Inside NERC: How Neuroeconomic Training Can Boost Marketing Performance
7 May 2026
In business, change happens every day. Prices rise and drop, competitors emerge from thin air, and entire market dynamics can shift overnight. In such an unpredictable environment, marketing professionals should remain focused on the single variable that is present at all times: the consumer and their mind. How they think, what they feel, and what ultimately drives them to choose one brand over another. That constant is where the real competitive edge lives.
Edgars Vasiljevs, student researcher at Plekhanov University in Dubai's Neuroeconomics Research Center (NERC), investigates the effectiveness of this approach in his study, “The Impact of Neuroeconomic Training and Development on Marketing Performance: A Study of Enterprises in the United Arab Emirates.” Drawing on survey data from 250 marketing professionals across UAE enterprises, the research examines whether training rooted in neuroeconomics meaningfully improves how marketing teams perform.
The Average Marketing Approach
Most organizations train their marketing teams on the typical mechanics: SEO optimization, paid media strategy, A/B testing, competitor benchmarking. The focus is on outsmarting the competition through market data and tools. While these are necessary competencies, the question remains: where does the customer fit in all of this? If they are perceived as statistics, in a world where people make purchasing decisions based on instinct or emotional state, is a statistics-first approach truly the best? The average approach addresses what marketers should do, not how they should think.
The Neuroeconomics-Backed Marketing Approach
Neuroeconomics introduces a psychology- and cognitive science-rich layer to marketing decision-making. Rather than working from the outside in using data-based tactics, it starts from the inside out: understanding the consumer's decision-making process, their automatic and deliberate thought patterns, and the deep-rooted associations that build trust, desire, and loyalty. When marketing strategies are shaped around how the consumer's mind actually works, campaigns move from persuasion attempts to genuine connection.
Does this mean a data-backed approach is wrong? Not at all. Market data and analytical tools remain essential, as they tell you who your audience is and where to find them. But data describes behavior; it doesn't explain it. The missing layer is understanding why consumers behave the way they do. The most effective marketing teams don't choose between data and psychology — they utilize a blend that draws out the best of both approaches.
One point to take away from this article: According to Vasiljevs’ study, organizations with fewer established resources saw even greater relative benefits — this means that neuroeconomic training doesn't just reward well-resourced teams; it levels the playing field. If you’re reading this as an owner of a small enterprise, it is especially beneficial for your team to undertake neuroeconomic training. Rather than using the same approach competitors use and hoping your product will outperform, do what others aren’t and dominate an untapped niche.
Edgars Vasiljevs, student researcher at Plekhanov University in Dubai's Neuroeconomics Research Center (NERC), investigates the effectiveness of this approach in his study, “The Impact of Neuroeconomic Training and Development on Marketing Performance: A Study of Enterprises in the United Arab Emirates.” Drawing on survey data from 250 marketing professionals across UAE enterprises, the research examines whether training rooted in neuroeconomics meaningfully improves how marketing teams perform.
The Average Marketing Approach
Most organizations train their marketing teams on the typical mechanics: SEO optimization, paid media strategy, A/B testing, competitor benchmarking. The focus is on outsmarting the competition through market data and tools. While these are necessary competencies, the question remains: where does the customer fit in all of this? If they are perceived as statistics, in a world where people make purchasing decisions based on instinct or emotional state, is a statistics-first approach truly the best? The average approach addresses what marketers should do, not how they should think.
The Neuroeconomics-Backed Marketing Approach
Neuroeconomics introduces a psychology- and cognitive science-rich layer to marketing decision-making. Rather than working from the outside in using data-based tactics, it starts from the inside out: understanding the consumer's decision-making process, their automatic and deliberate thought patterns, and the deep-rooted associations that build trust, desire, and loyalty. When marketing strategies are shaped around how the consumer's mind actually works, campaigns move from persuasion attempts to genuine connection.
Does this mean a data-backed approach is wrong? Not at all. Market data and analytical tools remain essential, as they tell you who your audience is and where to find them. But data describes behavior; it doesn't explain it. The missing layer is understanding why consumers behave the way they do. The most effective marketing teams don't choose between data and psychology — they utilize a blend that draws out the best of both approaches.
One point to take away from this article: According to Vasiljevs’ study, organizations with fewer established resources saw even greater relative benefits — this means that neuroeconomic training doesn't just reward well-resourced teams; it levels the playing field. If you’re reading this as an owner of a small enterprise, it is especially beneficial for your team to undertake neuroeconomic training. Rather than using the same approach competitors use and hoping your product will outperform, do what others aren’t and dominate an untapped niche.