Using Behavioural Economics to understand behaviour – and change it
The puzzle
The Royal Bank of Scotland needed to take its understanding of consumer buying decisions to another level.
- How could they avoid any assumptions that would cloud their thinking?
- How could they get the deepest possible understanding?
The pieces
As part of an extensive buying journey project, we asked 148 consumers to keep an online diary for up to 6 months.
- Consumers recorded their efforts to decide on a variety of financial products and providers.
- The diaries revealed contradictions and changes of direction that consumers were often unaware of.
- Post-diary interviews allowed us to explore this apparently irrational behaviour.
The picture
Our analysis revealed multiple biases across a range of financial services product categories.
- The biases uncovered included regret aversion, status quo bias and mental accounting.
- To identify strategies to help change behaviour, we ran co-creation workshops with the bank’s teams.
- We devised strategies to tackle key issues with our “Bypass/ Leverage/ Tackle” (BLT) approach.
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