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You're Not Alone: Using Normative Feedback to Motivate

2015-02-03

MotivationPsychologybehavior changecompetencedesign psychologymotivationmotivational designrelatedness
You're Not Alone- Using NormativeOne of the three fundamental human needs that an engaging experience supports is competence. Competence is not necessarily about already being good at something so much as having a sense of growth and the possibility of future success. Normative feedback is a tool that we can use to support both a sense of competence, by showing that people's performance is aligned with social expectations, and relatedness, by showing people that there are others in similar situations. Normative feedback can be an effective tool for changing behavior. Two case studies highlight best practices as well as tactics to avoid.

Normative Feedback Powers Lower Electricity Consumption

[caption id="attachment_2319" align="alignright" width="300"]Opower customers show reductions in electricity use year-round, including the peak summer season. Taken from http://opower.com/results. Opower customers show reductions in electricity use year-round, including the peak summer season. Taken from http://opower.com/results.[/caption] Opower is a company that encourages people to opt into a location-based monitoring program for their utility services such as electricity and natural gas. The goal is to use normative feedback about utility use among neighbors to raise awareness of personal use, and, eventually, drive environmentally conscious behaviors. (While Opower dominates this market, it does have several startup competitors, and some industry analysts also consider products like Nest competitive.) [caption id="attachment_2320" align="alignleft" width="300"]A sample Opower report, from http://opower.com/solutions/energy-efficiency A sample Opower report, from http://opower.com/solutions/energy-efficiency[/caption] Opower delivers normative feedback in a sleekly formatted report along with the monthly utility bill. The report showcases the individual household's power usage alongside both all neighbors and those neighbors who are the lowest users. Consistently across a variety of data slices, Opower has shown that people who opt into this normative feedback go on to use their utilities in a more environmentally conscious manner. They use less electricity not just overall, but also at peak times of day and year. Knowing how other people are using electricity seems to be an effective way to get people to monitor their own use.

Normative Feedback and Activity Tracking: The Paradox of Fitbit

[caption id="attachment_2317" align="alignright" width="300"]From a Fitbit weekly email. From a Fitbit weekly email.[/caption] Fitbit encourages users to connect with their social network contacts to share activity tracking data. Making that connection enables a leaderboard for you and your connections and allows you to compete together in challenges like the "Workweek Hustle." Fitbit pushes users to utilize their social capabilities by touting research results that group exercise improves well being and that having social connections on Fitbit boosts steps by 27%. But Jawbone recently published an interesting finding: Social challenges can actually be demotivating for people whose performance is lagging. This makes total sense in terms of self-determination theory. Seeing your peers significantly outperform you sends the message that your own performance isn't good enough. My own experience with Fitbit echoes the Jawbone findings. I'm motivated to watch my step counts when I'm either leading a challenge or have a decent chance of overtaking the leader. When one of my friends has tons more steps than me, though, I engage in a psychological discounting process. "He's obviously just wandering the city in a fugue." As a side note, I am sorry to my Fitbit friends for what's happening to my step totals while I train for a marathon. Please psychologically discount me. The lesson here? Normative feedback is good as long as it shows that you're in the ballpark of success. Normative feedback that suggests you're at the back of the pack is counterproductive.

Using Normative Feedback in Health Coaching

The activity tracking findings hint at a challenge that my team has always found with our health coaching products. We know that normative feedback can be helpful, but we also intuitively know that telling people they are in the most overweight group, the least active group, or the sickest group is not going to inspire change. [caption id="" align="alignright" width="234"]This infographic on smoking cessation promotes the positive physiological changes at different time points in the quit process. From BeTobaccoFree.hhs.gov. This infographic on smoking cessation promotes the positive physiological changes at different time points in the quit process. From BeTobaccoFree.hhs.gov.[/caption] Effective use of normative feedback, as suggested by the case studies above and behavioral science more generally, includes: Have you used normative feedback to try to change behavior? What have you found works best? [caption id="attachment_2335" align="aligncenter" width="300"]Got hypertension? You're not the only one. Got hypertension? You're not the only one.[/caption]