MadHatDJ/Backtracks Music shop
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MadHatDJ/Backtracks Music shop
@BacktracksEdin
BACKTRACKS Music Film Game shop +MobileDisco DJHIRE Edinburgh secondhand Vinyl CD Games AV/TV HiFi DVDs Film Guitar Golf Equip Plugs Leads+Hibs/Scot Fitba Fan++









In the early 2000s, IKEA ran a strange experiment in one of its European stores. They noticed that customers spent hours walking through showrooms, testing couches, opening drawers, and lying on beds. Yet many still left without buying anything. So IKEA changed one small thing. They started placing everyday objects inside the display rooms. A half-finished cup of coffee. A book left open on a table. Shoes under the bed. Sales went up. Nothing about the furniture changed. The prices stayed the same. The layouts stayed the same. Only the environment felt different. Customers stopped seeing the rooms as “showrooms” and started seeing them as real homes. The spaces felt lived in. Familiar. Easy to imagine themselves inside. Psychologically, this triggered mental ownership. When people visualize themselves using something, they begin to feel like it already belongs to them. That feeling increases the likelihood of buying. IKEA later scaled this idea across stores worldwide. Their rooms became less perfect and more human. Messy desks. Folded laundry. Kids’ toys on the floor. The brand learned that people do not buy furniture logically. They buy the future version of their life they can picture in their head. A coffee cup on a table sold more couches than any price tag ever could. ___ Thanks for reading! Enjoyed this post? Follow @BigBrainMkting for more content like this.





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🗓️ On this day in 1980, George Best scored THIS for Hibs against Celtic 💚






@ScotlandNT Lourve to see it




