Real behavior. Real feeling. Real choice—not engagement theater, not conversion-optimized Stockholm syndrome. What’s left when you build for humans instead of feeding the algorithm’s insatiable need for predictable patterns.
Human Response™ creates customers who stay, not just transactions. When brands nail both—the emotional hit and the rational case—people don’t just buy once. They stay. They spend. They advocate. That’s the difference between optimizing for conversion and building for connection.
this is what the data misses
01
the cheap option isn’t about price
02
you can get good coffee anywhere
03
you didn’t watch that show because Netflix’s UX made it easy to find something
04
you lied, the meeting doesn’t really have an agenda
The formula is simple. The execution isn’t.
Emotion + Logic = Action.
They don’t work in sequence. They work together. The decision to avoid cheap coffee is both emotional (identity protection) and logical (social calculation). The drive across town is both feeling (recognition matters) and thinking (worth the time).
Build for both, and brands stop guessing.
The unconscious appraisal that decides everything before thought begins.
The conscious evaluation that follows — validating what emotion already decided.
Something happens. An ad, a conversation, a recommendation, a search.
Before conscious thought, the brain tags it. Threat or opportunity. Approach or avoid.
Emotion decides what’s worth thinking about. Logic only engages what emotion already greenlit.
Analysis enters. Features, price, fit, risk. But the canvas is already coloured.
The decision that feels reasoned. Usually the emotional conclusion, now justified.
Purchase. Commitment. Referral. The moment everything upstream produced.
Building moments that marry emotion and logic — that’s how brands turn human connection into lasting customers.
That’s what we do.
in practice
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This category is full of brands talking to an aspirational version of their customer. We built for the stressed parent, the exhausted professional — the person who needs to cope, not optimize. One campaign repositioning unlocked an entirely new market.