Webinar: Mind Tricks: How the Brain Reacts to Price-Based Offerings
This free webinar from the Stanford Graduate School of Business, Executive Education, looks interesting. I hope to post a review soon after attending:
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Title: Mind Tricks: How the Brain Reacts to Price-Based Offerings
Host: Professor Baba Shiv
Date: Tuesday, June 23, 2009
Time: 8:00 AM – 9:00 AM (Pacific Daylight Time)
Registration: www.stanfordinnovation.com
In light of the current recession, the media is filled with stories of consumers favoring products that deliver a price-based value proposition. Recent scientific investigation concerning how the brain processes information throughout the consumer decision making process has uncovered many surprising findings. In fact, these findings counter the conventional wisdom surrounding the development of a successful customer value proposition.
Professor Baba Shiv, Professor of Marketing at the Stanford Graduate School of Business, will examine the customer value proposition from the perspective of the buyer decision making process.
KEY TAKEAWAYS |
Based on insights gained through cutting-edge neuroscience research, the key takeaways will include:
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FACULTY SPEAKER
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Baba Shiv is Professor of Marketing at the Stanford Graduate School of Business. His research is in the area of consumer decision making and decision neuroscience, with specific emphasis on the role of emotion in decision making, the neurological bases of emotion, and nonconscious mental processes in decision making. His rece nt work examines the potential for nonconscious placebo effects related to pricing, showing for instance that the higher the price of a product (e.g., wine) that one consumes, the greater the pleasure one experiences as manifested by a higher level of activation in brain centers that code for pleasure. Your attendance will also give you a glimpse of the Strategic Marketing Management experience and will further demonstrate the value that our ten-day advanced management program can provide to you and your organization. |
dammit i want to be? in stanford only prbeolm i didnt score good marks in 9th and 10thso i dont think i will get into just for that reason and nothing else