While attending the ARISE Arts Conference, I sat in on a session called Attack of the Never-Ending Brainstorms by Tony Biaggne. It was an entertaining and enlightening session discussing idea generation for churches (I volunteer on a creative team at Liberty Church in Broken Arrow, OK).
Tony used this Derren Brown video clip as an example:
After viewing the video, two questions come to mind:
1) How can I be better at embedding messages superfluously? I tend to stop promoting a message at the point of adequacy. As Derren shows, there is a level of subliminal saturation to reach in order to be truly persuasive.
2) How many of my decisions are driven by these subliminal messages, instead of being driven by my core beliefs and values? Great! Now I’m even questioning whether eating at Pei Wei last night was my idea or a string of subconscious prompts (probably both in reality).
There is a rule of thumb that people must see your message 5-7 times before they’ll act on it. As with any rule of thumb, there are exceptions. (An incredibly powerful or creative message may be a catalyst at first impression. A boring, uninspired message may never break through.)
But, what if the message is packaged differently each time, or you repeatedly expose people to different elements of the same message - as Derren Brown did?
Maybe the whole isn’t always greater than the sum of its parts.
The Casual Fridays blog is about business in blue jeans. It's about doing the REAL hard work of today. Pausing, thinking and asking the questions others won't ask.
Mike Wagner
June 27th, 2008 at 10:06 am
“what if the message is packaged differently each time, or you repeatedly expose people to different elements of the same message - as Derren Brown did?”
Once when I was teaching at a summer church camp on Lake Michigan an elderly pastor asked me this question; “do you think the Bible teaches lots of things lots of different ways, or do you think the Bible teach a few things lots of different ways?”
That’s when I saw the power of what I call “creative redundancy” - packaging the same message differently each time.
Good post Dustin.
How you doing in your new venture?
Keep creating…a message worth repeating creatively,
Mike
DUST!N
June 27th, 2008 at 10:19 am
Thanks Mike. Creative Redundancy is a great term for this. You’re dead-on as usual.
New gig is good. Took 30 days or so to deal with the transfer, so the blog suffered some. Up and running now and have some great opportunities!
Thanks for asking.