Formulating Your Campaign: Reaction

5.4) Emotions

Part of the reaction element of the We Do Your Marketing Way

The emotional triggers that turn attention into action

Every meaningful reaction is emotional before it is rational.

In the final stage of the Reaction framework, we define which emotions a campaign is designed to trigger. These emotions shape how a message is interpreted, remembered, and acted upon — often more powerfully than facts or logic alone.

You can target one emotion or a combination, depending on the outcome you want to achieve.

Why Emotions Matter in Marketing

Emotion is the bridge between awareness and behaviour.

People don’t act because something makes sense — they act because it feels right, urgent, exciting, safe, or meaningful. Emotional triggers influence:

By identifying the emotional response you want to create, your marketing becomes intentional rather than reactive.

Core Emotional Triggers

Below are the primary emotions we consider when designing campaigns. Each emotion serves a different strategic purpose and should be selected based on the desired outcome.

Positive & Motivational Emotions

These emotions encourage engagement, connection, and forward movement.

  • Happiness — Creates positive brand association and enjoyment

  • Excitement — Drives momentum, anticipation, and action

  • Love — Builds emotional attachment and long-term loyalty

  • Gratitude — Strengthens relationships and appreciation

  • Trust — Reduces resistance and increases confidence

  • Pride — Reinforces identity and achievement

  • Relief — Positions your brand as a solution or safe choice

  • Awe — Inspires admiration and elevated perception

Curiosity & Attention-Based Emotions

These emotions are effective for cutting through noise and encouraging exploration.

  • Surprise — Breaks patterns and captures attention

  • Curiosity — Encourages discovery and deeper engagement

  • Confusion — Can be used strategically to prompt clarification or learning (when resolved quickly)

Challenge & Tension-Based Emotions

These emotions highlight problems, gaps, or dissatisfaction — often motivating change.

  • Frustration — Highlights obstacles or inefficiencies

  • Anger — Creates urgency around injustice or unmet expectations

  • Fear — Encourages protection, preparedness, or prevention

  • Regret — Motivates action to avoid missed opportunities

  • Guilt — Encourages corrective behaviour

  • Shame — Can influence behaviour change when used carefully

Social & Comparative Emotions

These emotions are tied to identity, status, and relationships with others.

  • Jealousy — Highlights comparison and desire

  • Contempt — Creates distance from undesirable alternatives

  • Hate — Strong rejection of opposing ideas or behaviours

  • Distrust — Can be triggered intentionally to challenge existing assumptions

  • Boredom — Often used to signal the need for change or innovation

Choosing the Right Emotional Mix

Most campaigns do not rely on a single emotion.

Effective marketing often combines:

  • A tension-based emotion to highlight a problem

  • A positive emotion to present the solution

  • A trust-based emotion to support action

The key is alignment — emotions must support the Aim, Archetype, Timing, and Action you want to achieve.

How Emotions Fit the Reaction Stage

Emotions define how the audience feels at the moment of decision.

When emotions are chosen intentionally:

  • Messages resonate faster

  • Decisions feel justified

  • Actions feel personal rather than pressured

This ensures your campaign connects at a human level — not just a logical one.

In Summary

Emotions are the final trigger that turns messaging into movement.

When you understand which emotions to activate — and why — your marketing becomes more persuasive, more memorable, and more effective.