persuasion, motivation, and behavior: the science of when and why the rules don't (always) work

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Andrea Kuszewski @AndreaKuszewski The Science of When and Why the Rules Don’t (always) Work June 12th, 2014 Persuasion, Motivation, & Behavior

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From GSummit 2014, in San Francisco Science provides us with a number of general principles or rules of persuasion, motivation, and human behavior that tend to hold true for most people. For example, we know that people are more easily persuaded when we trigger an emotional response. Or if we reward a behavior, it is more likely to be repeated—and conversely, if we punish a behavior, it is less likely to be repeated. Or just the very basic principle that people tend to seek pleasure and avoid pain. These shortcuts, or heuristics, are useful, and often, they work well. But for every rule there is at least one very important exception; times and situations in which people act in unexpected and counter-intuitive ways, the complete opposite of what you predicted. Statistically speaking, paying most attention to group behavior is fine. But sometimes the outliers are telling us something really important about the underlying motivations or characteristics of a subset of our audience, and sometimes not reaching that subset of people, or understanding what causes their behavior, carries a high cost. I will be discussing three very different, and very critical, instances of ‘outlier behavior’ –explaining why they defy the norm, how you can identify these situations from the beginning, and some alternate strategies that can work with these outlier groups or conditions. Finally, I will talk about motivation types in the broader sense—those who are most and least likely to respond to incentives, why punishment doesn’t work on some people, and the difference between Happiness and Meaning as driving forces behind individual behavior.

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Persuasion, Motivation, and Behavior: The Science of When and Why the Rules Don't (always) Work

Andrea Kuszewski @AndreaKuszewski

The Science of When and Why the Rules Don’t (always) Work

June 12th, 2014

Persuasion, Motivation, & Behavior

Page 2: Persuasion, Motivation, and Behavior: The Science of When and Why the Rules Don't (always) Work

The Science of Behavior

Principles of Human Behavior

Identity/Ideology

Context/Environment

Personality

= =B

Page 3: Persuasion, Motivation, and Behavior: The Science of When and Why the Rules Don't (always) Work

The Science of Behavior

Ingroup/Outgroup Identity (ideology)

Page 4: Persuasion, Motivation, and Behavior: The Science of When and Why the Rules Don't (always) Work

The Science of Behavior

=

Ingroup/Outgroup Identity (ideology)

BX

Page 5: Persuasion, Motivation, and Behavior: The Science of When and Why the Rules Don't (always) Work

The Science of Behavior

Cognitive Dissonance

When we feel our identity is being threatened by the outside world, we are strongly motivated to resolve that.

Challenging a strongly-held belief is a threat to our identity ....

especially when challenged by the OUTGROUP.

Result? Cling to false beliefs even tighter

Backfire Effect

Page 6: Persuasion, Motivation, and Behavior: The Science of When and Why the Rules Don't (always) Work

The Science of Behavior

Page 7: Persuasion, Motivation, and Behavior: The Science of When and Why the Rules Don't (always) Work

The Science of Behavior

Context or Environment

Page 8: Persuasion, Motivation, and Behavior: The Science of When and Why the Rules Don't (always) Work

The Science of Behavior

= =

Context or Environment

B BX

Page 9: Persuasion, Motivation, and Behavior: The Science of When and Why the Rules Don't (always) Work

The Science of Behavior

Intrinsic vs Extrinsic Motivation

Intrinsic

Like

Passion

Self-Growth

Fulfillment

Meaning/Purpose

Incentives

Rewards

Grades/Ratings

Threats of Punishment

Extrinsic

Internal motivation to act = Always present

Long-lasting, sustainable over time Short-term solution

Comes from outside individual = May go away at any time

Page 10: Persuasion, Motivation, and Behavior: The Science of When and Why the Rules Don't (always) Work

The Science of Behavior

Incentivizing Creativity

Page 11: Persuasion, Motivation, and Behavior: The Science of When and Why the Rules Don't (always) Work

The Science of Behavior

Incentivizing Creativity

Financial incentives REDUCE creative output

Extrinsic rewards reduce intrinsic value

Page 12: Persuasion, Motivation, and Behavior: The Science of When and Why the Rules Don't (always) Work

The Science of Behavior

Incentivizing Creativity

Financial incentives REDUCE creative output

Extrinsic rewards reduce intrinsic value

Best way to increase creative output: Autonomy

Page 13: Persuasion, Motivation, and Behavior: The Science of When and Why the Rules Don't (always) Work

The Science of Behavior

Incentivizing Creativity

Financial incentives REDUCE creative output

Extrinsic rewards reduce intrinsic value

Best way to increase creative output: Autonomy

How to incentivize? Let creativity happen!

Page 14: Persuasion, Motivation, and Behavior: The Science of When and Why the Rules Don't (always) Work

The Science of Behavior

It’s hard!

Page 15: Persuasion, Motivation, and Behavior: The Science of When and Why the Rules Don't (always) Work

The Science of Behavior

Individual Differences (personality)

Page 16: Persuasion, Motivation, and Behavior: The Science of When and Why the Rules Don't (always) Work

The Science of Behavior

“People tend to seek pleasure and avoid pain.”

General Principle of Behaviorism

Page 17: Persuasion, Motivation, and Behavior: The Science of When and Why the Rules Don't (always) Work

The Science of Behavior

???=

Individual Differences (personality)

B

Page 18: Persuasion, Motivation, and Behavior: The Science of When and Why the Rules Don't (always) Work

The Science of Behavior

Approach vs Avoidance (BIS/BAS)Jeffrey Alan Gray: Biopsychological Theory of Psychology

BAS: Behavioral Activation System

BIS: Behavioral Inhibition System

* sensitive to punishment

* sensitive to reward

Activated by threat and Avoidance Motivation

Behavior that brings a person closer to some reinforcer; Approach Motivation

Page 19: Persuasion, Motivation, and Behavior: The Science of When and Why the Rules Don't (always) Work

The Science of Behavior

Approach vs Avoidance (BIS/BAS)Jeffrey Alan Gray: Biopsychological Theory of Psychology

BAS: Behavioral Activation System

BIS: Behavioral Inhibition System

Avoidance

Approach Pursue and achieve goals

Positive emotions (elation, happiness, hope)

Dopamine!!

Avoid negative events

Negative emotions (fear, anxiety, boredom, frustration, sadness)

Page 20: Persuasion, Motivation, and Behavior: The Science of When and Why the Rules Don't (always) Work

The Science of Behavior

Does Punishment Work?

-Short-term solution

-Threats of punishment increase the INTRINSIC value of the unwanted behavior

Page 21: Persuasion, Motivation, and Behavior: The Science of When and Why the Rules Don't (always) Work

The Science of Behavior

Does Punishment Work?

-Short-term solution

-Threats of punishment increase the INTRINSIC value of the unwanted behavior

-Once you remove the threat, person may be more likely to engage in unwanted behavior

Page 22: Persuasion, Motivation, and Behavior: The Science of When and Why the Rules Don't (always) Work

The Science of Behavior

Does Punishment Work?

-Short-term solution

-Threats of punishment increase the INTRINSIC value of the unwanted behavior

-Once you remove the threat, person may be more likely to engage in unwanted behavior

-Activates the BIS (Avoidance) = STRESS, ANXIETY, & BAD FEELINGS

Page 23: Persuasion, Motivation, and Behavior: The Science of When and Why the Rules Don't (always) Work

The Science of Behavior

Does Punishment Work?

-Short-term solution

-Threats of punishment increase the INTRINSIC value of the unwanted behavior

-Once you remove the threat, person may be more likely to engage in unwanted behavior

-Activates the BIS (Avoidance) = STRESS, ANXIETY, & BAD FEELINGS

AND.... in that stubborn cohort, doesn’t work AT ALL!

Page 24: Persuasion, Motivation, and Behavior: The Science of When and Why the Rules Don't (always) Work

The Science of Behavior

Does Punishment Work?

-Short-term solution

-Threats of punishment increase the INTRINSIC value of the unwanted behavior

-Once you remove the threat, person may be more likely to engage in unwanted behavior

-Activates the BIS (Avoidance) = STRESS, ANXIETY, & BAD FEELINGS

AND.... in that stubborn cohort, doesn’t work AT ALL!

Page 25: Persuasion, Motivation, and Behavior: The Science of When and Why the Rules Don't (always) Work

The Science of Behavior

HappinessMeaningor

Page 26: Persuasion, Motivation, and Behavior: The Science of When and Why the Rules Don't (always) Work

The Science of Behavior

Meaning vs Happiness

MM HHMh/Hm

Primary driver for approach behavior(for significant task)

MeaningfulMasochists Hedonists

Happy

Page 27: Persuasion, Motivation, and Behavior: The Science of When and Why the Rules Don't (always) Work

The Science of Behavior

Meaning vs Happiness

MeaningfulMasochists Hedonists

Happy

- incentives + incentives

Page 28: Persuasion, Motivation, and Behavior: The Science of When and Why the Rules Don't (always) Work

The Science of Behavior

Meaning vs Happiness

MeaningfulMasochists Hedonists

Happy

- incentives

Will sacrifice happiness for Meaning

+ incentives

“Feel good now” (short-term satisfaction)

Page 29: Persuasion, Motivation, and Behavior: The Science of When and Why the Rules Don't (always) Work

The Science of Behavior

Meaning vs Happiness

MeaningfulMasochists Hedonists

Happy

- incentives

Will sacrifice happiness for Meaning

Self-sustaining

+ incentives

“Feel good now” (short-term satisfaction)

Less loyalty

Page 30: Persuasion, Motivation, and Behavior: The Science of When and Why the Rules Don't (always) Work

The Science of Behavior

Meaning vs Happiness

MeaningfulMasochists Hedonists

Happy

- incentives

Will sacrifice happiness for Meaning

Self-sustaining

Punishment NOT a motivator!

+ incentives

“Feel good now” (short-term satisfaction)

Less loyalty

“Pain builds character!”

Page 31: Persuasion, Motivation, and Behavior: The Science of When and Why the Rules Don't (always) Work

The Science of Behavior

The only way to guarantee LONG-TERM sustainable behavior change:

make them WANT to change their behavior.

Page 32: Persuasion, Motivation, and Behavior: The Science of When and Why the Rules Don't (always) Work

The Science of Behavior

Feed their inner masochist. Make it meaningful.

Page 33: Persuasion, Motivation, and Behavior: The Science of When and Why the Rules Don't (always) Work

The Science of Behavior

Thank you! @AndreaKuszewski

Feed their inner masochist. Make it meaningful.