Monkey Lion Dog - The Theory Behind our Unique Psychology Model
31 Aug 2017
We all know that we need to talk to our consumer in a relevant way, so we develop hypothetical ‘personas’ to represent them, and then create messaging that aims to speak directly to them. While this sounds like a reasonable method of engaging with our target audience, the problem is that we can tend to become too rational when working through this process – presuming that our rational assumptions correspond to predominantly rational consumers.
The first step tends to be segmenting our market by socioeconomic demographics, then creating a description of them and their lifestyles, and finally identifying the relevant functional needs/benefits that our product or service could fulfil for them.
But here’s the rub. Any behavioural economist will tell you that consumers are often irrationally unpredictable, and any neuroscientist will tell you that all consumer decisions are emotional.
Which begs the question; how can you begin to understand the powerful, emotional, intrinsic motivations of the consumer, when typical personas rely too heavily on rational thoughts?
The challenge is that people are not that predictable - two people within the same persona group can make the same choice but for completely different reasons.
Monkey Lion Dog
Our model is a synthesis of several theories from behavioural and inter-personal psychology:
Triune Brain Theory – Paul MacLean PhD
FIRO Theory – Will Schutz PhD
Self-Relations Theory – Stephen Gilligan PhD
3 Needs Theory – David McCelland PhD
Neuro-Linguistic Programming - Richard Bandler PhD & John Grinder PhD
Each of these theories essentially alludes to the same 3 distinctions in human processing, which we’ve summarised in Monkey Lion Dog - our own practical, tripartite model for understanding intrinsic motivation and consumer behaviour.
How you use the model
Monkey Lion Dog is essentially a creative thinking exercise. For each given persona we dive deeper into their motivations, evaluating them through three different lenses – Contextual (revealing a ‘Monkey’ side), Rational (their ‘Lion’ aspects) and Emotional (related to ‘Dog’).
The best thing about this model is that our clients just get it, extremely quickly. It helps them to understand their target consumers’ intrinsic motivations in all types of communication, leading to effective messaging that really speaks to the people they want to be talking to.
If you want to learn the full range of rational and irrational motives in the Monkey Lion Dog model please contact us & take the test here.
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