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Stuart Duff

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Gender Male
Age 42
Date of birth January 23,1982
Zodiac sign Aquarius
Born Aberdeen
United Kingdom
Height 178 (cm)
Weight 65 (kg)
Current teams Inverurie Loco Works F. C.
Job Footballer
TeamsInverurie Loco Works F.C.
Picked dateInverurie Loco Works F.C.
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID1335953
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Stuart Duff Life story


Stuart Duff is a Scottish retired professional footballer who last played for Inverurie Loco Works in the Highland Football League. He was primarily a central midfielder although his versatility saw him play in most defensive and midfield positions.

The job sharing apps that feel like online dating

The job sharing apps that feel like online dating
Nov 26,2023 8:41 pm

... But could an employer simply turn down job sharing candidates to avoid having double the HR and payroll work? UK employment solicitors Davidson Morris say that job sharing requests from existing employees Fellow business psychologist Stuart Duff says that in most cases firms can benefit from having employees in job sharing roles...

How brands hope to tempt you with videos on labels

How brands hope to tempt you with videos on labels
Jul 16,2023 7:40 pm

... While you d expect those involved in helping firms create AR to sing its praises, what do independent experts think? Stuart Duff is a leading business psychologist, who studies how firms can best connect with consumers...

Should social media face-altering filters be regulated?

Should social media face-altering filters be regulated?
May 14,2023 10:00 pm

... " Psychologist Stuart Duff, a partner at UK practice Pearn Kandola, says that some social media influencers will always be tempted to use tricks to improve their online appearance - because being good-looking sells...

The app allowing fans to invest in their favourite musicians

The app allowing fans to invest in their favourite musicians
Feb 5,2023 10:11 pm

... " It is this sense of closer involvement that business psychologist Stuart Duff, a partner at UK practice Pearn Kandola, thinks might be key to Corite s future success...

Italian label maybe but the beer's British brewed

Italian label maybe but the beer's British brewed
Dec 15,2022 6:10 am

... " Global TradeMore from the Yet why are so many British lager drinkers attracted by a foreign brand name? Business psychologist, Stuart Duff of UK practice, Pearn Kandola, says it is an " aspirational" decision...

How human-like are the most sophisticated chatbots?

How human-like are the most sophisticated chatbots?
Jun 16,2022 5:35 am

... Psychologist, Stuart Duff of UK practice, Pearn Kandola, says he understands this sentiment...

The sophisticated tech predicting if an advert will work

The sophisticated tech predicting if an advert will work
Mar 7,2022 4:20 am

... But if brands can now test their adverts in more depth than ever before, what makes a good one in the first place? How can a retailer and its advertising agency, dream up the next drumming gorilla ? Psychologist, Stuart Duff, of UK business coaching firm Pearn Kandola, says that if brands want to reach customers hope is the emotion they should focus on...

Coronavirus: what is it like to be dismissed on Zoom?

Coronavirus: what is it like to be dismissed on Zoom?
Jun 2,2020 9:45 pm

... It will make you feel uncomfortable, until someone in the eye, and the level of emotional frustration and anger is more visible, but it is essential to the provision of the message in an open, fair and transparent way, Stuart Duff, an expert on the psychology of leadership at business psychology consultancy Pearn Kandola, says to another person ...

The sophisticated tech predicting if an advert will work

Jun 2,2020 9:45 pm

Back in 2007, Kerry Collinge, who works in marketing, found herself working on an unusual project featuring a drumming Gorilla .

The TV advert was for Cadbury's Dairy Milk chocolate, and The Gorilla - or rather, an actor wearing an extremely convincing Gorilla suit -

It was an immediate hit with viewers: sales of the chocolate soared,

At The Time the advert was made, Ms Collinge was a senior figure in Cadbury's in-house marketing team. But as she explains, th finished piece might never have seen The Light of day.

" The ad lay finished in The Company , within Cadbury's, for Nine Months before anybody would let it out, " she says.

Initial Market Research had suggested that the ad would not do well with customers. After All , a drumming Gorilla has nothing to do with chocolate.

Yet, Ms Collinge and colleagues were convinced it would be a hit. So she went to a London-based high-tech, ad-testing company called System1 for a Second Opinion . Its online-based system doesn't ask participants whether they like a particular advertisement.

Instead, it asks at least 150 people to view the ad and record their emotional responses to it - the drumming Gorilla got an extremely positive score. Ms Collinge reported this back to Cadbury's bosses, and the ad was released to widespread acclaim.

" I used The Testing to really give confidence to Cadbury that the ad was going to do a fantastic job, " she says. " Because it was very, very different for them. "

It takes a foolhardy person to claim they are not influenced by Advertising . In today's digital world it is coming at you all The Time , and the amount of money companies spend on Advertising their products and services has never been higher.

This year That is up from $634m in 2019, and digital Advertising - adverts you see or hear on your computer and Mobile Phone - Now accounts for 62% of the total.

The Problem for brands however, remains neatly summarised by this quote from US car industry pioneer, Henry Ford : " Half The Money I spend on Advertising is wasted, The Problem is I do not know which half. "

To try to ensure adverts are as successful as possible, retailers are using high-tech ad-testing firms more often.

UK firm, Kantar, is another firm working on these analytics. It's online testing system also focuses on a person's emotional response to being shown an advert. One Way it does this is by connecting to a tester's laptop, or webcam, then using facial-mapping software to monitor their reactions.

Jane Ostler, Kantar's executive Managing Director of creative and media products, says this type of more sophisticated testing is increasingly in demand.

This shift is because companies want to advertise their products across a large number of platforms - print, TV and Social Media . These various mediums may require a different advert for the same product.

" I think for clients, that is The Real Challenge - not only Making It [The Adverts ] all, and Making It all integrated and part of the same campaign, but also How To measure it and whether it is working, " she says.

Ms Collinge Now works for System1 as its director of marketing and partnerships. The System asks testers to reveal their emotional response to an advert, as it is playing, by clicking on the relevant small graphic of a human head on their screen.

Each of these pictures show a different emotion, with that emotion also written underneath. The choices are contempt, surprise, anger, disgust, fear, happiness, sad, and neutral.

" We don't want to ask people what they're going to do [whether they will buy The Product or not], because we know that's not very predictive of how an advert is going to perform, because people go into their Left Brain and start thinking too much, " says Ms Collinge.

" Instead, we want to measure what their natural feeling is, what their natural emotion is, what all those basic emotions are. We can get a snapshot of which parts of an ad are working or not. "

The ultimate aim is that clients get both accurate short and long-term sales predictions, and additional metrics like finding out whether the brand of The Company is recognisable and familiar to customers or not.

is a Series exploring how technological innovation is set to shape the new emerging economic landscape.

Priyanka Carr, who is The Chief operating office of US software firm Momentiv says that the benefit of using online ad-testing is that it is cheaper than in-person testing or market surveys. (Momentive is also the owner of another provider of online ad-testing - Surveymonkey ).

" It doesn't take hundreds of thousands of dollars to run an ad-test [as it could do previously], " says Ms Carr. " It Now takes tens of thousands of dollars to run a large ad-test, and you can do it early in The Process . That's one major differentiator. "

One such online tester is Nicole Cheong, from Johannesburg. She recently reviewed an alcohol advertisement that included wheelchair users but felt the survey questions were somewhat leading, probing her reaction to people with disabilities in adverts.

" It was a cute story and touching, but it didn't resonate with The Product for me, " she adds.

System1 says that its prices start from around £2,000 per advert, while fellow online ad-tester, Toluna, says that its prices can be as low as 5% of an advert's campaign budget.

But if brands can Now test their adverts in more depth than ever before, what makes a good one in the First Place ? How can a retailer and its Advertising agency, dream up The Next 'drumming Gorilla '?

Psychologist, Stuart Duff , of UK business coaching firm Pearn Kandola, says that if brands want to reach customers hope is the emotion they should Focus On .

" Emotions are critical to our memory, " he explains. " We do not remember factual or bland information easily, but something that is moving or uncomfortable will be committed to memory with ease. What are the three most powerful emotions? I would suggest that fear, guilt and hope.

" Hope is associated with feelings of joy and relief, and offers a Way Out from fear and guilt. It is hope that will move us forward and trigger feelings of trust in The Product . "



Source of news: bbc.com

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