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More on the Psychology of Social Shopping | On Being Predictably Irrational

Wired magazines’s cover story on social commerce this month refers to Dan Ariely‘s bestseller on consumer behaviour, Predictably Irrational to explain why people use Shop-And-Tell apps such as Blippy and Swipely to share purchase information online.

In a nutshell, we not only shop to consume, we also shop to manage our public image (‘image management’), and our personal identity (how we feel about ourselves).  Because we want to feel smart about ourselves, we tend to overvalue things once we own them (what a smart and savvy shopper I am!) – a phenomenon known as the “endowment effect” from the “psychology of sunk costs“. By looking at the psychological and social value (as opposed to the practical value) of Blippy and Swipely, the take-up of apparently irrational behaviour – sharing credit card transactions in social media – makes sense.

The Wired article prompted us to go back to Predictably Irrational and look for insights and opportunities for making social commerce more effective.

The top-line takeout of Dan Ariely’s book on behavioural economics – the study of social, cognitive and emotional factors in economic decisions – is that shoppers are not rational actors, but irrational reactors.  Rather than process information rationally and act accordingly, shoppers use simple and usually smart rules of thumb to choose that can sometimes prompt irrational behaviour. Some of these shopping cues use social intelligence – our ability to understand and learn from each other and profit from social situations – and others are a consequence of our “bounded rationality” (human rationality bounded by limitations of time, data and processing power).

The practical upshot for social commerce is that there is a real opportunity to hardwire these shopping cues – social and otherwise – into the social shopping experience to make desired behaviour – purchase and advocacy, more likely.  Whilst many of these cues have broader retail applications, the specific opportunity for social commerce lies in its status as an experimental platform – we can experiment, develop and test the effectiveness of shopping cues on social commerce platforms whilst leaving the e-commerce mother-ship intact. We’ve covered some of these social shopping cues here, but here’s a quick run down of thirteen more ways shoppers are predictably irrational covered by Ariely – with ideas for how social commerce could profit from them.

  1. The Cost of Social Norms: Why we are happy to do things, but not when we are paid to do them. Consumer behavior is patterned by two sets of norms – social norms (implicit rules of social interaction) and market norms (explicit and hard transactional business rules) – understand the norms at play and don’t mix the two.  For example, encourage consumers to spread the word to help their friends, but don’t pay them to do it – shilling to friends breaks social norms.  Use social norms where possible rather than create new market norms with financial rewards or fines – these have a tendency to backfire. When a school tried to reduce late-arriving parents by issuing fines, the problem got worse, not better – the fine created a market norm, a paid-for transaction that legitimized the undesirable behaviour.
  2. The High Price of Ownership: Why We Overvalue What We Have. Consumers are irrational insofar they overvalue things once they own them.  This is because we suffer from “loss aversion” – we don’t like losing things.  Harness this “Endowment Effect” and the psychology of “Sunk Costs” by getting your product into the hands of influencers – once they own it, they’ll advocate it.
  3. The Effect of Expectations: Why The Mind Gets What It Expects. Previously-held expectations irrationally cloud our point of view and even sensory experience.  Tell a consumer they’ll like something and they will.  Tell them they won’t like something, or use negative associations, and they won’t.  For example, people prefer Budweiser with a couple of drops of vinegar in it, unless you tell them. So tell consumers what to expect, or better, get happy customers to tell new customers what to expect, and that’ll be their experience.
  4. The Context of Our Character, Part 1: Why We Are Dishonest.  People are irrational when it comes to honesty; most people will try to be honest, and be seen to be honest when it comes to major transgressions (e.g. major office theft), even when there is no chance of getting caught.  But for small transgressions (e.g. stealing an office pen), otherwise honest people will be dishonest.  With conscience, size matters.  Priming people’s minds with honest behavior may encourage honest behavior – seeing someone hand in a lost wallet, will prompt them to do likewise. Seeing a customer help another customer will prompt them to do likewise.
  5. The Context of Our Character, Part 2: Why Dealing With Cash Makes Us More Honest.  Money, like power, is often said to corrupt, but money actually helps keep honest people stay honest.  Put a Coke in a communal fridge and it will disappear, put dollar bills in the fridge and they’ll stay there. Play a game with tokens, people will cheat more than if they play a game for money. Dealing with cash cues customer honesty. Does this mean people will be less likely to cheat on returns (buy for party and return) if you show the dollar cost to you of returns?  Worth a try.
  6. The Truth About Relativity: The human mind uses comparative thinking to make decisions, comparing options on offer, and comparing ourselves to others – and this leads to irrational behavior.  For example, you can use the decoy effect to boost sales of a product by adding a decoy product to your product line that you don’t intend to sell, but has extreme pricing, either much higher or much lower than other virtually identical products.  This will boost sales of products that were previously the highest or lowest priced, as they are comparatively cheaper (or better quality for low priced goods – price is irrationally associated with quality). High street retailer Williams-Sonoma used this technique to boost sales for bread making machines adding a “deluxe” version that was virtually identical but 50% more expensive.
  7. The Fallacy of Supply and Demand: Another irrational consequence of comparative thinking. When we walk into a store, the first price (or even arbitrary number) we see becomes an “anchor” we use to judge whether other goods are good value. “Anchoring” has a major long-term effect on our willingness to pay.  We have behavioural anchors too, like the experience of a Starbucks coffee becomes an anchor point to which we compare all other café experiences.  Understand the anchors at play, you’ll understand the consumer.
  8. The Cost of Zero Cost: Why we often pay too much when we pay nothing. Zero/free is a source of irrational excitement; it’s called the “zero price effect.”  Consumers will trade-up and pay more just to be able to get a free gift or bonus, such as free shipping.   And they’ll will wait in line for absurdly long times or go to extraordinarily long lengths to get something for free. As Amazon rolled out free (Super Saver) shipping across markets, sales increased accordingly. Free is the most valuable word in marketing.
  9. The Problem of Procrastination and Self-Control: Why We Can’t Make Ourselves Do What We Want To Do.  Even when it is their best interests, consumers are bad at planning for themselves, and worse at following through with the plan.  Ford found that customers were poor at organizing the regular servicing of their cars, so they organized customers, with a simple service plan – with reminders.  Suboptimal from an engineering perspective, car servicing volume increased.  Think of consumers as kindergarten kids who need to be actively organized and managed.  If banks had consumers best interests at heart, they’d offer a ‘self-control’ credit card that would allow consumers to set restrictions on their spending in advance…
  10. Keeping Doors Open: Why Options Distract Us from Our Main Objective. Consumers feel compelled to preserve options, even at great expense – energy, time and money, even when it doesn’t make sense.  When you want consumers to make a decision, close down their options to good and bad, but position your brand as opening doors and opening up new opportunities, rather closing them down.
  11. The Power of Price: Why a 50-Cent Aspirin Can Do What A Penny Aspirin Can’t.  Price has an effect on experience.  A fake pain killer can work by the placebo effect – expectations trigger endorphins and opiates and other biological reactions that actually change body and experience, and it will work better, the higher the perceived price.  Expensive (branded) goods are experienced as better.
  12. The Influence of Arousal: Why Hot Is Much Hotter Than We Realize.  In a state of excitement or arousal, people think and behave very differently.   For example, willingness to engage in different sexual activities changes based on state of arousal (see here for Ariely’s wondrously creative experiment involving pornography, masturbation, shoes, spanking and behavioural economics). Takeout: emotional states trump rational thinking; it’s easier to sell to consumers when they are excited.  So use social commerce for live event shopping rather than simply add a retail layer to social platforms and a social layer to your retail platform
  13. Beer and Free Lunches: What Is Behavioral Economics, and Where Are the Free Lunches? Consumers are far less rational in their decision-making than most marketing models of consumer behaviour predict. But their irrational behaviors are neither random nor senseless, they are systematic and predictable.  For instance, consumers will sacrifice personal pleasure for public image – the reverse-herd effect, choosing to be different to be seen as being different, even if they prefer what others are doing. So base your social commerce strategy on how customers actually behave, not their values, beliefs and opinions nor on rational choice theory.  Behavioural economics is a behaviour-first tool for smart retailing based on how consumers are, not how they say they are.

So how could you integrate the ways shoppers are predictably irrational into your social commerce platform or proposition?

Written by
Dr Paul Marsden
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Digital wellbeing covers the latest scientific research on the impact of digital technology on human wellbeing. Curated by psychologist Dr. Paul Marsden (@marsattacks). Sponsored by WPP agency SYZYGY.