Persuasive Design: How IKEA Tricks You Into Buying More Furniture

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  • Опубликовано: 12 дек 2024

Комментарии • 380

  • @SkamGame
    @SkamGame Год назад +428

    Are you telling me that I don't need to buy new cutlery, kitchen equipment, candles, towels and a new coffee table each time I pop in to get a hotdog?!

    • @parisakamali345
      @parisakamali345 Год назад +12

      Apparently not 😳 do they not know I NEED another spatula 🙄

    • @sharmisthatralalala
      @sharmisthatralalala Год назад +2

      🤣🤣🤣

    • @OCEAN_OF_FOXES
      @OCEAN_OF_FOXES Год назад +3

      Shh you do

    • @margaretwandel5660
      @margaretwandel5660 Год назад +5

      I shopped at Ikea once or twice. The first time I enjoyed it. I dislike that it is difficult to get in and out. Once I had to do a return. I had to wait until my number was called in an area that was like a train station waiting room. Never again. I have never returned.

    • @th3m3shr
      @th3m3shr Год назад

      😂😂😂😂😂

  • @haleymist09
    @haleymist09 Год назад +143

    Every single one of these tactics works on me. I'm aware of it and I'm fine with it lol. I'm actually really impressed with how ikea curated the experience in a very unique way. I appreciate how well-thoughy it is.

    • @Italiaikea
      @Italiaikea Год назад

      www.youtube.com/@Italiaikea

    • @ClarkBK67
      @ClarkBK67 Год назад +8

      I would probably shop more if other retailers’ attention to detail to the experience was so good. I guess it’s good their stores are houses of horror.

    • @EyeMCreative
      @EyeMCreative Год назад +2

      Exactly, it's a really nice experience and I wish more retailers did things like this. I enjoy just walking through, even if I don't buy anything. It's just fun to appreciate the design and attention to detail.

  • @MrGoalie2012
    @MrGoalie2012 Год назад +108

    Staging rooms to showcase products and layout is the smartest thing they ever decided

  • @JHZech
    @JHZech Год назад +24

    I compare what Ikea is offering to other furniture makers all the time, but it usually turns out that due to Ikea's huge selection, it has something that meets my needs and the others don't. Or in cases where there are comparable items, Ikea's is way cheaper or actually even looks better due to having a focus on minimalist designs and not having to factor in the handmade labor cost.
    Then there's the staging. I love the staging. It shows what type of style this piece of furniture looks good in and what kind of context really brings out its charm along with giving a sense of scale. Otherwise I have to do a lot more work to picture how it would look in my space.

    • @Serena-or7sl
      @Serena-or7sl Год назад +4

      I found a single piece of furniture that I like better in the non-ikea version. Only one. It's a room divider, and while the ikea one is good the amazon (yeah, amazon) one has a design that adapts better to me and my house. The ikea one is better built though, so I'm not buying anything at the moment.

  • @PossumNZ1
    @PossumNZ1 Год назад +19

    We have no IKEA where I live in nz but we specifically imported a couch from IKEA because our furniture here is mass produced and expensive.
    I found that really interesting because it was just product placement in a lot of interior design videos, and not just yours btw that drew me to it.
    We saved thousands importing the couch and a few bits and bobs from IKEA that we just can’t get here where I live.

  • @mrsmorris265
    @mrsmorris265 Год назад +11

    I enjoy the psychological journey and seeing the work of the interior designers. It's a great date night adventure. The key is leaving your money at home and recognizing this for the theme park it is.

  • @dr.stacey7283
    @dr.stacey7283 Год назад +5

    I truly hate shopping but for some reason the Ikea Model works for me. Maybe being able to see items in a functional way works for my brain.
    When you showed the picture of “the other” furniture store, my heart rate went up!

  • @thefluffyferret
    @thefluffyferret Год назад +102

    Hm. In Europe Ikea has shortcuts in the exhibition so you do not need to follow the maze all the way. In Hamburg / Germany we even have an IKEA right in town in a normal shopping area; it has windows to the outside, too.
    I can arm myself against Ikea's evil designs by making a shopping list and sticking to it (and I do, too😀):
    I am old enough to remember furniture shopping before the first Ikea hit northern Germany: mostly ugly, and mostly way too expensive for me. So yeah, next to inherited or thrifted furniture I have a lot of Ikea stuff and I'm not sorry.

    • @anastasia10017
      @anastasia10017 Год назад +2

      there are shortcuts in the Ikea USA too but they are really hidden and hard to find. You have to ask an employee where the shortcuts are and memorize them for the next time you are there.

    • @tomasdoubek
      @tomasdoubek Год назад +3

      I think you can also get very fast into warehouse sections. Making list in advance helps a lot.

    • @Eriadni.
      @Eriadni. Год назад +5

      The 3 Ikeas Ive been to in the US had the shortcuts marked on the maps and they were easy to find.

    • @Elizabeth-rq1vi
      @Elizabeth-rq1vi Год назад +1

      Canadian IKEAs also have shortcuts. The maps & signs also inform us where they are.

    • @utethornburg7715
      @utethornburg7715 Год назад +1

      It does in the US too.

  • @marlabrunker738
    @marlabrunker738 Год назад +466

    Yeah, Ikea tricks me into buying their stuff by offering inexpensive prices, designs that are aesthetically and functionally somewhere between inoffensive and pretty damn good, and items that fulfill basic household needs.
    I don't know why I keep falling for it.

    • @rockthevote398
      @rockthevote398 Год назад +8

      Yep--me too!

    • @suebabyblue168
      @suebabyblue168 Год назад +5

      😜😂😂😂

    • @wilmaknickersfit
      @wilmaknickersfit Год назад +3

      I'm such a suckered! 🤣

    • @cynthiaarmstrong7972
      @cynthiaarmstrong7972 Год назад +18

      I’m still using 35 year old “pressboard and plastic” ikea dresser drawers that survived 2 children. Great design, inexpensive materials

    • @verreal
      @verreal Год назад +3

      Yeah, the basics are where they excel.

  • @nahteinas
    @nahteinas Год назад +1

    I've never wanted to go to an Ikea more than after watching this video. Sounds like a pleasant weekend outing. Get excited > look at an irl interior design catalogue > get inspired > have lunch. Hopefully when they do make one here they actually follow the same formula.

  • @jaycarver4886
    @jaycarver4886 Год назад +23

    Daniel, could you please do an episode on how to achieve the wonderful lighting effects that Ikea rooms have. It's so calming and soothing and makes me feel great. I have light sensitivity issues!
    Btw, just found your channel and loving it. Great information. Thanks for your efforts!!

    • @almmason7
      @almmason7 Год назад +3

      I'm learning while doing a renovation in my home as he said they layer their lighting. You can add lighting under upper and lower cabinets in kitchen or any room, add lighting in different areas, use dimmers, different color lighting, and etc.

  • @SN-sz7kw
    @SN-sz7kw Год назад +10

    Thank you - great to understand why it’s such a delightful shopping experience. Our home is filled with a mix of vintage, 2nd hand, & Ikea. Much of the Ikea has been hacked, upgraded, or painted. I love it. And look forward to going back occasionally. We are retired - so go early in the day when it isn’t crowded, wander slowly & enjoy that free coffee in natural light. 😊

  • @karenjakobsen668
    @karenjakobsen668 Год назад +18

    Thanks for the glimpse of my hometown IKEA! I live in Paris now but have visited that store since childhood. I 'get' all their clever tricks but I don't care. Long live IKEA!

  • @superleggenda
    @superleggenda Год назад +20

    Very interesting video. I am restoring an 800 years old house in Tuscany, and even though no expense was spared on the renovation, I will probably use A LOT of IKEA furniture. Just one correction: upsell is selling a large McMenu instead of a medium one. CROSS selling is selling drapes, or pillows, to someone who bought a sofa. Or nuggets if you got a Big Mac menu. Up is the same, but bigger and more expensive. Cross is something else. Like their Kafferep cookies (formerly known as chokladflarn). Damn they’re good.

    • @superleggenda
      @superleggenda Год назад +3

      @@Deb.-. because money is not unlimited?

    • @anastasia10017
      @anastasia10017 Год назад +3

      @@Deb.-. because he is running out of money..... do you live in the real world.?

    • @ClarkBK67
      @ClarkBK67 Год назад +1

      A good plan, spend on the home and upgrade the furniture as you’re able. The beauty of using IKEA is it’s cheap enough you won’t mind retiring it when you find the perfect piece at the flea market or antique stop.

    • @superleggenda
      @superleggenda Год назад +1

      @@ClarkBK67 or the circular corner at IKEA. This is precisely the idea, I have been using IKEA furniture for more than 20 years and I cannot think of one single stick of furniture that I had to throw away because it failed. I actually resurrected a Poang chair that had broken using a piece of metal and a few screws. Lasted several more years, then was gifted during a move.

    • @superleggenda
      @superleggenda Год назад

      @@anastasia10017 couldn’t have found better words myself! Architects tend to keep projected costs lower to avoid scaring customers away. Customers, on the other hand, sometimes get carried away. Both definitely happened in this case. The glaziers were in today to install a 20 foot long glass (made of 7 pieces of safety glass) parapet in the home office, and a 10 feet square RGB backlit glass wall for one of the (two) bathrooms. Unfortunately I did not get permission from the crew to film them while working, but I have a lot of videos and photos in between phases. I am seriously considering posting the stuff somewhere, maybe I need a media consultant…

  • @alinagavrilov
    @alinagavrilov Год назад +83

    Good for them!! they’re inspiring and giving design ideas. Everyone knows you don’t have to go through the show room and you can skip whatever it is you’re not interested in, it’s up to you, we all know where the exit is!

    • @gremlinfifty2308
      @gremlinfifty2308 Год назад +4

      hehehhe got me at the exit part

    • @juliastockhausen7173
      @juliastockhausen7173 Год назад +3

      Ok that's good to know. I wasn't as it's you could exit once you started.

    • @avagrego3195
      @avagrego3195 Год назад +1

      I find getting out difficult so I don't go there.

    • @thornyback
      @thornyback Год назад +1

      THERE IS AN EXIT?!?

    • @toonman361
      @toonman361 Год назад +1

      Apparently not everyone.

  • @denizdenakaplan3481
    @denizdenakaplan3481 Год назад +41

    Points in this video apply only to who I call IKEA 'noobs'. Once you figure out the shortcuts, exits and all entry points of your local store, you can hack your trip and quickly grab what you need and get out. For example, I always enter from the As-Is section, which is that circular/second hand bit this video showed, so I can check if I can find a cheaper and second hand alternative for what I need. Then, I go directly to the shelf where my product is, which I have already checked on the website before going to the store. Yes, you can see the location of an item on the website. If you are still entering from the main entrance, following the arrows, doing the entire maze, then the marketplace, that's a noob move 😉

    • @eisenklad
      @eisenklad Год назад +4

      same people who take 1-2hr in a supermarket when their grocery list should be done in 20 minutes max.

    • @krispaton8670
      @krispaton8670 Год назад +1

      Yes this exactly. That’s my Ikea experience.

    • @OCEAN_OF_FOXES
      @OCEAN_OF_FOXES Год назад

      My hacking ended up having 3x longer trip because I got lost multiple times 🤣 I had to go back and forth because I was looking for one piece in the expo.

    • @juliaclaire42
      @juliaclaire42 Год назад +3

      Last time I got a bed with mattress, it took me ten minutes in the store. Cart, boxes, app check-out. It took me another ten minutes to get everything delivered.

    • @SN-sz7kw
      @SN-sz7kw Год назад +4

      But being a noob is sometimes the whole point of going. 😊

  • @vladimirdelima2519
    @vladimirdelima2519 Год назад +17

    It's interesting how I would apreciate the effort and money investing on research to come with such strategical decisions from IKEA.
    I also apreciate the great analysis YOU did.
    So instead of feeling myself manipulated, I thank YOU and IKEA! great job both of you!

  • @lol007
    @lol007 Год назад +16

    I always think about what I "want" or "need" in the apartment. Search for it online with a setting showing only what is available in your favorite store. You won't be surprised by any promotion in-store as you already saw it online and you know exactly the items you are looking for, so no browsing around. You can now skip whole sections of the showroom or even go straight to the ground floor and skip the showrooms all together.
    Choose "the cheapest" but still visually acceptable ones for you in each category as well as actually "pleasant" ones.
    Wait a week, look through them over, and delete most of the "wants" saving only the ones which touched my heart. Go through "needs" reassess them and delete some.
    Wait another week, look through everything calculate the total, compare it to my budget and eliminate from that, the way it sits right with my emotions. (usually, a balance between "the cheapest" and "pleasant" in "need" category and 1 item from the "want" category, because IKEA always finds a way).
    I also do grocery shopping there to please the craving for ikea food which stays with you for a few days after visiting IKEA.

  • @Ragd0ll1337
    @Ragd0ll1337 Год назад +2

    I go to IKEA to annoy my family with puns using the product names. That, sir, is priceless.

  • @viviwilhelmsson307
    @viviwilhelmsson307 Год назад +5

    Loved to watch this! As a Swedish person I've had this experience all through my life and find it so nice. If we didn't had anything to do, we young kids went to Ikea. :) Lovely family of yours and thank you for great work!

  • @glockingnormies
    @glockingnormies Год назад +6

    I am a huge fan of IKEA regardless of their tactics. Their design, innovation, accessibility and utility just makes them the perfect option for furniture when you're not looking to spend an arm and a leg to outfit your living space. The idea of building your own furniture gives you a sense of connection and achievement to the things you've built and it even allows you to come up with creative solutions by mixing and matching things for yourself.

  • @mshmslv
    @mshmslv Год назад +3

    I love going to Ikea:) haven't yet bought anything that I'm not using except for maybe a cutting board (too narrow) which now serves as a cheese board for parties. I'm also proud to say, that I've both the same table 6 (!!!!!) times, when I lived in different cities, in the USA and Australia. I've given away lots of Ikea items when I moved, and received many for free. There's a sense of comfort in being able to get the same dining table no matter where I live. Sadly it is now discontinued, but knowing that I have bought two. My favorite RUclipsr who works in leather craft has the same table. It melts my heart :) even though we are on different continents and likely will never meet in person.
    I like browsing the "as is" section - both of my sofas were ex-display items and I just got new machine-washable covers. I just bought a new cover for one of them for $28 instead of $180 a few weeks ago, in the same store, 3+ years later. What other store can offer this kind of joy?
    On multiple occasions I've come after a long day at work just to relax, with no intention to buy, simply to browse and look for new ideas on how I can reuse my current items at home or perhaps rearrange my room. On days like this I typically set a budget of $20 on whatever pleases my heart.
    We also have a group chat with the closest friends and when someone is going to IKEA, we coordinate on various daily necessities like napkins, plastic bags, candles, meatballs haha.

  • @TheGUNdalf
    @TheGUNdalf Год назад +9

    That is all true and it may even be dark and cruel but the fact for me is, how amazingly perfect everything is and the furniture always does the job and most items can even simply be upgraded and made sturdier with a little diy effort

  • @portfolioFS
    @portfolioFS Год назад +4

    Your insights are so interesting! It's now clear that upon arrival Ikea is a wholesaler providing the customer with a retail experience, while the average retail furniture show room treats the customer to a wholesale experience.

  • @tarajoyce3598
    @tarajoyce3598 Год назад +6

    That explains why I love going to Ikea stores. Take me away and let me wander in different environments. It's like having multiple interior designers already paid. 😂

  • @berlinorama
    @berlinorama Год назад +23

    This is why the last time I went there (it is only 10 minutes by foot and bus from my house) I ordered the items online and only picked the stuff up, avoiding at least some of the psychological manipulation;-))

  • @jimmyzhao2673
    @jimmyzhao2673 Год назад +2

    0:42 That IKEA looks like the one in Coquitlam, Canada.

  • @batsteve1942
    @batsteve1942 Год назад +3

    Another consideration for me personally is that the IKEA showroom isn’t just a shop you stroll by and decide to pop in and have a look. For most people they will have travelled there with the intention to buy, so you’re already in the mindset of “I’m buying something today”. Add that to everything mentioned in this video and I’d be amazed if anybody has been to an IKEA and not bought something!

  • @danatmatchvox
    @danatmatchvox Год назад +11

    Daniel...when we had nothing in North America, IKEA in Canada became a beacon of better design and gosh golly fun to explore. The novelty has worn off and the options are now manifold but the Hot Dogs and ginger cookies will forever rule...long live IKEA

  • @anaalves3658
    @anaalves3658 Год назад +11

    I LOVE IKEA!!!!! ❤️❤️❤️❤️ From the free coffee to the frozen Swedish meatballs that are always in my freezer 😁. Excellent video 👏👏👏, so clever of them that I am not even upset by being manipulated by their strategies to get me to buy more stuff 🤣. Our store does have short cuts in it and we also have the option to enter straight into the ground floor area, I do use the short cuts if I don't have the time, but I like having a look at the displays so I usually walk the whole store. We also have the option to just go to the restaurant section as our IKEA is attached to a large shopping mall. So not like the description in the video.

  • @lisahines532
    @lisahines532 Год назад +2

    I think I IKEA is also brilliant in making scarcity of stores. I found that when I lived far from an IKEA, I was far more likely to get sucked into buying things I didn't need because I couldn't come back easily. When I moved close to an IKEA, it was so much easier to go home and consider if I really needed those items.

  • @pholliez
    @pholliez Год назад +2

    I live 8 minutes from an Ikea. I love it and it’s kept me from doing huge shops a few times a year as I can easily pop in.

  • @dr.stacey7283
    @dr.stacey7283 Год назад +2

    I knowingly fall for it; hook, line and Swedish meatball 😂
    My trick is to go through the market place with two carts. We happily put everything we think we want in as we’re shopping. When we get to the end that’s when we decide to buy or not. I feel guilty leaving a cart full of stuff from all over the store, but I do try and put most stuff back.
    Also looking online beforehand helps.

  • @jwrightgardening
    @jwrightgardening Год назад +2

    I enjoy visiting Ikea, especially walking through the showrooms. I like designing small spaces for fun and I like getting ideas from the pretend rooms and apartments.
    I also take a lot of pictures of things that I like for inspiration or to think over, if I can build it myself for cheaper, for example. I probably have gone to IKEA just to walk around more times than I have gone to actually buy something. Part of that might be because it's 1 hour from my house and a halfway point to another city I travel to often. So it's a nice place to stop and take a break if traffic is bad.
    Once I've decided on buying something, I'll look it up online at home then go in through the exit doors straight to where it's at and pick it up.
    I sometimes make a detour over to the as-is/clearance section that is right by the checkout. I filled my car with a bunch of material for building my own stuff, like 3/4" laminated mdf for $1. I'm making some computer desks for my kids with it and my dad used some to make a pullout shelf in his cupboard. Way cheaper than what it would have cost to get the same material at Home Depot.

  • @michaelcristofano5863
    @michaelcristofano5863 Год назад +6

    Great job! While I always new there was "the Ikea affect" It was very informative to hear it broke down and explained. I usually go to Ikea with something in mind so in an effort to find the product I tend to get lost and frustrated. On my next visit I will go with the flow you described and look at it like an amusement park.

  • @Tobi-ci3ns
    @Tobi-ci3ns Год назад +2

    Multinationals like IKEA win every time in Australia as our boomer-owned local retailers steadfastly refuse to adapt with the times and offer good ways to browse or shop online.

  • @Lily_The_Pink972
    @Lily_The_Pink972 Год назад +3

    A trip to IKEA is the only way I get a good walk! I tried a shortcut once and ended up walking against the flow and feeling like I'd crossed the space/time continuum!

  • @esthereley6808
    @esthereley6808 Год назад +3

    The downside to this IKEA strategy is it’s been years since I’ve been able to face going there. The parking situation is competitive, it takes more of your weekend than you’d like it to, and when there’s something I want to buy, I like to get it and go, otherwise I’ll lose interest.

  • @MacAdvisor
    @MacAdvisor Год назад +1

    I found this very interesting because I almost never go through IKEA following their planned route. I haven't been in some time because my great shopping buddy, Joyce Abel, passed away about two years ago, and going without her doesn't seem as fun. We would arrive at IKEA and park very near the exit, enter through the exit, go past the checkout stands, and visit the second chance merchandise first. Then we'd take the elevator up, not the escalator, to the restaurant and review what we wanted to visit while we ate. Using the map, we'd use the wormholes -- the doors that go from one section to another skipping the walking route -- directly to the section we wanted, then use them again to immediately go down to the lower section. The lower section has them, too, and out we'd go to get our item. This just seemed the most efficient way to buy from IKEA.

  • @MrSullismom
    @MrSullismom Год назад +2

    Thank you Daniel. It is good for people to know how they are being manipulated whether the reason is benign or sinister.

  • @d.l.c7456
    @d.l.c7456 Год назад +1

    Those discounted items from As Is /Circular Hub were products once used for display; Home areas, Shop Windows, Walls & Shelves.

  • @silvertbird1
    @silvertbird1 Год назад +1

    This was interesting, and the video has such high quality production. Yes, we're manipulated everywhere we go, but knowing that fact allows one to make informed purchasing decisions. I'm near Dallas but have never been to the IKEA as it's still quite distant, and I have watched a documentary about some of their questionable materials procurement. I prefer antique furniture but hilariously do have an IKEA table and chairs that was given to me by a friend. If the woman and little girl are your wife and child, you are truly a beautiful family.

  • @katherineschexneider585
    @katherineschexneider585 Год назад +2

    I love IKEA. All the things you described in your video are, as you said, marketing tactics. But that's IKEA's job: to market their products as effectively as possible. I disagree that IKEA tricks us into buying things. It presents items in an enticing way, but again, that's marketing, and if we don't want to buy something, we don't have to.

  • @desigirl8785
    @desigirl8785 Год назад +3

    I ❤ IKEA as a brand, as a leader in its field! I think it's super genius (like you said in your video), I as a customer don't fall for their tricks, I think it is a fantastic worldwide brand!
    I also love your videos but just wanted to share my thoughts with you! X

  • @kossttamojaan
    @kossttamojaan Год назад +1

    I've been to ikea three times. each time I was influenced to buy a jar of strawberry jam.

  • @ClarkBK67
    @ClarkBK67 Год назад +1

    I admit to being persuaded by the IKEA vision of a clean, orderly world and a meatball lunch. But I would argue every purchase I have made was based on utility and value. They provide inexpensive pieces that are useful. And they’re cheap enough I don’t really care if they wear out.

  • @AndresOssa
    @AndresOssa Год назад +2

    The Market Hall makes me feel like a kid in a candy shop.

  • @V1N_574
    @V1N_574 Год назад +16

    IKEA tried to trick me but it failed due to the anxiety they induce me by not letting me see the exit and creating a maze inside the store. Almost died, 100%

    • @karenholmes6565
      @karenholmes6565 Год назад +3

      Yes, I have an anxiety disorder and I find being inside an IKEA to be a nightmare.

  • @chiareta
    @chiareta Год назад +1

    I’ve recently learned that in order to pick up a cabinet from the warehouse I don’t have to go through the entire circus!! There is one gate to go in right next to the cashiers. If you looked up the location of your piece online, it is in-and-out experience like you’d never believe. (Well at least in Amsterdam.)

  • @sarasoueidan
    @sarasoueidan Год назад +3

    This is brilliant. Just watching this made me want to go buy some IKEA products. 😂 Good on them being so good at what they do (despite the fact that this isn't good for me as a customer). As a minimalist, this makes me dread wanting to go into one of their stores. 😅 Lots of willpower needed to make it through this all.

  • @moraesJuli
    @moraesJuli Год назад +3

    when I moved to Europe I first heard about Ikea and I love it ! But, I see a lot of Europeans that don't like or if you say this furniture is Ikea it is perceived as "bad". I would say Ikea need to solve this on their business model :) hheheh

  • @sumeetlamba4603
    @sumeetlamba4603 Год назад +2

    Not to forget the many designers and architects who (rightfully) endorse/push their products 😅

  • @favouritemoon4133
    @favouritemoon4133 Год назад +1

    It's probably 15 years since I last went to an IKEA, but this video did a great job of making me really REALLY want to go to one soon!

  • @avocado3748
    @avocado3748 Год назад

    What a brilliant break down. I would go to IKEA to get design ideas and get a sense of what you can pack in and not feel cluttered. The only thing I don’t like is how angular everything is but I can’t complain about the price. So glad there are creative people who dress up Ikea furniture to where you don’t recognize it

  • @andrewmorgan81
    @andrewmorgan81 Год назад +4

    Great video thanks. I might be Ikea’s worst customer as I only go when I need something specific - replacing the wine glasses my friends broke at my last party - and never at a weekend. Trick can opener - no thanks I’ve got one; handy pack of tea towels - no thanks I’ve got a set I can wash. Free parking - ok thanks!

  • @sharmisthatralalala
    @sharmisthatralalala Год назад +1

    Loved this. I didn't even skip a bit. So yeah indeed some genius editing you did there!

  • @SoulDragonit
    @SoulDragonit Год назад +1

    You should come to IKEA Groningen, we have a slight different layout! The markethall is here after the appropriate showroom. Only big packages like furniture is still at the end. :)

  • @markwagner4909
    @markwagner4909 Год назад +1

    I’ve been in two ikea one in Australia and one in Columbus Ohio
    I’ve never bought anything from them
    The one time I wanted to, the piece was out of stock.
    And Daniel is the cutest

  • @zoelee8471
    @zoelee8471 Год назад +4

    Thank you for the upload, Daniel! Enjoyed the video very much. Looking forward to my next visit to IKEA hahaha 😂

  • @Maiju86
    @Maiju86 Год назад +2

    I love Ikea and don't care if they are manipulating me! 😁😅 For me going there is like going home... All those swedish things warm my expat heart. 🥰

  • @fabiyeah
    @fabiyeah Год назад +10

    The Ikea shop is a mixed love-hate experience to me, i enjoy the different spaces decorated as a real home but i can't stand the fact that i'm forced to walk the whole store even if i just want to grab a couple specific items

    • @MrGoalie2012
      @MrGoalie2012 Год назад +7

      you can bypass the showroom in most scenarios and go straight to the warehouse

    • @lindagear9014
      @lindagear9014 Год назад +2

      Look for the shortcuts, they are there, and if you can't find them the staff are usually more than happy to show you. Good luck

  • @luluandmeow
    @luluandmeow Год назад

    Hey, that's my sofa, my chair, my storage containers and my spotlights in your video! My big local IKEA in North East London has closed and I really miss it although I'm probably saving money by not "popping in" to look around. I don't like most of IKEA's stuff but there's always something to my taste as their products are so varied. Most of my furniture, etc. is from IKEA as their prices are reasonable. I have in the past overspent on trinkets like their poor quality picture frames, but when you're on a budget you simply can't afford the better made ones. IKEA remains a good day out, it's quite exciting to go there. They're opening a store in central London in the autumn, in Oxford Street, and frankly I can't wait to go there even though I don't need anything. Great video and lovely family btw.

  • @senses70
    @senses70 Год назад +5

    Another excellent video! I love your forensic analysis of the IKEA stores and of course all other videos as a talented architect with ideas that won’t explode your budget! Beautifully edited, inspirational and relaxing videos that I’ve been binge watching since I’ve discovered your channel. Thank you for sharing your talents and knowledge!

  • @brontec9769
    @brontec9769 Год назад +1

    Haha that's why I always look online first, make a list of all the items I want or need and follow that list! AND I always add all item prices to my calculator before they go into my shopping trolley, so I know I'm not over budget by the time I get to the exit :)

  • @kawangkwok5262
    @kawangkwok5262 Год назад +4

    I studied MBA and can see some of these tricks set up by IKEA. Sometimes customers would easily fell in their trap and bought some wrong products. So, 1st should really know what kind of furniture really need; 2nd should subscribe, watch more Daniel Tichener's video for sensible ideas, to plan and learn what to buy, then not necessary to buy from IKEA.

  • @olgagarcia7409
    @olgagarcia7409 Год назад +1

    You, Daniel, are absolutely genius! I’ve been laughting and saying WHAT!! all the time. Such a clever essay 👏🏻👏🏻 Thanks!

  • @justinirons4831
    @justinirons4831 Год назад +1

    The IKEA that Daniel went to has the same exact layout with the one we have here in the Philippines, which they dub as the cheapest IKEA in the world. LOL

  • @bekahmarie489
    @bekahmarie489 Год назад +1

    The funny bit is how often I see IKEA products in computer room set ups like the countertops for the desktops on top of IKEA Alex units and I'm like "You have it spaced so far apart and then you complain about it sagging! It's made of cardboard essentially!" T^T Beyond that though, I love their customer service.

  • @LGrian
    @LGrian Год назад +3

    Yes their branding is great but ultimately it’s the combination of value, function, reasonable quality, and mid to good aesthetics that continues to get me

  • @Izzyic7505
    @Izzyic7505 Год назад +1

    I love your videos but I really think you’ve over thunk this one 🤣. I’ve yet to go browsing in ikea, I always go in with a planned purchase in mind. I’ve also yet to have a good experience in their dining room 🤷‍♀️. I’m disabled so have sussed out all the shortcuts and can be in and out in very quick time. It’s all perspective. Good job though and your wife and daughter are beautiful.

  • @inakillstormbreaker3920
    @inakillstormbreaker3920 Год назад +2

    So you are telling me in Canada Ikea serves meatballs with poutine? Absolute genious!

  • @majesticblue92
    @majesticblue92 Год назад +1

    Its interesting that you were able to describe the exact layout & experience of IKEA Kuwait. From start to finish.

  • @rayden54
    @rayden54 Год назад +1

    This is not what I thought this video would be about, but it's interesting. I've never been to an Ikea. The nearest one's about 300 miles away. Parts of it look like Bed, Bath and Beyond, but the furniture part at the start looks like nothing I've ever seen in a store before. Though oddly, it looks exactly like the pictures in their catalog.
    What I thought this video was gonna be about is why people recommend Ikea furniture over similar things from other brands (like the Walmart Mainstays brand). You can find all sorts of people doing Ikea designs, but none of the others really. Even if I find something I like, it's simply not worthwhile to have them ship it to me or to drive that far (last time I checked I think they wanted $300 to ship me a $100 dresser).

  • @knockshinnoch1950
    @knockshinnoch1950 Год назад

    An excellent presentation- no hyped OTT cheesy presenter but a no nonsense professional insightful clear straightforward informative piece- substance with some style!

  • @TraceB
    @TraceB Год назад +3

    I wouldn’t say that I have an emotional attachment to IKEA or to my items from there, but I would pick them over my family 😬 I love my store because it’s one level. They can manipulate me & take my money better than any of my ex bfs!

  • @ShaliPishi
    @ShaliPishi Год назад +1

    Ikea is smart Undoubtedly, but I'm so satisfied from their products and using them for years (means more than 10) and which company furniture you know buy back theirs products after years!? Ikea does. Genius people who knows customers and their wills are working there and this is result every household has at least one Ikea product. Viva Ikea

  • @don1designceo
    @don1designceo Год назад +2

    this video is DOPE
    Full of great knowledge
    can you do the same style with another company that uses those kind of strategy?

  • @DerpEye
    @DerpEye Год назад

    I've just furnished my new apartment almost entirely from ikea. Having an infinite choice of products, makes it very easy to furnish a room in a certain style/colour.

  • @miriamkaulbarsch
    @miriamkaulbarsch Год назад +1

    And where McDonalds is not a fast food chain but a real estate giant, IKEA does make more profit from their restaurants than their actual products which makes it one of the largest fast food chains worldwide!

  • @blubbblubb6239
    @blubbblubb6239 Год назад +5

    Really nice vid! Would love to see that about other brands as well! 🙂
    Long ago I once really liked the IKEA Design and also fell for all the little items like candles etc.. But I am frustrated about the low quality of many things meanwhile and became minimalist and a quite intentional consumer overall. However, I really like their show rooms as a nice inspiration to see, test, feel in real life rather than online. Taking the ideas you maybe got by looking at their stuff, you can than sit down and plan your actual shopping list to order online.

  • @Megaloid
    @Megaloid Год назад

    It's a destination, where you know you can get a little of everything. And so many other people shop there, that you're bound to have been recommended products from your friends or family. In the U.S., other retailers like Costco, Wal-Mart, or Target are very similar.

  • @randomdigress
    @randomdigress Год назад

    Basically, Ikea is like that overachieving classmate submitting beautiful pieces of art for their thesis

  • @TopFlightFamily
    @TopFlightFamily Год назад +1

    Wow this is SUCH a well done video. I’ve been bingeing your channel for the last month and always enjoy how well produced, aesthetically pleasing and informative your vids are, but this one is next level. Amazing job! I learned so much!

  • @KoffiBean_
    @KoffiBean_ Год назад +10

    I've already sold my soul to Ikea. Their delicious meatballs won me over

  • @ardaschandrakaur
    @ardaschandrakaur Год назад +1

    Such a great analysis on persuasive design!

  • @annakarienina1
    @annakarienina1 Год назад

    Thanks for the video. I personally find the entire process very time consuming and for many years now when I need something at Ikea I enter from the exit, often possibile, I have already a list of items I will pick up and go back to pay. In this way I save time and exit less stressed.

  • @Spriggana
    @Spriggana Год назад

    In Poland (and probably some other countries) IKEA’s staged rooms are based on actual flats in recent developments, so you see a living room with open kitchen and a plaque with a complete floor plan saying „a 54m² flat, street X”. It shows that the furniture really firs your space.

  • @jimmyzhao2673
    @jimmyzhao2673 Год назад +1

    There was an IKEA store in Richmond Canada that was too small, so rather than expand it, they tore the whole thing down and built a new one from scratch. It is *still* too small, so they are expanding the new store even further.

  • @wohfab
    @wohfab Год назад +1

    If you haven't had a hotdog, you haven't been to IKEA!

  • @uycuongnguyen1883
    @uycuongnguyen1883 Год назад +1

    Your Ikea store looks freakishly the same as our Ikea store over here

  • @florin-titusniculescu5871
    @florin-titusniculescu5871 Год назад +1

    " every single square inch " while showing a very decimal/metric ruler

  • @dedhampster4730
    @dedhampster4730 Год назад +1

    I don't think it is a "trick". I think it is a wonderful customer centric way to go about the need for furniture. I am usually anti-corporations, but Ikea knows what they are doing. Wal-Mart has a lot of the same flat pack funiture in their Mainstays brand and in the Better Homes and Garden brand for the same price point as Ikea. But Wal-Mart does not display their furniture, they do not provide accurate measurements, they have zero customer service if there is hardware missing from the box or the item is damaged and they absolutely do not make the shopping experience a joy in any way. At least Target usually has a Starbucks and keep their stores cleaner in general, but again no displays. My favorite part of Ikea is the modular office furniture and storage shelves and units. We were able to build our work-from-home space completely using their online catalogue and then go to the store and pick it up and have a nice lunch at the same time. It takes a lot of the stress out of the shopping process.

  • @annelailakvitvang-cz4yw
    @annelailakvitvang-cz4yw Год назад +1

    Use the shortcuts! Don't follow the maze. And escalator procession; nah did not have those in IKEA in the 1990's in Scandinavia; but still loved going there and buying there products. Warehouse shop, yes but isn't that an American construct they have adopted. As you say their retail tacticts is not there, but part of our consumerism, they are just clever at using it! And come to think of it; I actually go there for the design of their products!

  • @user-pl3lo8cc8y
    @user-pl3lo8cc8y Год назад

    As an IKEA nerd.. I usually go through the store backwards- I enter through the cash registers and shop in the marketplace area.. unless I’m looking for a specific large piece of furniture (then the showroom is better).

  • @carolhathaway5168
    @carolhathaway5168 Год назад +1

    This was fascinating! I have to say that I'm not a fan of the store, but I love online shopping.

  • @avagrego3195
    @avagrego3195 Год назад

    Ikea is like an Alfred Hitchock or Twilight Zone horror episode. There have been a few times I was almost hysterical feeling trapped. I ONLY go to their 1st floor food court a couple of times a yr to stock up on some of their foods because once you get into the store you can't get out all the while being bombarded with cornicopia of stuff. I love the container store because everything is well organized and well lit, I spend my money here.

  • @ytmvbergieb
    @ytmvbergieb Год назад

    I'll totally give it to you for a thorough and interesting analysis. Thank you!!!

  • @kwong6884
    @kwong6884 Год назад +1

    Funnily enough most of my IKEA stuff is the Tupperware cos they’re really good 😂😂

  • @MauroMavro
    @MauroMavro Год назад

    Great mini-class! Thank you

  • @xinrew
    @xinrew Год назад +4

    Love this sit down documentary video! its a very welcome change for the channel.