Wednesday, September 26, 2012

Putting B__S__ into business: My new webinars


I'm pleased to announce my two new webinars on the use of B__S__ (Behavioural Science) in business.  Join me from from the comfort of your office whilst chewing on a sandwich to learn about what influences buyer behaviour.  I guarantee you will learn things you will use for the rest of your life.

Getting Your Buyers to Buy 
How Behavioural Science can get customers to take action
Thursday 11 October 12.30 - 1.30pm

Designed for small business owners and managers, you'll learn

  • The three behavioural reasons people don't take action
  • Common mistakes businesses are making
  • Behavioural techniques to influence action
  • How businesses are applying these techniques to gain advantage




Take Marketing ROI to the Next Level
How Behavioural Science can improve marketing conversion
Friday 19 October 11.30 - 12.30pm

Designed for marketing managers, you'll learn
  • What behavioural economics is 
  • The four layers of buyer behaviour
  • Common mistakes marketers are making
  • Behavioural techniques to influence action
  • How businesses are applying these techniques to gain advantage

Recordings of both webinars are also available to purchase.


If you want to hear about my future seminars, webinars and other adventures, why not join the People Patterns mailing list?  Every month you'll receive a short wrap-up of top news from the behavioural sciences and other nuggets of goodness from me. Click here to sign-up.



Monday, September 24, 2012

A beer lesson in "Consumption design" for behavioural influence

Some great examples have popped up recently of how the behaviour of buyers can be influenced by the physical experience that goes with consumption -  let's call it 'consumption design'. 

Too speedy on the beer-y? It might be the glass
Hey, there's an excuse for guzzling that beer...the glass is curved!  Researchers at the University of Bristol (and by the way, kudos for pitching that to the research board!) found that people tend to drink more quickly out of curved glasses because it is harder to gauge how much has been consumed.

No Big Gulp for the Big Apple 
In a controversial move, New York city's Board of Health has banned super-sized (16oz/470ml) soft-drink containers. Detractors see it as an encroaching on personal liberty (and stifling vendors) whereas advocates claim it will help fight obesity.  The behavioural science clearly demonstrates that when provided a larger serving, we consume more so the decision is grounded in fact; it's the matter of whether government should have the right to determine the size of the serve that remains contentious. 

Stop getting chip-faced
I've mentioned this one before, but ever found yourself chomping through more chips than you intended?  Researchers looking into self-control dyed chips red before inserting them at set intervals in the Pringles-like tubular packet.  Without impacting the taste of the chip they found that when people were cued by a visual 'stop' signal, they ate less.  Maybe we need every third Tim Tam to be red?

The lesson from these examples?  "Consumption design" is a reminder that every element of your product experience will impact consumption.  It takes things a bit further than product design and means that your role doesn't end at the production line - think about how and where your product will be experienced and design according to the behaviour you want to facilitate.  

PS Why not join the People Patterns mailing list?  Every month you'll receive a short wrap-up of top news from the behavioural sciences and other nuggets of goodness from me. Click here to sign-up.

Image: http://www.rgbstock.com/photo/mgysJNS

Monday, September 17, 2012

Assimilate or disintegrate: How your buyers respond to new information

Last week the Federal Minister for Health Tanya Plibersek condemned Imperial Tobacco's move to introduce a form of stylised plain packaging ahead of the mandatory and uniform olive green, unbranded version.  It is no surprise that the tobacco companies are trying everything to secure their product in market, and so putting the ethics of tobacco products to one side, let's consider a key behavioural lesson from this industry as it reacts to change. 

Assimilate or disintegrate
When faced with new information, we seek to assimilate it with our existing view of the world, much like fitting a piece of a jigsaw puzzle.   We are motivated to maintain our internal narrative - how we explain the world to ourselves - and will actively seek to resolve what is known as cognitive dissonance; the unpleasant sense that something just doesn't fit right.  What do we do to alleviate this feeling? Distort, refute or ignore the new information.  Anyone who has been in a meeting when a stakeholder has flat out rejected new facts/research will know what dissonance looks like..it's officially known as "Information Avoidance".  In fact, just follow how the political parties respond to the release of studies to see reactions to dissonance writ large.

In adjusting its packaging ahead of the government changes, Imperial Tobacco were seeking to bridge the old and new worlds for its consumers with the hope of softening the reaction.  They were assimilating the changes - on their terms - so that their consumers would be less likely to reject the new information.

For your business, consider how any new information - new product or service, pricing, conditions -  will likely be received by your market.  How are you helping to bridge the gap between old and new so that the change will be assimilated rather than disintegrated?


PS Why not join the People Patterns mailing list?  Every month you'll receive a short wrap-up of top news from the behavioural sciences and other nuggets of goodness from me. Click here to sign-up.

Monday, September 10, 2012

Behavioural lessons from one of the best websites

My heart began to race.  It was the last one and I knew there were four other interested buyers.  No time to muck around, I better go in for the kill. Where's my credit card?

Welcome friends to the world of booking accommodation online, a goldmine of examples of behavioural economics applied to the customer experience.

Let's look at just three of the techniques used by one of the best exponents, Booking.com.


Sample listing from Booking.com

Create a sense of urgency
No surprise, but part of getting customer commitment is a sense of urgency.  Urgency comes from our fear of missing out, so this is how Booking.com use it;  

  • Notice that the number of rooms left is displayed next to the City View room deal. Trust me, when it gets down to 1 you jump pretty quickly.  Chances are you will even stop looking for reviews in your rush to secure the room - the overall rating will do.

Create a sense of normalcy
As much as we deny we are persuaded by what others do, we are.  Being a normal part of the 'herd' is core to our functioning, so here's how Booking.com use it;

  • There are 6 other people looking at this hotel - good, because it means I have great taste. But worrying that there are six people looking and only three of the city rooms available!  Urgency strikes again.
  • Last booking - others have trusted this hotel enough to book
  • Guest reviews - whilst the impartiality of reviews may be questioned, they do carry psychological weight because they are ostensibly written by people like us

Create a sense of value
We need to make estimations of value whenever we are looking to buy.  If the business doesn't control how its price is contextualised we will rely on whatever's in our head - dangerous for any business.  You must therefore anchor the prices relative to others. For example, carry more expensive options to encourage sale of the cheaper option, and always list your original price along with its marked down amount.  Booking.com;

  • Notes that the price for the City View room has been marked down, and obviously so.  No good just showing your 'sale price' if you don't also show the original because your customer may not understand how great a deal this is.
I've booked a lot of accommodation over the years and whilst there are many sites - Lastminute.com.au, Expedia.com, Wotif.com amongst them, I keep being drawn back to Booking.com for its interface and communication of information.  Let me know if you agree that it is one of the best, and whether you have used similar behavioural techniques in your business.

PS Why not join the People Patterns mailing list?  Every month you'll receive a short wrap-up of top news from the behavioural sciences and other nuggets of goodness from me. Click here to sign-up.




Monday, September 3, 2012

Just make a decision will you!!! Overcoming decision quicksand to get the sale

You've been dealing with this customer for what seems like an eternity.  On paper, the decision is an easy one, some might say trivial, and yet they can't seem to make up their mind.  You are going around in circles, with them demanding more and more information and as a consequence, them getting more and more confused.  Oh no!  You are in "decision quicksand"!

When you make something unexpectedly difficult, you get quicksand
In their study "Decision Quicksand: How Trivial Choices Suck Us in" (2012) Aner Sela and Jonah Berger examined why trivial choices suck us in.  In short, the study looked at the association between difficulty and importance and found that if a choice was unexpectedly difficult, then it's perceived importance increased. What had been trivial has now been elevated into a decision worthy of time and effort.  And what better way of churning up time and effort than seeking out more options, sadly taking us further away from being able to make a choice.

Using quicksand in your business
You can use quicksand in two ways in your business.

Strategy 1. Intentionally make it hard
If you want to increase the perceived importance of a choice, make it more difficult.  Provide more options, use complicated language, complex processes and protracted explanations.  In Daniel Kahneman's language, you will be engaging "System 2" thinking which tends to interrupt an otherwise low engagement decision.  Why would you want to?  To force consideration of your product when you are not the preferred incumbent.

A word of warning though, an unimportant decision that is difficult might increase the time involved but it will likely decrease satisfaction.  Makes sense doesn't it?  We end up resenting being stuck on something that we think we should have easily dealt with.  For those who monitor customer satisfaction, it may be worth looking at how your customers perceive difficulty relative to importance because where effort is greater than reward, satisfaction will suffer.

Strategy 2. Simplify
More commonly, you will want to make the decision process for your customer as easy as possible. Fewer options, simple language, easy to follow processes and straight forward explanations.  Here "System 1" thinking will be most likely ruling the roost meaning your customer will be on 'auto pilot' and go with the flow.  Your job of course is to set up the flow!

Getting out of quicksand
So what do you do with the customer is stuck in decision quicksand? Go back to the basics of what they first talked about and why they contacted you. Fight their urge to get more information by concentrating on framing their decision using simple pros and cons.  Something along the lines of...


"Let's go back to when you first walked in.  As I see it you have two choices in what we've talked about, A or A-.  Now A has xyz whereas A- has 123. From what you've described to me, A- is really what you are looking for.  Does that seem right?  OK. That is a great decision, let's sort out (next steps)".

Knowing that decision quicksand can affect us all should help you come to terms with customers who seem to be frustrating you on purpose.  Take the view that they are not being deliberately difficult and instead look at how you set up the decision for them.  After all, you're the choice architect here!

PS Why not join the People Patterns mailing list?  Every month you'll receive a short wrap-up of top news from the behavioural sciences and other nuggets of goodness from me. Click here to sign-up.

(Image from http://www.gsbhealthandsafetysigns.co.uk/danger-quicksand-sign.html)