The Brainy Business | Understanding the Psychology of Why People Buy | Behavioral Economics

101. Dan Ariely Interview: Discussing Shapa, the Numberless Scale

05.22.2020 - By Melina PalmerPlay

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Today’s episode features a discussion with Dr. Dan Ariely – you know that name by now right? We talk about the numberless smart scale from the company he co-founded, Shapa, and all the research behind it.   I am very excited to introduce you to Dan Ariely, one of the best known behavioral economists in the world whom I have mentioned many times on the first 100 episodes of the show, and I know I will continue to do so after he helped me kick off these next hundred. He wrote Predictably Irrational and several other books and has done some amazing research. As I mentioned in the opening, Dan has worked on a huge amount of projects, and while this conversation could have gone in a million directions, we are specifically talking about Shapa. The company he co-founded showcases a numberless scale that was created to change the way we all think about our health and make it easier to do something that many of us find scary…stepping on the scale. The discussion ties back to a bunch of past episodes (including loss aversion, partitioning, the focusing illusion, herding) as well as on an experiment I did which was influenced by one of Dan’s studies from Kenya. We also talk about overall health (emotional, physical, financial) and how it is all related. I hope you enjoy the conversation as much as I did, and thank you again for joining me Dan! CLICK HERE FOR YOUR FREE DOWNLOAD! Show Notes: [02:18] In this episode we are specifically talking about Shapa. A company Dan co-founded for a numberless scale that was created to change the way we all think about our health. [03:26] Shapa has many components. How would a social scientist approach helping people lose weight?  [05:04] The struggle for health is a daily struggle. You can’t be healthy five days a week. It doesn’t work. Your healthy life needs to start in the morning.  [07:08] They started studying the bathroom scale. They learned it is a good idea to stand on the scale every morning, not at night.  [08:01] The second thing they learned is that weight fluctuates from 2-8 pounds a day. (wow!) [09:38] They also learned that people think their weight will change very fast if they go on a diet. The reality is that it can take 8 days to two weeks to see results.  [12:31] A year where nothing bad happens is an amazing year.  [12:36] The story of obesity in the U.S. is a story of gaining a little bit throughout the year and not losing - especially in November and December.  [13:39] Shapa created this 5 point scale which includes, “congratulations nothing bad happened!” They tested it and the studies were great.   [15:34] We are obsessed with absolute levels. People usually want to know how what they are doing is improving their health and they want to be motivated.  [16:55] When people go to the doctor they get stressed and their blood pressure goes up. If you go to the doctor and you are the kind of person that gets stressed because you’re seeing a doctor, they might prescribe you blood pressure medicine because you are stressed because of the doctor not because you are really stressed usually.   [18:29] The way they start the process with Shapa is that they ask people to tell them about their environment.  [19:54] Suggestions are sorted by the probability that you will take them and then they give you tips.  [20:07] They focus on small changes and do it for two weeks and then add the next one.  [22:53] Look with fresh eyes from social science about little things in life and then use the digital revolution to really change things.  [24:51] The problem is that the scale has become so negative and the numbers are so depressing.  [25:44] How much do you want to be in a race where the best you can do is not that bad?  [27:59] We need to change our thinking about finances and health. We need to do more things that give people a sense of success and achievement. [30:34] Finances and health are both long-term and often painful struggles; we need strong motivation to achieve there.  [32:17] What are the incentives we can give people to behave in a certain way? [33:30] Shapa has five levels and they each have a different color. [34:39] Mostly we want to have no change with improvements from time to time.  [35:12] Focus on the things where you can make the biggest behavioral impact. [37:02] The feeling of success is important to keep people motivated. [39:46] It is time to fix some of the habits we got wrong during the coronavirus crisis. It is time to take care of ourselves and feel better about ourselves.  [43:10] It always comes back in this way, and you never know what is around the corner. [43:33] If you are working on a health journey as well, with a Shapa or on your own, let’s support each other and do this together - connect with me on social media (links below!). Thanks for listening. Don’t forget to subscribe on Apple Podcasts or Android. If you like what you heard, please leave a review on iTunes and share what you liked about the show. Links and Resources: [spacer height="20px"][email protected] The Brainy Business® on Facebook The Brainy Business on Twitter The Brainy Business on Instagram Master Your Mindset Mini-Course The 10 Behavioral Economics Concepts You Need To Know AND HOW TO APPLY THEM Ebook The Brainy Business on LinkedIn Melina on LinkedIn The Brainy Business on Youtube Center for Advanced Hindsight Dan Ariely My Shapa 61. Color Theory: When It Comes To Color, This 1 Thing Matters More Than Anything Else 98. Behavior Change at WW and Beyond, an Interview with Dr. Julie O’Brien 51. Time Discounting: The I’ll Start Monday Effect – My Favorite Concept!: A Behavioral Economics Foundations Episode 65. Can Behavioral Economics Increase Savings? 91. Coronavirus and How the Human Brain Responds to Pandemics 16. Framing: How You Say Things Matter More Than What You’re Saying: A Behavioral Economics Foundations Episode 35. NUDGES & Choice Architecture: Introducing Nobel-Winning Concepts: A Behavioral Economics Foundations Episode 89. Focusing Illusion: Why Thinking About Something Makes It Seem More Important Than It Is (A Behavioral Economics Foundations Episode) 81. How to Finally Change Your Behavior (So it Sticks) 9. Loss Aversion: Why Getting New Stuff Is Not The Same: A Behavioral Economics Foundations Episode 67. How to Get (and Stay) Motivated 58. Partitioning: Why We Eat More Cheetos From A Party-Sized Bag Than A Fun Size: A Behavioral Economics Foundations Episode 34. Optimism Bias: The Good And The Bad Of Those Rose-Colored Glasses: A Behavioral Economics Foundations Episode 21. Habits: 95% Of Decisions Are Habitual – Which Side Is Your Business On?: A Behavioral Economics Foundations Episode 100. 100 Episodes – 1 Big Insight 80. Celebrate! It’s more important than you think

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