Money and Finance
How Online Companies Get You to Share More and Spend More - By Dan Ariely
Found via Simoleon Sense.
You’re not stupid, but you can be fooled. For millennia, the best salespeople have known how to exploit the vulnerabilities of the human mind. In the burgeoning field of behavioral economics, we’ve begun to give precise names to the mental weaknesses that make us all susceptible to a well-crafted pitch. Drawing on the insights of psychology, behavioral economists have explained why we buy more stuff at $0.99 than at $1.00 (the “left-digit effect”), why we commit to gym memberships we’ll never use (“optimism bias”), and why we don’t return things we buy as often as we should (“post-purchase rationalization”). The giants of the web, from Amazon to Zynga, use similar tricks to keep us coming to their sites, playing their games, and buying their goods. In fact, that’s how they became giants in the first place. Here’s how they game us—and how, in some cases, we wind up gaming ourselves.
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Rick Bookstaber: Human Complexity & Financial Markets
Found via Simoleon Sense.In a recent post I discuss the limitations of neoclassical economics and the strain of behavioral economics that remains tethered to it. I argue that they fail because the market is inhabited by people, heterogeneous and context-sensitive,...
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Wsj: Peer Pressure And Other Pitches
Thanks to Will for passing this along. More businesses are using behavioral economics to appeal to customers, seeking to capitalize on the notion that people don't always act in their economic self-interest. Behavioral economics is popular among academics,...
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How Obama Is Using The Science Of Change
Great find from Simoleon Sense (where I find a lot of the things I post). Two weeks before Election Day, Barack Obama's campaign was mobilizing millions of supporters; it was a bit late to start rewriting get-out-the-vote (GOTV) scripts. "BUT, BUT,...
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Bill Miller: What's Luck Got To Do With It?
This interview is from July of this year and since I don't believe I posted it before now, here it is.-Bill Miller on poker and investing - Question: Right. Who's Puggy Pearson, and why should anybody care? - Answer: Well, the late Puggy Pearson...
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A Short Course In Thinking About Thinking - A "master Class" By Danny Kahneman
While Kahneman has a wide following among people who study risk, decision-making, and other aspects of human judgment, he is not exactly a household name. Yet among many of the top thinkers in psychology, he ranks at the top of the field. -Harvard psychologist...
Money and Finance