T
he following was previously published in an earlier edition of Media Insider.Spamming and phishing and robocalls at midnight
Pop ups and autoplays and
LinkedIn requests from salespeople
These are a few of my least favorite things
We all feel the excruciating pain of unsolicited demands on our attention. In a study of the
50 most annoying things in life of 2,000 Brits by online security firm Kapersky, deleting spam email came in at number 4, behind scrubbing the bath, being trapped in voicemail hell and cleaning the
oven.
Based on this study, cleanliness is actually next to spamminess.
Granted, Kapersky is a tech security firm, so the results are probably biased to the digital side, but for me the
results check out. As I ran down the list, I hated all the same things that were listed.
In the same study, robocalls came in at number 10. Personally, that tops my list, especially phishing
robocalls. I hate, hate, hate rushing to my phone only to hear that the IRS is going to prosecute me unless I immediately push 7 on my touchtone phone keyboard.
One, I’m
Canadian. Two, go to hell.
I spend more and more of my life trying to avoid marketers and scammers (the line between the two is often fuzzy) trying desperately to get my attention by any means
possible.
And it’s only going to get worse. A new study by researchers with security firm WithSecure showed that the ChatGPT AI chatbot could be a game changer for phishing, making scam
emails harder to detect. And with Google’s Gmail filters already trapping 100 million phishing emails a day, that's not good news.
The marketers in my audience are probably outrunning
Usain Bolt in their dash to distance themselves from spammers, but interruptive demands on our attention are on a spectrum that all share the same baseline. Any demand on our attention we don’t
ask for will annoy us. The only difference is the degree of annoyance.
Let’s look at the psychological mechanisms behind that annoyance.
There is a direct link between the parts
of our brain that govern the focusing of attention and the parts that regulate our emotions. At its best, it’s called “flow” -- a term coined by Mihaly Csikszentmihaly that describes
a sense of full engagement and purpose. At its worst, it’s a feeling of anger and anxiety when we’re unwillingly dragged away from the task at hand.
A 2017 neurological study by
Rejer and Jankowski found that when a participant’s cognitive processing of a task was interrupted by online ads, activity in the frontal and prefrontal cortex simply shut down while other parts
of the brain significantly shifted activity, indicating a loss of focus and a downward slide in emotions.
Another study, by Edwards, Li and Lee, points the finger at something called reactance
theory as a possible explanation. Very simply put, when something interrupts us, we perceive a loss of freedom to act as we wish and a loss of control of our environment. Again, we respond by getting
angry.
It’s important to note that this negative emotional burden applies to any interruption that derails what we intend to do. It is not specific to advertising, but a lot of
advertising falls into that category. It’s the nature of the interruption and our mental engagement with the task that determine the degree of negative emotion.
Take skimming through a
news website, for instance. We are there to forage for information. We are not actively engaged in any specific task. And so being interrupted by an ad while in this frame of mind is minimally
irritating.
But let’s imagine a headline catches our attention, and we click to find out more. Suddenly, we’re interrupted by a pop-up or pre-roll video ad that hijacks our
attention, forcing us to pause our intention and focus on irrelevant information. Our level of annoyance begins to rise quickly.
Robocalls fall into a different category of annoyance for many
reasons. First, we have a conditioned response to phone calls, hoping to be rewarded by hearing from someone we know and care about. That’s what makes it so difficult to ignore a ringing phone,
as I noted in a previous post.
Secondly, phone calls are extremely interruptive. We must literally drop
whatever we’re doing to pick up a phone. When we go to all this effort only to realize we’ve been duped by an unsolicited and irrelevant call, the “red mist” starts to float
over us.
It doesn’t matter whether the message is about a service special for our vehicle, an opportunity to buy term life insurance or an attempt by a fictitious Nigerian prince to
lighten the load of our bank account by several thousand dollars -- whatever the message, we start in an irritated state simply due to the nature of the interruption.
Of course, the more
nefarious the message that’s delivered, the more negative our emotional response will be. And this has a doubling-down effect on any form of intrusive advertising. We learn to associate the
delivery mechanism with attempts to defraud us.
So politicians who depends on robocalls to raise awareness on the day before an election should probably reconsider their ad-delivery
mechanism.