The dubious statistics and where they come from
The "93% of purchase decisions are based on visual appearance" claim comes from a 1994 Pantone-commissioned study that had significant methodological problems, and even that study's figures are frequently misquoted. The "80% brand recognition" figure appears to trace back to a University of Loyola marketing study that has never been independently replicated and whose methodology has not been published. These statistics get reproduced in marketing decks because they are useful, not because they are reliable. The actual research literature on color and marketing is more modest: color influences perception under controlled conditions, the effects are meaningful but rarely the primary purchase driver, and the direction of effect depends heavily on context, category, and consumer.
