Marketing as Behavior Change (Live Syllabus)
- Broderick Turner
- Jan 16, 2020
- 5 min read
Instructor: Broderick Turner
Why take this course?
With the rise of Surveillance Capitalism , firms now have more information about you than you do about yourself. And they have the information at an unfathomable scale. Theories from social and cognitive psychology have provided firms with the tools to transform that information into behavior change.
So not only can firms predict what you will do, they can change what you will do.
The goal of this “course” is to consider Marketing as Behavior Change, i.e., how can marketing make people do things (other than just buying stuff) that they did not plan on doing.
Take Facebook for example, they can manipulate the newsfeed to get you to click on an ad, but also they can induce you to vote, or make you both happier or sadder. And that is just the published research they are willing to share.
Or do you use Tinder, Bumble or other dating apps? As a PhD student at Stanford, Professor Jessica Yu ran a field experiment with one mobile-dating firm where they changed the information that was presented to daters to make the dating pool in their area seem larger or smaller, and they found that they could make daters more or less selective. When I was early in my PhD I ran my own experiments where I found that simple changes to a the stream of images that a dater swipes can change how often they choose the target I wanted them to choose. Considering that about 40% of heterosexual couples and 65% of same-sex couples met online in 2017, marketing may be able to determine who you date and who you partner with.
If lowly PhD students with small budgets can change your behavior, imagine what a firm with real resources can do.
In many ways, the individual consumer is powerless to stop this. If you use the internet (and you’re reading this, so YOU use the internet), it is nearly impossible to avoid being tracked, and aggregated. For instance, Medium (and almost any other website) knows where you are right now, what device you’re one, and what services you’re logged into. You can see some of this data for yourself. Open up the Webkay site and scroll down. If the Webkay site can read this information, any other webpage can as well. Moniker, an Amsterdam based interactive design studio, put together a “game” that shows you just how much data you put out while browsing a webpage (to play click here: clickclickclick.click). Creepy, huh?
Objectives
This course on Marketing as Behavior Change has four learning objectives:
1. We* will learn about the Marketing as Behavior Change environment. Even if we can’t stop the train, we should know what train you’re on. This will cover a (very) brief history of firms and individuals who use marketing to change behavior. We will cover some really old persuasion research, and some really hightech stuff that will be out of date by the time we read it.
2. We will learn the underlying social and cognitive psychology of Marketing as Behavior Change. Many consumer behavior classes cover a great deal of this now. But this “course” seeks to understand how these theories will work at scale. For a good example, see this recent paper by Professor Daphna Oyserman and her student Andrew Dawson on how social psychology can explain fake news, disinformation and Brexit.
3. We will learn how to create behavior change (at scale). We will cover a bunch of experiments that have changed behavior. We will consider what could have made these experiments better or worse. We will learn how, when and why to design these experiments. We will design experiments that might change behavior.
4. We will consider the ethics of Marketing as Behavior Change. This can’t simply be a one-off class or a slapdash lecture at the end of a semester. As marketing students of today, we could very well reshape the world how we see fit. We need to be good stewards of this power.
Class Schedule
Class 1 — History of Marketing as Behavior Change
This class covers a brief history of the use of social and cognitive psychology to change a person’s behavior. We will cover Skinner to Zuckerburg.
Read: The Stanford Prison Experiment- http://www.prisonexp.org/
Write: Based on the findings of this study, examine how the assigned status or the position of “prisoner” affected the personality and behavior of the research participants assigned as prisoners.In addition, examine how the assigned status or position of “guard” affected the personality and behavior of the research participants assigned to be a guard.Substantiate your findings with reasons.
Read: Johnson, E. J., & Goldstein, D. (2003). Science, Policy. Do defaults save lives?.
Write: What other defaults do you accept in your life. Think broadly. Think Deeply
Class 2 — The basics of persuasionand the persuasion knowledge model
This class covers the six building blocks of persuasion: Reciprocity, Scarcity, Authority, Consistency, Liking and Consensus. It also covers what happens when people know they are being persuaded.
Friestad, Marian, and Peter Wright. “The persuasion knowledge model: How people cope with persuasion attempts.” Journal of consumer research21, no. 1 (1994): 1–31.
Write: Give one example of each type of persuasion that a company has used recently.
What are specific ways that a company may signal they are trying to persuade you?
Is it unethical to NOT tell consumers they are being persuaded?
Class 3 — The Basics of Nudging, Marketing Under the Radar
What is nudging? When does it work? When does it backfire?
Read: What is nudging?
Write: a. Find one example of a nudge that improved lives.
b. Find one example of a nudge that made lives worse.
c. Is there any difference in the design of these nudges?
d. Is there any difference in the ethics of these nudges?
Class 4 — Nudging at scale
You know what’s cool? Nudging one person. You know what scary? Nudging a billion. You know what keeps me up at night? Someone in this class could decide who was president in 2024.
Write: What are these authors’ theories about why Brexit worked? If one political party uses these tactics, should all political parties?
Class 5 — Designing a Marketing as Behavior Change Campaign
How do you pick a problem to solve? Is it feasibly solvable? Can you measure the change? What tools will you use/
Write: 10 “problems” you want to change. Put them in order from unsolvable ever, to solvable today.
Class 6 — The Ethics of Marketing as Behavior Change
Guardrails. You need guardrails. We need to do better than “don’t be evil.” We need some rules. In this class, we decide the rules of the game.
Write: Which ethical school do you abide by and why? Consider your design from last week, how does it violate each of these ethical schools?
Final Project- You can pick one of these two options
1. Share your design for a behavior change campaign. Justify that decision to the stakeholders, and your grandmother.
2. Find an example of a behavior change campaign that you believe has not yet been reported. Bonus points if we can’t google the answer, but you can “prove” it exist.
Class 7- Present and Grade Final Projects
You will see three to four other projects. You will present your project to three or four people. You will grade each other based on the provided rubric
My Expectations
I expect you to:
1. View/ attend all lectures and workshops.
2. Participate in the class discussion, whether that is in person or online.
3. Respect your fellow learners. Learning is hard enough, no need to be rude.
4. Turn in all writing assignments the day before class (so you have time to read them and think about them).
5. You will put effort and creativity into your final project.
Grading
Life is flexible. So is this class. I choose what I grade on, you choose how much this is worth (within my guardrails). The final grade for each term will be determined by a formula chosen at the beginning of class by each student subject to the following constraints.
Class Participation 15% — 50%
Writing 15% — 50%
Final Project 15% — 50%
All weights must add up to 100%.
*Notice the use of “we” instead of “you”. Learning is collaborative. I have some knowledge. You have some knowledge. Together, we will learn. It will be difficult. But it will be fun, because it is difficult.
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