember: This is a new scientific discovery. In the future it will probably be better understood and could even be proven wrong (thatâs [how science works](). It may also not be generalizable to your situation. If itâs a risky change, always test it on a small scale before rolling it out widely. What did you think of today's insight? 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