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Simple Shifts In Thinking – Positive Impact on Behavior
1. Simple Shifts In Thinking – Positive
Impact on Behavior
Denise Aube, Vice President, Health Care Practice Leader
Joel Machak, Executive Creative Director
12. If you insulate your home fully
you will save 50 cents a day.
4% response
If you fail to insulate your home
you will lose 50 cents a day.
10% response
Source: Robert B. Cialdini, Influence: The Psychology of Persuasion, 1993.
13. “We need to get more women to schedule a
heart exam with our docs.”
14. A conventional
approach
• Give them facts.
• Heart disease is the #1
killer of women.
• 1 in 2 women die of
heart disease.
• 6 times more than
breast cancer.
• Risks are all preventable.
15. We tapped into #1 thing
Mom does not want to
lose.
All available
appointments booked.
17. NO
SIGN
Help save the environment.
Reuse your towels during your stay.
35% reuse
Join your fellow guests in helping
save the environment
(75% are participating).
Reuse your towels during your stay.
44% reuse
- 49% reuse
Source: Study published in Journal of Consumer Research (2008), authored by Noah J. Goldstein, Robert B. Cialdini, Vladas Griskevicius.
18. “We need more people to register to become
organ donors.”
19. A conventional
approach
• This is a crisis – we need
your help.
• 118,498 people are
waiting for an organ.
• 18 people will die each
day waiting for an organ.
• 1 organ donor can save
up to 8 lives.
21. 21
2010 Postcard – I mail drop
Traditional Health Education Focus
< 100 county residents respond
Made breast cancer
screening the norm –
“8 in10 women right
here in AA Cty.”
2011 Postcard – 1 mail drop
Utilizes “Social Norming”
Nearly 600 county residents respond
4.5% response rate
(DMA benchmark 2.5%)
22. Chunking
People are more likely to embark
on a difficult task if it’s presented
in bite-sized stages, rather than
one continuous act.
23. Survey with 96 questions
divided into 8 sections, 12
questions in each.
Survey with 96 questions.
Q1 – Q96
6% response
61% of responders
complete the entire
form
26% response
87% of responders
complete the entire
form
Source: Richard Storey, AAAA, Behavioral Economics: Small Change, Big Difference, 2010.
24. “We need to increase sales among current
customers.”
25. We made it easy for stressed
clinicians to implement urine
drug monitoring.
The 5 Step Guide.
Utilization increases.
Volume and revenue goals
surpassed.
28. Physician Surveys
National sample, 2,147 physicians
Mailed survey – 25 minutes to complete
Source: Study published in Public Opinion Quarterly (2001), authored by Sandra Berry and David Kanouse, funded by NIH.
½ sample was promised a check
upon completion of survey
66% completion
½ sample was sent a check with
the survey (pre-payment)
Only 26% of respondents who did not complete
survey cashed checks.
78% completion
29. “We need to generate more leads for our
sales force.”
31. We grabbed prospects attention and opened
doors with a gift.
20% response rate
14% conversion
32. The Power of Now
We engage more strongly with
current events than future ones.
33. What is the most effective way to stop speeding?
34. Photo taken and fine incurred.
Prevents 2.2
accidents
No photo taken, no fine incurred.
Prevents 3.1
accidents
Source: United Kingdom, Department of Transport Study, 2008, Angela Watkinson’s Report to House of Commons.
47. • Find a principle that
might work for your
program.
• Pick one primary
approach.
• Positively frame the
call to action or
desired behavior.
Design your strategy
48. • Apply your theory
across all platforms.
• Build your plan, create
your tactics and
execute.
• Build in metrics and
form of data
collection.
Plan, execute, measure