Insights Industry News

August 28, 2012

4 Common Myths About Human Decision Making

Neal Cole uses Behavioral Economics to challenge some common assumptions about human decision making.

Neal Cole

by Neal Cole

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Editor’s Note: Neal Cole continues his excellent series exploring practical examples of the theory of Behavioral Economics in action. It’s a topic that researchers need to pay attention to; this framework of understanding humans has immense implications for virtually every aspect of our discipline and is reshaping cognitive psychology. Neal is one of the rising stars in incorporating BE thinking into commercial research. Enjoy this primer on some of the key learnings!

 

By Neal Cole

1. Prices are determined by supply and demand!

  • Despite what economist might tell us, prices are often not the result of an equilibrium between supply and demand. When a new product is launched the initial price can be fairly arbitrary. It may simply reflect what the seller believes customers will be prepared to pay. However, experiments in behavioural sciences show that the first price that we see when considering a purchase becomes imprinted in our mind and acts as an anchor. This influences not only current prices but also our future expectation of the price. This is contrary to traditional economic theory.
  • This phenomenon is called arbitrary coherence and explains why our first decision to purchase an item is so important to our future behaviour. It also suggests that what consumers are prepared to pay can easily be manipulated. Indeed, Dan Ariely found that the prices we are initially prepared to pay can be influenced by responses to random questions.
  • In one experiment Ariely got students to write down the last two digits of their social security number before asking them to bid for a number of items in an auction. When the bids were analysed Ariely found that students with the highest-ending social security numbers bid the highest, and those with the lowest-ending numbers bid the least. Ariely’s experiments also demonstrated that once people are willing to pay a certain price for one product in a category, their expectation of prices for other products in the same category are logically linked to that first price (the anchor).

2. People are mainly influenced by a brand or product before they take an action. This idea is fundamental to the popular A.I.D.A (Attention, Interest, Desire, Action) advertising model.

  • Experiments by behavioural economists (BE) suggest that most of the decisions we make are influenced unconsciously by our emotions, social norms and what our peers are doing. The context, including the environment we find ourselves in, also influences our behaviour. BE indicates that we then unconsciously review and post-rationalize after the event. This means that we usually act before we consciously consider our decisions and our memory of what drives our decisions is unreliable and often wrong.
  • Because most of our decisions are driven by the unconscious mind we cannot assume that the customer journey is a linear process as many popular  models would have us believe. Mark Earls suggest that it is more likely to be similar to a game of snakes and ladders. Positive influences, such as what we hear from our peers, nudge us towards a purchase. However, negative influences, such as our emotional state, may move us away from a decision.

3. People have clear preferences and know what they want!

  • As Dan Arliely points out in his book Predictably Irrational, “everything is relative”. People often don’t know what they want until they see it in context. Priming, bias" href="http://www.sciencedaily.com/articles/a/anchoring.htm" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">anchoring, and framing are key to how we respond to choices we make. People like to compare things that are easily comparable, and the context of how we present items heavily skews our response to them. This is why it is particularly important how we position new ideas or products. For once we have presented something new as being positioned in a certain category or price band it is very difficult for people to accept much movement away from this initial anchor.
  • This partly explains why asking people about future purchase intentions can be highly misleading. The answers you receive will be strongly influenced by the context of the survey and the individual question. Further, if people are not fully aware of their motivations for past purchases you can’t expect them to predict how they will respond in a future hypothetical situation.

4. Consumers like to act independently of each other and express their individual preferences.

  • Humans are a “super social species” (Mark Earls, Herd). Our behaviour is unconsciously influenced by what other people do and more so than we realise or like to admit. When faced with uncertainty we look to how other people behave and will often follow their lead. Indeed, Mark Earls argues that human-to-human interactions about a brand are much more influential than business-to-consumer interactions can ever be. Further, he suggests that consumer generated word of mouth (WoM) is much more powerful than that created through marketing WoM campaigns. This is because people are very good at spotting cheating and deception.
  • The insight here is that brands are built on interactions between people and not brand values or footprints. Whether it is consumer-to-consumer interactions or staff to consumer conversations, its people that matter most. Marketing departments may be more productive if they encourage C2C interactions rather than trying to control brand communications. There is some evidence to suggest that the C2C interactions potentially generate greater returns than short-term B2C marketing activities.
  • This challenges current thinking about targeting and the Customer Relationship Marketing (CRM) approach to interacting with consumers. If B2C communications are indeed more short-term and less powerful than C2C interactions then does this undermine some of expected benefits from CRM? Certainly recent research does not suggest that most customers want a relationship with your brand!  If this is the case then they key to unlocking the power of  WoM may be more about giving power back to your customers to allow them to interact rather than trying to police brand communications.
Thank you for reading my post. I hope it challenged some common assumptions about human decision making.

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behavioral economicsbrand strategycognitive psychologymarketing

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The views, opinions, data, and methodologies expressed above are those of the contributor(s) and do not necessarily reflect or represent the official policies, positions, or beliefs of Greenbook.

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