Insights Industry News

April 16, 2013

Can Behavioral Economics Explain The Movements In The Market Research Industry?

Edward Appleton discusses the “psychology of money” and how it impacts the market research industry.

Edward Appleton

by Edward Appleton

Director Global Marketing at Happy Thinking People

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behavioral economics

 

By Edward Appleton

I’m almost at the end of the 2nd Week of my online course on Behavioral Economics given by the renowned Dan Ariely. Week two was all about “The Psychology of Money”. 
What did I learn? Here’s a short summary, aided by a few refresher views of the relevant Lecture sessions:

  • The greater the number of choice options in a given category, the higher the likelihood that we will become confused and buy less or nothing. However, there may be an optimal number of choices, after which purchasing activity drops off.
  • Contrary to what classical economics posits, we do not tend to calculate “opportunity costs” prior to making a decision. If we are sensitized to what else we could do with the same amount of money, it can lead to us avoid a purchase, or trading down.
  • Free is a special price point, leading us to especially irrational behavior, whereby we only see the benefits, and are blind to potential cost.
  • Losses make us more unhappy than gains make us happy. 
  • We’re happy paying more for something that seems to us to have involved effort.

The whole chapter left me feeling slightly uneasy – especially the points made about the value we attach to “free”. The course he’s offering is free – is there a catch involved? Are we being encouraged to blind ourselves to any potential costs? 

On a less meta-level, I wondered what these BE findings would tell us about the industry movements in Market Research. Here’s my take.

1. The Pace of Change to New Market Research is partly driven by Loss Aversion.

I occasionally hear or read about New Market Research agencies wondering about the surprisingly slow movement towards new techniques, given the apparent advantages and assuming cost-parity. Loss aversion perhaps explains this in part: MR Clients are reluctant to give things up, and attach a higher value to the things we “own” (the procedures we have learned over the years) and down-weight the benefits of the new.

I didn’t see any suggestions in the Course about how to accelerate openness to change – or countering loss-aversion. No doubt those reading this in the business of Communications and Marketing will have some ideas – thanks for sharing.

2. The Shift to Online has reduced our Willingness to Pay more for MR.

Dan Ariely points out that when fixed costs are high – as with ATM machines – and marginal ones low, then our willingness to pay is diminished. We don’t see any effort going in, and psychologically don’t reward efficiency – even if that is irrational. The example given of a lock-smith that got better tips when learning his trade – though very slow and inefficient – than when he was expert and speedy in getting the job done is salutary, and mildly depressing.

In MR, the whole shift to online, away from one’s mental picture of interviewers on the phone, in the street, patiently waiting to fill their quota, in all sorts of adverse weather conditions – has in effect diminished our willingness to pay for something, as we don’t see or imagine the effort. 

3. DIY doesn’t just cost less, it heightens our aversion to Paying for Options that Cost Anything.

According to this course, it would seem that DIY is more of an enemy to MR Agencies than I had originally thought. My position up until now is that DIY can be a good thing – it allows more research to be done, and as long as fit for purpose, and carried out with an understanding of the limitation and risks, is not something to be demonized. 

The example of “free” in the course suggests that once something is offered for free, demand shoots up, regardless of any potential costs – time, for example – and to the extreme detriment of anything that costs money.  What also happens is that once people have sampled free, it is very difficult to get them to go back to paying.

This has immense, not to say grave,  implications for MR. I very much doubt that online is going to disappear. Other industries – publishing, newspapers – are presumably much further down this road with “free” online content and paywalls, advertising and subscriptions. Curious if anyone has any experience they can share that go into more detail on this complicated topic.

Overall, the chapter left me feeling hungry for more in-depth, perhaps (dare I say it) nuanced explorations of the psychology of money. I wondered if the experiments were sometimes a little far from real-life situations – many of us believe that there is “no such thing as a free lunch”, for example, that there is always a hidden cost attached to something. We become suspicious. We also know as consumers of media that the price of “free” means advertising of some sort. To me it’s an immensely complex area, and something I definitely wish to explore further.

Debt consciousness is also something I wished the course had touched on, as it is a major problem for many societies and individuals. How might the BE insights apply to real-life situations to the benefit of society overall ? Deferring payment, for example, is something BE highlights as a way of minimizing the pain of paying – that is precisely what Credit Card companies have known for decades and exploit to their own advantage. 

I would also welcome any inter-cultural experiments done on the topics touched on – attitudes towards money and debt differ extremely by culture.

That said, it’s a great course, and a great learning process.

Curious, as ever, as to others’ views.

 

Originally posted on Research & Reflect

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behavioral economicsdiy market researchstate of the industry

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