You may have heard of two-speed economies, where some sectors are booming while others flat line? I believe there is such a thing as two-speed consumers as well, and by understanding the difference we can be more effective in how we go to market.
Two-speed consumers
The easiest way to describe two-speed consumers is to start by comparing them to a house.
In a house you have core structures like walls, a floor and a roof. Letโs call them the โfoundationsโ. These things form the basis of the home and donโt change without significant renovation. At this base level, my house is the same as my neighbourโs because they are both made using the same universal design principles.
You also have soft furnishings within a houseย โ things like curtains and cushions, as well as surface materials like paint, wallpaper, floorboards and carpet. Letโs call these types of things the โfurnishingsโ. These you can change more regularly without needing to alter the homeโs structure and is how I differentiate my house from my neighbourโs.
Behavioural foundations
In behavioural terms, there are deeply ingrained patterns of behaviour that are like the foundations of a house. You canโt build a house without them, and you canโt be human without them either. Iโm talking about universals of human behaviour like:
- Social normsย โ consumers are influenced by what other people do;
- Loss Aversionย โ consumers are more motivated to avoid loss than seek gain; and
- Short-term biasย โ consumers will be more interested in immediate gratification than long-term payoffs.
These foundations of how people behave have been identified through fields such as behavioural economics, and with 170 principles and counting, it means thereโs a lot we can draw on to anticipate how our consumers will respond to a campaign or promotion we are running.
The foundations are the basis of my behaviour change model, which distills behavioural economics down to three central universals. To get consumers to buy, you need to overcome apathy (canโt be bothered), paralysis (canโt decide), and anxiety (worried about proceeding). ย
Behavioural furnishings
Behavioural furnishings, like the furnishings in a house, are more changeable and prone to trends. One week people might be flock to your store, the next they stay away. The frustrating thing is you donโt know why.
To understand behavioural furnishings requires you be on top of the latest trends in technology, social media, politics and consumption. Itโs โbeing on the pulseโ and seeing where the winds of change are blowing.
You need to be a two-speed marketer
My observation is that most marketers are trying to keep abreast of the โfurnishingsโ part of the behavioural landscape, jumping from Facebook to Instagram to Snapchat without really exploring why. As a result theyโre getting exhausted, irritated and angry.
The answer lies in going back to the foundations of behaviour to understand whatโs driving the latest trend. People are people and the fundamentals of human behaviour havenโt substantially changed over time. The veneer of behaviour may change (people use social media to connect for example), but the principles donโt (people will be influenced by what others do, for instance).
Step back from plumping the cushions of consumer behaviour, and consider whether you know how the house is constructed first.
NOW READ:ย Why fees can beat discounts when influencing customer behaviour
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