Monday, April 21, 2025

Untangle Responsibility Attributions

In both the U.S. and UK, welfare payments to disabled citizens are a noticeable percentage of the government budget. Voter opinion about these payments counts.
     University of Michigan and Cardiff University researchers concluded that public support for disability benefits in Wales depends on the degree of responsibility placed on the person for their disability—in a way we might expect—and whether the disabled person is an immigrant—in a way we might not expect.
     Study participants considered the case of a man unable to work because of a brain injury. Depending on which of three groups the participant was assigned to, the brain injury was said to be either the result of childbirth complications, a high-speed motorcycle accident, or illicit drug use. For about half the number of participants in each of the three groups, the man was described as, “David is 28 years old and lives in Cardiff.” For the others, the man was described as, “Khalid is 28 years old and emigrated to Wales from Yemen with his family when he was 5.” Participants were asked to indicate how strongly they believed the man deserved some financial assistance from the government and how responsible they thought the man was for his disability.
     Overall, respondents in the drug use condition were most likely to say the man was responsible for his disability, and those in the childbirth complications condition were least likely to say that.
     Did David and Khalid deserve disability benefits? For those presented a David scenario, the childbirth group gave the highest ratings of deservedness, the drug group gave the lowest ratings, and the motorcycle group results were in the middle. But for Khalid, there was one intriguing exception to this same pattern: Respondents in the childbirth group gave lower ratings of deservedness than did those in the motorcycle group.
     After considering the full set of findings, including from a study in Scotland, the researchers attribute this exception to respondents suspecting Khalid’s family of exploiting a more generous UK welfare system by emigrating to Wales after learning of Khalid’s disability. This suspected responsibility for gaming the system was intertwined with perceived responsibility for the brain injury, and the responsibility of Khalid for his actions was intertwined with the responsibility of Khalid’s family for their actions.
     To effectively assess and change public opinion, attend to intertwined attributions which may not be apparent at first glance.

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Pin Responsibility in Unhealthy Food Choice 
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Monday, April 14, 2025

Clear the Clouds from Switching Costs

Cloud video gaming—in which the processing is completed on a vendor’s computer servers—has been growing at a compound annual rate of about 75%, while the traditional video gaming in which processing is completed on the gamer’s local computer has been growing at a rate of less than 6%. The researchers at Durham University, The University of Leicester, and The University of Manchester who cite those statistics used semi-structured interviews and an online survey with gamers to analyze what factors are producing this difference.
     The data indicated a chief reason was how cloud gaming better enabled play of a broad variety of games across a broad range of circumstances. On the other hand, of the numerous factors considered in the study, switching costs exerted much less influence. In this context of video gaming, switching costs referred to the gamer needing to learn how to use the new platforms and accepting that many of the skills that had been mastered to use the old platforms would now be useless.
     Gamers in the study did acknowledge switching costs. One participant told the researchers, “I’ve spent years building up my game library and hardware setup. It would be hard for me to give it up.” Further, perception of higher switching costs was associated with higher reluctance to change from the traditional method. But the researchers say we should expect less influence of switching costs with a hedonic pastime like video gaming than we would with a parallel shift for a utilitarian project, such as storing company data on a vendor’s computer server and having processing completed on the vendor’s computer system. Variety is more important with the hedonic, consistency with the utilitarian.
     The lesson is to attend to the relative influence of switching costs while acknowledging that switching costs do always matter at least somewhat when we’re asking a consumer to make changes. Research findings from Santa Clara University, University of Maryland, and University of Texas-Austin indicate that switching costs exert a stronger influence than does customer satisfaction on whether a consumer will continue to patronize a retailer.
     To make a switch tempting, we’re wise to tell the target population about the ample benefits. People need to see the potential gains in order to put out the energy to form and maintain new habits. However, we too often forget about the importance to the shopper of the costs of the switch.

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Minimize Switching Costs 
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Monday, April 7, 2025

Portray Relative Risk via Pricing Which Fits

Price can portray relative risk. In an Arizona State University and Tulane University study, groups of students were advised to get a flu shot. Some were told the price of the inoculation was $25, while the rest were told it was $125. So that the decision to get the shot wasn’t influenced by whether the student could afford it, all were told the fee would be reimbursed by health insurance. Each participant was then asked to estimate how likely it is they would contract the flu if not receiving the shot.
     The group told the shot cost $25 judged themselves as more likely to get the flu. The researchers’ explanation is that a lower price signifies a need for greater accessibility, and therefore a higher risk of nonuse. People are more likely to get the shot if the price is lower because it is more affordable, but also because the prospect of not getting it is scarier.
     Using a different scenario, an Aalborg University, University of Zurich, and Goethe University study produced a contrasting conclusion: A higher price portrays greater risk.
     These study participants perused an ad for a canyoning or a whitewater rafting adventure at a $100 price. Offered as an option was insurance to reimburse up to $100,000 in medical bills if the person was injured during the adventure. Some participants were told the price of this insurance was $9.90, while the others were told it was $79.90.
     The question in this study was not the likelihood of purchasing the insurance, but instead the likelihood of purchasing the tour whether or not the insurance was purchased. The answer is that people quoted a higher price for the insurance were less likely to indicate interest in purchasing the tour. Companion studies by the researchers gave evidence this was because those people considered the tour to be riskier.
     The effect is stable, but not large when calculated as an average across a group of people. Namely, for each 10% increase in the insurance price, the likelihood of purchasing the tour dropped by between 1% and 2%. A retailer could probably set a price for insurance which yields a substantial profit without the price sabotaging sales of the base item.
     Still, why isn’t that 1% to 2% higher? Perhaps because it’s an average for a group and within any group are adventurers who are attracted by signals of higher risk.

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Imply High Risk with Low-Price Sacred Goods 
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Monday, March 31, 2025

Serve People Just What They Expect

Surprisingly, if you exceed your customers’ expectations for service quality, this can decrease customer satisfaction.
     The University of South Carolina research team points out how customer expectations for service quality depend on characteristics of the particular transaction. Consider the example of a diner who generally expects highly attentive service, with the waiter checking frequently throughout the meal, but who wants limited interruptions when accompanied by a friend who’s seeking a confidential conversation.
     This example was the basis for scenarios the researchers used in their studies where degree of server attention and degree of desired privacy were varied. When these two variables aligned, customer satisfaction was highest. The greatest disruption of customer satisfaction occurred in the situation of a customer with low service expectations receiving service which exceeded those expectations.
     It's clear how service falling short of expectations lowers customer satisfaction. But overly solicitous service also has negative consequences. The researchers cite prior studies showing that positive misalignment can cause customers to feel embarrassed, guilty, and unpleasantly indebted to the service provider. It’s possible to thank customers too much.
     An exception to the general conclusion occurred with another study conducted by the researchers where the scenario reflected a severe service failure, namely a diner needing to wait one hour to receive the meal they ordered and the food arriving overcooked. In these circumstances, subsequent service quality exceeding customer expectations didn’t lessen satisfaction. The customer probably felt they deserved the bonus.
     Providing service consumes resources. When service quality exceeds customer expectations, that could harm the organization financially and precipitate employee burnout. And over time, the situation gets progressively worse. Each time you exceed expectations, it can nudge the expectations up for the next time the customer visits. At some point, it would no longer be profitable to keep raising the bar for yourself.
     Actually, the customer might not even notice if you do manage to exceed their expectations unless the excess is dramatic. When shoppers’ expectations are exceeded, the shoppers could take it for granted and don't give lots of credit.
     The University of South Carolina researchers’ core advice is that the nature of optimal service depends on the characteristics of the shopper and situation. Certainly, there is a challenge for the provider in assessing these as a transaction progresses. It requires attending closely to the customer’s actions and reactions. But isn’t that itself an essential component of optimal customer service?

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Assess the Costs of Customer Satisfaction 
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Monday, March 24, 2025

Unwrap Blind Box Collectible Concerns

How are a bubble gum pack, a storage locker, and a Birchbox alike?
     They’ve all been marketed as blind boxes—containers purchased without the customer knowing what specific items are inside. Baseball player cards were first packaged with bubble gum in the 1920’s by Fleer and Topps brands with the objective of increasing gum sales to kids. On A&E’s “Storage Wars,” adults bid on abandoned storage units at auctions before knowing what's inside. A Birchbox subscriber receives a mystery assortment of curated beauty enhancement products each month.
     University of Newcastle and University of Sydney researchers explored the type of blind box purchases in which the contained items are collectibles for the buyer. What these researchers documented is an addictive loop of impulsive purchases. The researchers report that the addiction potential is high enough to have caught the attention of regulatory agencies.
     Consumers are drawn to blind box collectibles via the appeal of uncertainty and the urge for completion. As to uncertainty, in a University of Chicago study, people worked harder for a bag containing either two or four chocolates than did another group told the bag had four chocolates. The tickle of ambiguity stimulated these study participants to act.
     The thrill of the tease is an aspect of this. Show shoppers a gift box being slowly opened, and their evaluations of what’s inside the box will be more positive than if you just showed them the item. The unboxing video genre has gained notable numbers of YouTube followers.
     The pleasure-from-watching-the-striptease is so compelling that researchers from Chinese University of Hong Kong saw it even with an empty box. In this case, the observers of the unveiling liked the empty box itself more, on average, than an equivalent set of consumers who were only shown the box.
     As to the drive to complete the whole set, blind box collectible purchases might be compared to slot machine gambling. Because the purchaser doesn’t know what specific items in the set will be acquired, they could continue buying in hopes of filling in what’s missing in their collection. This behavior could easily become economically imprudent and potentially addictive.
     In your own use of blind box collectible marketing, stay alert for any need to nudge a compulsive buyer toward counseling just as a casino operator would with their clientele. Also consider recommending collection groups where your customers could trade their duplicates while socializing.

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Tickle with Uncertainty 
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Monday, March 17, 2025

Complete the Teasers if Charging for More

When I post on Bluesky with a live link in the Bluesky post to one of my RIMtailing blog posts, the title of the blog post and the first 25 words or so often appear in the Bluesky post. This teaser almost always ends in the middle of a sentence and often ends in the middle of a word. My intent is to have the teaser draw people for whom the topic is relevant into looking at the extended blog post. I’m aiming for the appeal of curiosity and the urge for completion.
     Evidence is this works, according to studies by a team of researchers from TBS Business School, ALDI Data & Analytics Services GmbH, Copenhagen Business School, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, and Stockholm School of Economics.
     But the research also says this is true largely because there’s no fee to look at the complete content. If I required payment to go beyond teasers, that would quite legitimately activate in the reader a perception I’m trying to sell them something. Such persuasion knowledge, in turn, arouses sales resistance, making it substantially less likely the reader would choose to access the content.
     Consumers dislike the feeling they’re being manipulated. Any irritation would be aggravated by a teaser which ends in the middle of a word, sentence, or video scene. The researchers recommend that if you charge a fee for accessing full content, you end the teaser with a complete thought.
     Now at the other extreme of telling consumers too little is the possible risk of teasing them with too much, such as with spoilers in movie reviews. Researchers at University of Houston and Canada’s Western University defined “spoiler intensity” as the degree to which information in the spoiler reduces uncertainty about a central theme in the experience of watching the movie. Then, using a sample of 993 movies, they statistically analyzed the relationship between spoiler intensity on IMDB—the most popular movie review site—and box office revenues for the first eight weeks of the movie’s release.
     There was a positive relationship between spoiler intensity and box office revenue. The relationship was higher for movies in limited release, which supports the idea that the uncertainty reduction accounts for the value of spoilers. Spoilers increase the credibility of marketer claims and consumer reviews, so they’re of most use with relatively unknown items. In these circumstances, it seems like there’s little need to worry about spoiling the audience. Spoilers, in fact, increase the attraction.

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Spoil Your Audience with Spoilers 
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