By Ylan Q. Mui
Washington Post
December 19, 2006
When Joanne Wallace of Waldorf smells cinnamon, it feels like Christmas. Every year, her family keeps a pot of water and cinnamon sticks simmering on their wood-burning stove. "It just has such a beautiful smell," she said. "It's a happy smell."
It's also the smell inside the Sony Style store at the Fashion Centre at Pentagon City.
Through Christmas, the chain is filling its stores with a designer scent called "Seasons Greetings," which also has undertones of gingerbread, as a way to evoke happy memories in customers and put them in the shopping spirit. Other retailers are following suit with custom fragrances of their own. Shoppers' eyes and ears have been numbed by excessive decorations and endless loops of carols, marketers say. The nose is the latest frontier.
"It's really important for these retailers to be able to try to grab these consumers' senses any way they can," said David J. Urban, professor of marketing at Virginia Commonwealth University. "Smell can be a dominant cue."
The burgeoning "scent technology" industry has fueled sales at companies such as ScentAir. Since its founding six years ago, the Charlotte firm has developed fragrances for thousands of retailers, including Sony, said chief executive David Van Epps. Many placed their orders for holiday smells over the summer. Popular requests include mulling spices, pine trees and cranberry sauce.
"When you can put a great aroma in that's reminiscent of a time or place, it really pays off," Van Epps said.
Last year, the company developed a sugar cookie scent for Bloomingdale's to pump into its Christmas shop. This holiday, KB Toys has experimented with a minty chocolate fragrance in some stores, Van Epps said.
The product is not just for holiday use, however. Sony fills its stores with a mandarin orange and vanilla fragrance year round, and KB has experimented with scents of Creamsicle, cotton candy and Play-Doh. Upscale men's clothier Thomas Pink has ordered an ambient version of its signature "line-dried linen" scent.
ScentAir's fragrances are dispersed by a small coffee can-shaped device called the ScentWave. At the Sony Style store in Pentagon City recently, the machine was sitting at the front door, emitting waves of "Seasons Greetings" that drove out the smell of chicken stir-fry from the food court below. Customers who spent more than $200 got complimentary sachets of scent beads. Others could buy them for $1.50 if they craved that in-store experience in their own homes. Store manager Frank Kroner said one customer last week bought about 10.
At the Sony Style store on Madison Avenue in New York, the scent is even pumped onto the street, said Christine Belich, vice president of visual merchandising. On a windy day, you can smell it for several blocks.
"We're Sony, and we're not warm and fuzzy. [We're] much more slick and much more cutting edge," said Belich, who helped come up with the idea. "But at the same time, you want to soften that a little bit."
Experts say fragrance is an effective sales tool because smell is the sense most directly connected to emotion and memory.
"You smell a rose, and your brain doesn't go, R-O-S-E," said Charles S. Zuker, a researcher with the Howard Hughes Medical Institute. "Your brain recalls what a rose is like."
Daniel Lieberman, an associate professor of psychiatry at George Washington University, called smell the most "primitive" of the senses. Odor receptors in the nose are actually brain cells, he said. He cited recent studies that linked increased electrical and metabolic activity in the brain to pleasant odors.
ScentAir Technologies Inc, founded in 2000, is the leading provider of aroma marketing solutions for brands and retailers. ScentAir enables businesses to create a unique in-store experience by engaging memory and emotions through patented scent delivery systems. Proven to enhance the appeal of any environment, these pioneering scent machines can be customized to reflect even the most challenging environment or brand. ScentAir is a privately held company located in Charlotte, NC.
For additional information contact Murray Dameron at 704-504-2320.
