Showing posts with label amazon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label amazon. Show all posts

Monday, August 20, 2012

Don't underestimate the impact of fees on consumer behaviour

Imagine you are at an ATM withdrawing cash. Before you do, a message comes up reminding you that there will be a $2 fee for accessing your money through an ATM that is not part of your bank's network.  Do you proceed or do you cancel the transaction?

If you were an economist with the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA), you would have predicted that most would proceed with the transaction. After all, it's only $2.  We lose that behind the couch.

Well, much to the chagrin of RBA financial wizards, they didn't count on the impact of consumer 'irrationality'.  Instead of consumers banking like they had in the past, when the fee for a foreign ATM withdrawal was buried in terms and conditions and you only found out when you looked at your account statement, consumers have turned away from using these ATMs. 

What can you learn from the behavioural economics of ATM fees?

Red rag to a bull
People are more likely to adapt to a new price if they are not constantly reminded of it - it's like a red rag to a bull.  In this case, there was no choice for the ATM owners - the communication of the fee was mandatory, but in your business you may have more flexibility.  If you can, parcel the fee in with the price point and/or change once and not every time the customer pays.

I'm buying the good not the service
In previous posts I've talked about delivery fees.  For instance, order through Amazon and you pay less for the book but get hit with shipping.  Order through Book Depository and you pay more for the book but shipping is 'free' (ie included).  

People hate service fees so much because they decouple the value of the good from the service in getting it to them. Why? Because you retain the product not the service. Your opportunity is to gain  advantage by offering to wipe the cost of service (ie offer "free delivery" or "free installation") because 'free' is extremely persuasive and 'free' on a hated cost of service even more so.

Choose your number 
Was the fact that the fee is $2 the issue?  I think it did have something to do with it.  A lower fee structure, say 50 cents or 90 cents and more customers would have proceeded with their transactions  because dollars and cents are psychologically different.  If I told you that you are entitled to a $2 discount after you've purchased $30 worth of groceries does that hold more or less appeal than me offering you 4 cents off a litre of petrol (which works out about $2 a tank if you are lucky)?  Judging by our slavish devotion to petrol vouchers, 4 cents is extremely persuasive.  As a business you therefore need to consider the number context of the fee or discount you are using.

The big lesson out of the RBA experience is that people's irrationality should not be underestimated. Where something looks inconsequential on paper, it can have dramatic behavioural impacts. Your job is to make sure irrationality works in your favour, and behavioural economics is your guide to knowing how. 

To find out more about what happened with $2 ATM fees, read Peter Martin's article "Banks' $2 fee has big effect"in The Age. 

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(Image from http://www.bikyamasr.com/69294/india-launches-first-talking-atm-for-blind/)

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

Why free delivery can beat % off discount

Walking past a bedding retailer the other day and the sign on the pathway caught my attention as a nice little example of applied Behavioural Economics.  "Today only.  Free delivery".  Delivery costs around $40, so offering it as a free service is the equivalent of around a 10% discount on  a queen size mattress retailing for $400, but they chose to advertise the free service rather than reduced price.  Why?  Because 'free!' is much more behaviourally persuasive than a mere discount.

The online behemoth Amazon was one of the first to use this technique online.  Amazon offer free shipping for books over a certain value ($25), and what they find is people prefer to spend more to qualify for the free shipping than pay for the service.  In other words, people buy two books and spend more than $25 just to avoid paying a few dollars for shipping.

The behaviour behind this is loss aversion. We hate to lose and paying for a service like postage from which you gain little, is simply painful to our psyche.

Whilst the Amazon model is great for customers in the US, not so for us internationals!

Enter The Book Depository UK that offers free shipping anywhere in the world for any book.  Whilst the list price for the item is usually higher than Amazon, shipping is free.  By way of example, "Disrupt! Think the Unthinkable to Spark Transformation in Your Business" by Luke Williams is available on Amazon for $16.79 plus $9.81 shipping so the total is $26.31.  On The Book Depository the book is $24.74 inclusive of shipping.

The Book Depository has hooked into a key behavioural element here; we don't like to feel that we are paying for services related to the product.  Whilst I know that the higher listed price must cover the cost of shipping, to me the value of the purchase is in the book - the thing I am seeking to buy.  I feel better paying more for the item than I do for services that really have nothing to do with the product itself.  I will retain the book, I don't retain the delivery service.

And this is the genius of the free mattress delivery. I keep the mattress, I don't keep the delivery. Discount the element of your offer in which I see no ongoing benefit and I'll be a happy shopper.  So when you are next seeking to attract buyers to your shop, consider which elements of the product you are best to discount.  Scrapping annoying services costs might be a great place to start.


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