Uri Baruchin’s Post

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Strategy & Brand Consulting | D&AD Masterclass Trainer

Can we talk about the paradox of choice? It's not that simple. As behavioural economics become more important in marketing, Barry Schwartz's 2004 best-seller and some writing that followed him are almost a dogma for some people: Choice creates fatigue and anxiety --> reduce choice to increase sales. BUT, it's just not that simple. 1. Choice overload isn’t a consistent effect 2. Choice reduction alone does not ensure an increase in sales A 2015 meta-analysis of 99 studies isolated the circumstances in which reducing choices to customers are most likely to increase sales. What they identified is four factors: 1. Choice set complexity 2. Decision task difficulty 3. Preference uncertainty 4. Decision goal And what they saw across studies is that when the above factors are mitigated, the tolerance for choice often increases. Essentially, reducing complexity is more important than simply reducing choice. Portfolio strategy is not an exercise in reducing SKUs. Brand Architecture is not an exercise at killing and consolidating sub-brands. And behavioural economics isn't the silver bullet people think/pretend it is. Because unlike research, few marketing challenges concern a single, isolated, factor. Sorry, I know you didn't ask for a side of nuance with that.

Chris West

|CEO, VERBAL IDENTITY | #1 Best-selling book on brand tone of voice | Strategy + execution, the effective brand voice | Corporate narrative, brand tone of voice, guidelines and writer training

3y

I've just found this from the excellent Uri Baruchin - "reducing complexity is more important than simply reducing choice". I completely agree, not just intellectually but from real life. It's part of why language is so important: done well, it reduces mental overload by reducing complexity. Thanks, Uri.

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Anupam Yog

Conscious Cities | Regenerative Design, Creative Strategy, Mindfulness, Placemaking

3y

Wonderful post, in many ways the whole ‘business’ of the fast growing ‘nudge’ industry is this. Choice Architecture is actually a great tool, that if leveraged appropriately, can support purposeful brands.

Brant Long

Non-fiction for corporate brands | Brand director | Creative strategist

3y

Thanks for the references Uri Baruchin and the nuance (don't ever stop brandsplaining to us)! As usual, there is a tendency to valorise the over-simple in business. Like the COO who gets a report on marketing expenditure from the CMO who commissioned the first thorough study across the org. and responds with a "strategic" directive to just cut 10% across all spending, which the CMO decides is in his/her best interest to "implement" that year. *sigh*

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