Skip to main content

Study Reveals Video Emails Offer Relief as Inbox Fatigue Continues to Rise

Neuroscience study by B2B DecisionLabs and Vidyard shows text-based emails create negative emotions, while video messages tend to emote pleasure, less fatigue

Looking to increase company morale and make customers more likely to engage in the new digital-first business world? Use more video.

That’s the unmistakable conclusion of a first-of-its-kind brain study conducted in April 2021 with U.S. business professionals from industries including high tech, consulting, commercial, finance, banking, and insurance, who viewed a variety of text-based and video-based content assets and messages.

When shown a video message, respondents tended to enter a happy, pleased, or alert state and feel less fatigue. By contrast, text or email tended to make viewers more anxious and caused brain activity associated with negative emotions such as being upset or annoyed. In addition, viewers who read text with embedded video felt fewer negative emotions than those who read text alone.

Some participants also remembered video content better than text and may be far more likely to act on a video message than a text message -- an essential finding for employers and leaders of sales organizations looking for new ways to engage customers.

Nearly 60% of participants remembered zero emails within 48 hours of viewing them. Yet long-term memory test results indicated that of those who did remember one or more emails, participants remembered details from a video portion of the email if included. Videos that included dynamic effects (e.g., animation, motion, sound effects, screenshots) and relevant video titles have an even higher chance of memorability.

The study, commissioned by Vidyard, was led by Dr. Carmen Simon, Ph.D., a cognitive neuroscientist who serves as Chief Science Officer for science-backed marketing and sales training provider Corporate Visions and a lead researcher for B2B DecisionLabs.

Dr. Simon used various neuroscience and biometric tools to measure responses. While viewing text and video samples on a computer, participants wore an EEG (electroencephalogram) cap, as well as ECG (electrocardiogram) and GSR (Galvanic Skin Response) devices. The computer also tracked eye movement. These tools enabled an accurate evaluation of the cognitive and affective processes of the brain beyond self-reports, online assessments, or behavioral observation.

“Video engages reflexive thinking, which can lead to improved long-term memory,” Dr. Simon said. “In addition, our study findings around the dynamic effects of video align with the cognitive theory of multimedia learning, which has shown that viewers who are exposed to both pictures and narration score higher on memory tests than viewers who are exposed to only pictures or only words.”

Via the study, Dr. Simon and her research team learned that the experience of the email inbox tends to put people in a negative emotional state. And eye-tracking heat maps of participants viewing lengthy text emails showed that people lost focus and attention since long lines are strenuous for the brain to process.

But video, even in tandem with text in an email, elicited very different responses. For instance:

  • Maps of brain activity showed that including a video in an email is not a negative disruption to the viewer. Emails with embedded video messages tended to neutralize the negative experience of email and, in fact, promoted a more positive experience than just text.
  • Participants tended to have a more positive experience (higher “valence”) and were more consistently alert (higher “arousal”) when presented with a video email versus a text email.
  • Participants tended to feel more motivated and less fatigued while viewing the video emails versus text emails. People also remembered more (and with more precision) from the video emails.
  • Videos were positively perceived by the receiver as a welcome break from text emails. Eye-tracking heat maps of viewers watching a video showed that people stayed more focused, which may mean senders of video emails are better able to control the story and guide the viewer’s attention to what is most important in the message.

“What we learned in this study was that video wasn’t simply the right tool to use during the pandemic, it is the right communications tool to use going forward -- for hybrid work, for sales, and for businesses of all kinds,” said Tyler Lessard, Vidyard’s chief video strategist. “Plainly speaking, our brains demand video for the kind of remote human interactions that will continue as hybrid work and hybrid commerce become the norm. Relying solely on old, staid methods such as text and emails is bad business. The adoption and popularity of video, both live video calls and new technologies such as video messages, will continue to soar in business because it changes the way professionals communicate in a decidedly positive way.”

More Information:

  • For more information and to download the complete study, please visit vidyard.com.

About Vidyard

Vidyard helps businesses and professionals connect with their audiences in a whole new way through engaging, personalized, and measurable video experiences. Through its global video hosting and analytics platform, Vidyard empowers companies like LinkedIn, Zycus, League, Stanley Black & Decker, and others to transform their approach to marketing, sales, and corporate communications. Vidyard helps any business professional create and share custom videos to deliver their message in a more personal and impactful way through its free and pro tools. Thousands of businesses and millions of people around the world rely on Vidyard for their video needs. Sign up for Vidyard for free: https://www.vidyard.com/free.

Contacts

Data & News supplied by www.cloudquote.io
Stock quotes supplied by Barchart
Quotes delayed at least 20 minutes.
By accessing this page, you agree to the following
Privacy Policy and Terms and Conditions.