The Psychology of Instant Gratification and How It Will Revolutionize Your Marketing Approach
The Psychology of Instant Gratification and How It Will Revolutionize Your Marketing Approach · Entrepreneur

Humans are hardwired to want things -- now. It’s called instant gratification, and it’s a powerful force. It can make people convert, as long as you’re doing the right things. But do you know how to use instant gratification for marketing?

If you dig into the psychology behind instant gratification, you’ll be able to understand how and why this is such a powerful force. Then, you’ll be able to introduce strategy into your marketing that will create incredible appeal.

What is instant gratification?

Instant gratification is the desire to experience pleasure or fulfillment without delay or deferment. Basically, it’s when you want it; and you want it now.

Instant gratification is the opposite of what we’ve been taught and try too hard to practice — delayed gratification. Waiting is hard, and there is an innate desire to have what we want when we want it, which is usually without any delay.

Instant gratification and the ‘pleasure principle.’
In most psychological models, humans are believed to act upon the “pleasure principle.” The pleasure principle is basically the driving force that compels human beings to gratify their needs, wants, and urges. These needs, wants, and urges can be as basic as the need to breathe, eat, or drink. But they can be as complex as the “need” for an iPhone 6 or some other cool new product.

When we don’t get fulfillment, our psychological response is anxiety or tension.

Related: Which Social Media Accounts Really Matter and Why

Instant gratification is fueled by modern devices and information exchange.
Not all instant gratification is bad. There’s nothing wrong with wanting or needing things, experiences, or products in a timely manner. It’s important to balance our desires with a realistic sense of timing and patience. By itself, though, instant gratification isn’t a negative thing.

Instant gratification is expected in many contexts. We gain instant feedback from our devices, because we’re constantly plugged in and turned on. Social media gives us instant ability to upload videos, photos and status updates. We receive instant feedback from our social followers. We respond in near real time to emails and tweets. We have the ability to make things happen without having to wait.

Because our devices are ubiquitous, our connectedness is constant. There’s very little patience required.

We even expect business growth -- a phenomenon long considered to be gradual -- to happen overnight. Like the viral explosion of a YouTube video, we want to hack business growth for viral expansion. The pursuit is admirable, even if the results aren’t always what we desire.