Hidden Brain - Success 2.0: The Obstacles You Don't See
Episode Date: May 15, 2023Think about the last time you tried to bring up an idea at work, and it was shot down. What did you do? Most of us think the best way to win people over is to push harder. But organizational psycholog...ist Loran Nordgren says a more effective approach is to focus on the invisible obstacles to new ideas. In this episode of our Success 2.0 series,  we revisit a favorite 2021 interview about overcoming the obstacles that hold back innovation. We all rely on incentives to get people to do things they might otherwise avoid. If you missed last week's episode, "Getting What You Want," be sure to check it out for ideas about how to use incentives to achieve your goals.Â
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This is Hidden Brain.
I'm Shankar Vedanta.
Funny.
What was the last time you baked a cake?
Last week here.
When American food companies introduced cake mixes in the 1930s, they figured they had
a winner.
All you had to do was add water to the mix and pop it into the oven.
You don't have to be an expert when you use my cake mix.
The man really goes for it.
There was just one problem.
American women were not going for it.
Sales lagged for nearly two decades.
Northwestern University researcher Lauren Nordgren says the lack of interest wasn't because
the cake's tasted bad.
The problem was psychological.
What baking a cake represents is care. And the perception was, was that making cake with a pre-packaged
mix was a violation of that act. General Mills hired a psychologist named Ernest Dictor,
who came up with a clever solution.
Instead of including dried eggs in their mixes, General Mills asked bakers to add fresh eggs.
When you make a cake from a mix, which do you want? A fresh egg cake or a cake made with dried eggs? Why fresh eggs, of course?
Cracking eggs and whisking them into the mix gave Bakers the sense that that cake was
homemade.
Sales of the mixes took off.
A perfect cake.
You be the judge or write General Mills Minneapolis Minnesota and get your money back.
This week on Hidden Brain, we continue our success 2.0 series with a look at a core component
of innovation, seeing things from the perspectives of other people.
Many organizations struggle to gain traction in a crowded marketplace.
They can decide should they invest in more marketing, better products or hiring.
At Northwestern University's Kellogg School of Management,
psychologist Lauren Nordgren says all those things are important,
but very often they fail to move the needle.
That's because most organizations focus on the things that can move them forward
instead of the things that hold them back. Lauren Nordgren, welcome to Hidden Brain.
Thank you so much. I am honored to be here. I want to start by understanding the nature of the
problem you've been studying for a while, Lauren. You have a wonderful example of a Chicago-based
furniture company. You call this company Beach House.
That's not the real name of the company.
But can you tell me what they were selling and what their sales pitch was?
Beach House makes fully customizable sofas and chairs.
And the promise is that you end up with a one-of-a-kind piece of furniture,
almost something like your own art.
And their target audience is young millennials.
This is often their first piece of adult furniture.
And they love the idea
and they love the process of creation.
So whether they would go into the design showroom,
whether they would do it online, people would spend hours designing the perfect sofa for them.
Now people clearly like the idea. They were coming in spending hours designing the sofa
as they want. It's done. But that turned out to not be the full story because something
happened before they could make the sale. What happened, Laura?
These would be customers
disappeared.
Now in Beach House's mind, their thought was, well, perhaps we need to reduce price further, thereby making
our product more attractive. Maybe we need a better
customer experience, so we should invest in that training.
Maybe we need to create higher quality fabrics and materials.
Maybe that's how we make the idea more attractive.
In many ways, this is so intuitive.
If you're a company that finds that people are not buying your product, you know, if you
want to grow, if you want more customers, you say, I need to improve my product.
I will give them a better deal or market yourself better.
Now beach hours eventually figured out why that potential customers were not completing
the sale.
They brought in a colleague of yours, David Schoenfeld, to try and understand the problem.
What did he discover?
And how did they fix the problem, what did he discover and how did they fix the problem? Lauren. David Schoenfall did what we might call an ethnography, a deep dive into the needs and
backgrounds of these disappearing customers. And one idea came up again and again and it was
people didn't know what to do with their existing sofa.
Think about it.
It's not as if they were just sitting on the floor.
They have an existing sofa.
They have an existing chair.
And they loved what Beach House had to offer,
but at some point, it occurred to them
that they cannot move forward with this thing they want to do
until they figure out what to do with their
current sofa because they can't have two.
So the questions would be things like, can I physically move it?
And if I can, do I just take it out to the trash or is there some special day or some special
service?
Do I trust that the city of Chicago is going to be efficient in providing that service,
et cetera?
Hmm. How did beach hours go about addressing the challenge once they discovered what the problem was?
The solution was to offer to pick up existing sofas upon delivery.
And the moment that offer was made, that conversion problem,
that disappearing customer
conundrum largely evaporated. The lesson of the story is that beach house didn't
need to push harder to make the sale. It didn't need to lower prices. It didn't
need to change its business model. Customers were already sold on all those
things. What it needed to do was
remove a hidden impediment that was keeping customers from completing the
purchase. Lauren says the same principle applies in the non-profit world.
Organizations trying to help people often think they need to market themselves
better or sell their vision more strongly.
You're bringing to mind one of the powerful stories that we think about, which comes from a woman by the name of Stacey Alonzo. And she was working at a shelter called Shade Tree for women and children who've experienced domestic abuse
and homelessness.
And she would have this similar experience
to the beach house case where, again and again,
she would see women pull up to the shelter,
stare at the shelter for minutes or hours.
Sometimes they would even walk all the way up to the door
and at the last second, they would even walk all the way up to the door and at the last second they would turn away.
And the question is why would they turn away? And
she discovered
what they were seeing is a sign on the door that said no pets allowed.
So if you are in a difficult domestic relationship,
the benefits of escaping that relationship are often very clear.
What was holding people back is this realization, this strong emotional sense that I simply
cannot leave a pet behind.
So the way they solve this problem and in such a beautiful story is she created what's called Noah's Animal
House, which is a facility that allows women to shelter their pets close by on the grounds
of the shelter itself.
So in each of these examples, Lauren, if you don't study what's holding people back, it can
seem as if there's some kind of invisible force that's
demotivating people and keeping them from taking action. So our stock response in these situations is to push people harder to add
carrots or sticks or what you call fuel.
You say a better approach is to understand the source of what's holding people back to understand the source of the friction.
Can you talk about the contrast that you're drawing
between fuel and friction?
Uh-huh.
The job of fuel is to elevate and enhance the appeal
of an idea.
So using incentives, using an emotional appeal,
giving data evidence, all of that is designed
to demonstrate the value of the new idea and initiative.
Friction is the psychological force
or the set of forces that resist change.
Now, frictions take different forms
and we often don't see them,
we often don't talk about them,
but in essence, frictions act as drag on innovation and change.
So we're going to talk about the different forms that friction can take in ways to overcome it,
but I want to start by laying out in some ways why it is organizations and individuals
tend to focus on the fuel component of the equation rather than on friction.
And I was thinking about trying to launch a spaceship
into orbit, for example, it does seem tempting to focus
on building a bigger rocket instead of designing
a lighter spaceship.
Why do you think that is, Laura?
It's because we naturally understand behavior
in terms of internal forces, things like motivation and intent,
understanding behavior, interpreting it in terms of these internal forces, like motivation and
intent, perfectly maps on to fuel. So you're trying to launch a new product and maybe people aren't buying. The way the mind understands that is to assume that it's because the appeal, the allure,
is insufficient.
And if that's the problem you imagine, the way you solve that problem is to elevate
appeal and fuel does that job.
I'm wondering if it's also possible to go back to my analogy of the spaceship.
Should you build a bigger rocket or should you build a lighter spaceship?
It's also, in some way, sexier to build a bigger rocket.
Designing a lighter spaceship means doing a vast number of things that are more humble,
designing lighter materials, lighter technology. If you have astronauts on board,
you want lighter plates and cups, so maybe even lighter clothing. I'm wondering if one
reason it's easier to focus on building a bigger rocket is because friction can be caused by so
many different things. And in some ways it's easier and sexier to think about the big solution
rather than the myriad small solutions. Absolutely. Friction requires discovery. Friction tends to require that we shift attention
from the idea itself, which is our natural point of fixation, and instead start to consider
the audience.
The broader contextual emotional needs of the audience. So frictions tend to be buried and therefore require discovery.
They require knowing our audience and knowing the context. It's really hard to remember that people don't engage with us for our reasons.
They engage with us for their reasons.
So we think we're selling a great sofa, surely that's what matters.
From the customer's point of view, the hassle of getting rid of their old sofa matters
as much, maybe more than the beauty of our sofas.
Absolutely right. Finding, uncovering, friction requires perspective taking and knowing your audience.
The problem goes even deeper. It's not just that we need to pay attention to both fuel and friction.
Sometimes, fuel creates additional friction.
Lauren told me about one effort that tried to dissuade men from writing graffiti
on the walls of a public bathroom. One message was a low fuel message. The other
made a stronger sales pitch. It applied more fuel. So there were two versions
that are roughly like one is, please do not write on the bathroom wall,
and the other was much stronger where it was, in essence, under no circumstance, should you write
on the bathroom wall. And not surprisingly, the one that had the stronger message produced the
greatest backlash.
And in some ways that speaks to what you were saying a second ago,
which is that our stock response of using fuel
as the way to get what we want,
we sometimes fail to see that in some ways it can produce its own resistance.
Yes, this is the folly of fuel.
So if you think about when we push on people,
their instinct is to push back.
So you see that fuel doesn't move the people
who are open to change,
and it often makes things worse for those
who reject the message.
Even the best ideas and organizations can face resistance.
Motivational messages can backfire.
Perfectly polite signs can make people more prone to bad behavior.
When we come back, the different kinds of friction we confront in the workplace and in our relationships,
and techniques to fight them.
You're listening to Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedantam.
This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedantam.
We've seen how it often takes more than a good idea
to make something a success.
All around us, there are hidden forces making it difficult to reach our goals, close a
sale, or convince others to adopt new ideas.
When organizations meet resistance, all too often, they focus on adding fuel, building
better products, selling harder or marketing better.
There's nothing inherently wrong with that, but there is something many organizations fail
to do.
They don't ask how they can subtract friction, how they can remove the obstacles that allow
their audiences, customers and clients to fully engage with them.
In their book, The Human Element overcoming the resistance that awaits new ideas, Lauren
Nordgren and David Schonthel, both professors at the Kellogg School of Management at Northwest
on University, say that part of the problem is that friction comes in many disguises.
We often fail to dismantle it because we simply don't see it. Lauren, you tell a story about the University of Chicago. It's one of the best schools in
the world, but for years the university had inexplicably low applications from prospective
students. So in 2005, for example, Princeton had 28,000 applications, Chicago had fewer
than 4,000. And initially you say many people at the university
believed it was because their school was more rigorous
and that this was what was discouraging applicants.
The unofficial motto of the University of Chicago
is where fun goes to die part of its culture.
It is a place of rigor.
And the belief was that that rigor, that reputation, kept people away.
Well, it turns out the rigor of University of Chicago at that time was not the only thing
that set it apart. Most schools today, when you apply to a college, you fill out some forms,
and then you can distribute those applications to dozens of schools.
University of Chicago required a customized essay, and often it is a wild, outlandish essay
that would require you to write a completely tailored application.
And from an economist, I suppose you would say, given that both the prestige of the school
and the low application rate, the day or two
that is required for you to write this application
is a worthwhile investment.
But a few years back, a controversial decision was made
to drop the uncommon app and to start using
the same system
their competing schools use.
And the moment that happened, applications went through the roof.
And that speaks to a really essential idea of friction.
It's that we tend to dramatically underestimate the power of these frictions. Often small changes
can have such a dramatic impact on behavior.
I want to spend a moment talking about a few other examples of this idea that people
really prefer the path of least resistance. You cite research that shows that in many workplaces,
people choose their friends based on where
their friends are sitting.
And that most people form close relationships
in the workplace with other people who
are within 160 feet of them.
Now, obviously, we spend more time
with the people who are sitting around us.
Maybe those people are part of our teams.
We get to work with them more often.
But it's telling that something as simple as workplace geography can end up shaping
personal relationships.
It's often referred to as the proximity principle, and one dimension of effort is ease of interaction.
And this was one of my first experiences in understanding the power of friction
as a graduate student.
There were two departments on the same floor.
And although we were two departments,
it felt like one department lunches together,
table tennis tournaments, coffee, beers, after work,
a lot of camaraderie.
And then one department moved up two floors. Now, it occurred to no one
that this would change the dynamics. In fact, we were all happy that we were getting more
space. But what happened? Those relationships, those interactions, it was like night or
day. The only time you would see these people that you once saw with great regularity was this
kind of awkward moment in the elevator where it really revealed what was the depth of this
relationship.
Well, apparently it's not stronger than two flights of stairs.
Wow.
So, we've seen that following the path of least resistance in some ways is the first friction
that we have to contend with.
It turns out there are at least three other kinds of friction.
And one of those, Lauren, is the issue of inertia.
Much of the time when we review something, a new change, a new proposal, a new product,
we're often comparing it to what we have to the status quo.
Can you talk about the role that inertia plays in holding organizations and communities back from change?
Yeah, the human mind reflexively favors the familiar
over the unfamiliar, even when the benefits
of the unfamiliar option are indisputable.
And we tend to favor the system we are in
over better new ways of doing things.
And this inertia tends to be greatest when we are pursuing big radical change.
If we think of the kinds of change that we are most hungry for,
whether that's societal or leaps in innovation. The problem is the greater the change, often the more resistance
people have because that unfamiliarity is an inherent friction. It creates resistance
and reluctance in the mind.
If you've suggested a new idea at work and watched it get shot down because it's too
novel, you've just encountered the friction of inertia.
If your company has come out with a new product and customers rejected out of hand because
it seems unfamiliar, that could be the result of inertia too.
The third form of friction is related to the first two.
People don't just pursue the path of least resistance when it comes to things involving
effort.
They pursue the path of least resistance when it comes to their emotions.
Lauren cites the example of a challenge faced by US Army recruiters.
Much like the beach house case, Army recruiters want more recruits, they want better recruits,
and they're mostly targeting junior seniors in high school.
And very often you see these people who are excited by the idea and Army life for the
right person is heavily fueled.
There's patriotism, so meaning, camaraderie, connection,
professional advancement opportunities.
You see these people who are clearly
intrigued, excited by the idea, but many of them,
a significant proportion of them, never enlist.
And a reason why is because they're afraid to tell mom and dad.
And for many of them, it's the anxiety is because they're afraid to tell mom and dad.
And for many of them, it's the anxiety around what parents will say, how they'll respond,
that leads them to simply never follow their dream.
Now, you can try to push harder on the idea of joining the army.
This is the fuel-based approach.
But remember, the people the Army wanted to persuade
were already sold on the idea.
That wasn't what was holding them back.
Lauren says the Army came up with a different approach
to reduce emotional friction.
The Army recruiter has scripts that can help the student
have that conversation.
And, anecdotally, we've heard cases of recruiters
who will even volunteer to have that conversation. And, anecdotally, we've heard cases of recruiters who will even volunteer to have that conversation
or be in the room when that conversation takes place.
Hmm.
So people experience emotional friction,
even when it comes to doing things
that they're highly motivated to do.
And in this case, I want to talk about the idea of dating.
Many people sign up for dating websites,
but then drop out because they
find the process to be emotionally draining. Can you talk about this idea and how some companies
have tried to find ways around this particular form of friction? A great story around emotional
friction is thinking about the emergence of online dating, the first generation platforms,
So the emergence of online dating, the first generation platforms, for example, match.com, and the second wave, Tinder being the best example.
And Tinder, specifically that second wave, quickly became the dominant model.
And a reason for that is because Tinder could spot a friction that was embedded in the
first generation website.
So when you talk to people on say match.com, there are emotional frictions embedded in the first generation website. So when you talk to people on say match.com,
there are emotional frictions embedded in that process. There are several, but a big one
is rejection. Right. So imagine you find the person, the person that checks every box.
This could be the one. So now what do you have to do, you have to craft the perfect email, funny,
but not too funny, serious, but not too serious, etc. That is its own form of effort, that
other friction. But now you write the perfect email, you've made your friends look at it,
etc. You send it off and what happens? Well, people here respond like you're too short,
you're not in my age range, I don't date Republicans,
or worse of all, you don't hear anything at all.
And so seeing that, Tinder came up
with a very compelling and elegant friction removal solution,
mutual matching. So if you're familiar with the Tinder platform,
you swipe on people you are potentially initially interested in, but you are only matched with people
who signal initial interest in you as well. In other words, there isn't this act of putting
myself out there only to experience rejection, I'm only paired with people who
signal interest with me.
We've looked at how I desired to follow the path of least resistance to prefer the status
quo and to reduce emotional costs, our three forms of friction.
You also talk about a fourth way that friction manifests in our lives.
You cite the example of mandatory seatbelt laws.
In 1984, New York State became the first state to pass a mandatory seatbelt law. Anyone
in the front seat of a car had to wear a seatbelt by law. Even though the move would eventually
save tens of thousands of lives, many people were initially outraged. I want to play you a
clip of Michael Nozzolio.
He's a New York State Assemblyman at the time,
discussing the new law.
The question here is whether we have the right,
whether we have the responsibility,
whether we have the judgment to turn to the citizens of this state
and be there in 1984.
Big brother.
Lauren, you call this reactants.
Can you explain what you mean by that term?
Yeah, reactants is the idea, it's the human impulse,
to want to push back against change.
And it is rooted in our desire for autonomy. Humans like most other
animals have a fundamental need to exert control and influence over their environment.
Innovation, creating change and influence, is incompatible with that basic human need. Like,
what is the innovator in the conventional sense trying to do? They're trying to get them to follow a particular direction.
Well, that's a restriction of freedom.
And when we feel that freedom being restricted,
the human impulse is to push back in order to restore this need,
to restore our autonomy or control.
You have a wonderful analogy in the book about how a bullet is fired from a gun.
It has two elements to it. It has both fuel and friction coming to play.
But you use this analogy, this metaphor, to sort of talk about the different ways we should think about fuel and friction.
Can you take us back to our high school physics days and explain how a bullet actually comes
out of a gun and what this has to do with fuel and friction?
We've asked thousands of people over the last year what makes a bullet fly and the near
universal answer to that question is gunpowder. And people say gunpowder because when
gunpowder ignites, it expands rapidly, creating tremendous pressure inside the barrel of a gun.
And the only way for that pressure to be released is to push the bullet out the end of the barrel.
push the bullet out the end of the barrel. So gunpowder isn't the wrong answer to that question,
but it is a woefully incomplete answer because anytime a physical object, be it a bullet or an airplane takes flight, there are these two opposing forces at play. There are the forces that
propel the object forward, gunpowder or a jet engine, but there are also these forces that oppose progress,
namely gravity and wind resistance.
The principal obstacle to a bullet is wind resistance,
and that is because the faster an object moves,
the stronger the resistance or drag.
In other words, add more gunpowder,
you simply add more drag.
So gunpowder explains the initial velocity, but the reason a bullet is able to fly so far
and so true is because it's aerodynamic.
It has been built to reduce the frictions operating against it and this is a useful metaphor for understanding our tendency
to think in fuel rather than friction.
You know, I'm a recreational swimmer, Lauren, and I'm also a student of swimming.
I think a lot about swimming technique and for a long time, I thought that the way to propel yourself forward in the water was essentially to
you know kick harder or to pull harder.
And it's only in recent years that I've actually started to realize that paying attention to drag is actually much more important than paying attention to force.
I mean, for one thing, drag matters much more than force. The amount of force you need to overcome drag is enormously costly.
But if you can be a little bit more aerodynamic or I guess hydrodynamic in the water,
you need much less power to actually move you forward. That's the same idea, I think.
Yes, and what resonates with me, the story we've heard again and again,
is that this is not the first insight, that it takes a lot of intral and error for people to arrive, whether it's
swimming or encycling, for them to come to appreciate how critical friction is and how costly
trying to improve performance just through more exertion, more fuel, really is.
We've seen the different ways friction can hold back organizations, communities and governments
from achieving their goals.
We've also seen that pushing harder can sometimes not just be ineffective, but actually counterproductive.
When we come back, techniques to reduce friction.
You're listening to Hidden Brain.
I'm Shankar Vedantam.
This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedantam. When prospective customers fail to buy a
product or employees fail to listen to a directive or citizens fail to comply
with a law.
Marketers, managers and policymakers often focus on selling their message harder.
If carrots fail, they bring out sticks.
At Northwestern University, Lauren Nordgren and David Schonthel say there is a better way.
Instead of selling harder, make it easier for the people
who are trying to convince to buy what you are selling.
Fight the frictions that hold them back.
Lauren, one of the first forms of friction we discussed
was a desire to follow the path of least resistance.
Many years ago, psychologists were asked to help boost
the number of people
getting tetanous shots. They tried the idea of selling the value of the shots, being more persuasive,
adding fuel, but only 3% of people bought that message and got the shot. But they also tried
something else that boosted that number to 28%. What did they do?
that number to 28%. What did they do? They simply asked people to mark down in their calendar
when they are going to get the shot and gave them a map of the inoculation center.
And what do you think that is showing us, the fact that in some ways they did these very simple logistical things that help people with the logistics of the
decision rather than trying to persuade them that in fact it was the right decision.
What it is doing is simply making the action easier.
So one dimension of effort is simply the complexity of performing the task.
Writing it in a calendar makes it easier to remember.
A big reason why people don't go to checkups
they intend to go to is not because they don't see the value
in it, is simply because life gets complicated.
Helping people find the window of opportunity
to give them a roadmap for performing the behavior you want,
is often the most important step in creating the behavior we want.
When Netflix automatically plays the next episode of a TV series,
it's reducing the tiny friction of requiring you to say,
you want to watch the next episode.
The result?
A lot more streaming.
A lot more binge watching.
Now the reduction in friction seems trivial.
How much effort does it take to pick up a remote and hit play?
But Netflix and other streaming companies have found reducing this tiny friction has big
effects.
Lauren has found the same thing
when it comes to getting his students
to do something he really wants them to do,
fill out course evaluations.
First, it's essential that you have
near a hundred percent completion
to make sense of evaluations.
And for years, I, my colleagues have been following
a decidedly and now in retrospect,
embarrassingly, fuel-based approach, describing the importance, looking people in the eyes,
this kind of eyeball to eyeball emotional appeal, assuring them that I take it
seriously and learn a lot from it. And I have found no influence technique that could get this particular student body above 75% completion
rates until one day I changed a practice and now it is near universal. What I do now
is simply carve out time on the final day to have people complete the form. And what I am doing in that act is simply making the thing
we want easy, because I suspect they all want
to fill out this form.
But the moment they walk out the door,
tomorrow is a better day to do it.
And many of them just never complete their intended action.
One of the pernicious forms of friction we
discussed earlier Lauren was reactants. We often respond like small children when
someone suggests something to us. Our first reaction is often to object even if
it's something we might like or at least eventually like. Researchers in
Germany, the Netherlands and Luxembourg once tried different methods to get
people to quit smoking. Do you remember
the study? Can you tell me what they did and what they found? Yeah, it was a very simple idea.
Smokers were exposed to messages that were anti-smoking about the health risks of smoking,
but they created a very simple manipulation. In one case, someone read the script to them.
In another case, they read the script out loud.
In that latter case, people found the ideas more persuasive than when
the very same evidence and data was read to them.
And what that speaks to, I think, is one of the most important ideas around creating
change in the world.
And it's the notion that we are most effectively and profoundly influenced not by ideas and
data and evidence that people give to us or force upon us, but rather by ideas
and evidence we generate on our own.
I mean, it's a remarkable study because in this case, the messages actually did come from
someone else.
They were not self-generated, but merely the act of reading the message as opposed to
listening to the very same message change the ownership that people felt relative to the idea.
Yes, ideas are also like kids,
and that we always love our own more than any other.
The intuitive role of the innovator
is to have the idea and to push for change.
A master of influence and innovation is going to
understand that through some process of co-design through co-ownership, we want
people to commit themselves to these ideas.
Now this is easier said than done. If you want to bring about change, what Lauren is saying is you want the people you are trying to change to feel like they are the authors of that change.
So, how do you go about creating the conditions for self-persuasion?
One fundamental feature is we need to begin a positions of alignment. What I mean by that is very often
we begin conversations at the point of conflict. You and I might both recognize that we need
to change practices, but what we disagree upon is how to solve this particular problem.
So we begin the conversation there. That's starting at the place of misalignment.
Self-persuasion begins by understanding what is our space of alignment and establishing that
baseline of agreement. The second feature of self-persuasion, we need to stop telling people what to think,
and instead we need to ask.
An executive gave this great example.
His rule of thumb is when you are in a meeting,
and you disagree with someone's position
or the direction the team is taking.
Never give your counterarguments until you first get people to tell you they're
open to what you have to say. And the way you do that is imagine you listen very closely
and then ask the question, are you open to a different point of view? I see the merits
of your position, but I have some concerns, are you open to a different perspective? That is what we would call a yes question,
because when you ask that question to people,
the vast majority of people will say yes.
And simply getting people to say yes,
I want to hear what you have to say.
In fact, makes them more open to your point of view.
One place to see how fuel and friction produce very different outcomes is in the context of interpersonal relationships like marriage. Psychologists have found, for example,
that adding fuel to a relationship is a great idea. Say and do nice things, offer compliments,
but it's even more important to reduce friction. Removing the
negatives in a relationship is often far more important than increasing the positives.
It is one expression of the negativity bias, the idea that negative experience carries greater weight psychologically, emotionally, than positive experience.
For relationships, it's something like five to one.
Good relationships is a very loose rule of thumb.
They can afford the occasional negative experience, but the key point here is if you're in a
relationship that's one to one, whether it's your significant other, whether it's your boss or manager, for every one nice moment, you have one negative
moment.
That is not a balanced experience that is experienced as a negative toxic interaction because
negative experience carries so much weight. And it's precisely for that reason that focusing on friction can be so valuable.
In other words, focusing more on the problems in a relationship, trying to reduce those elements
of friction, of conflict. In some ways, that might matter more than trying to score more positive points
in a relationship, not to say the positives don't matter, but that reducing the negatives
might matter more than increasing the positives. Yes, it means that if you have wonderful romantic
dinners and surprise and delight flowers and you create these positive interactions and moments.
But then you're prone to the blowout fight.
That one moment can undo so much
of these other positive experiences.
And the same is true at health and happiness
within organizations.
When you have a toxic work culture,
often the impulse is to throw rewards and perks
Happy hours
Inducents, that's all fuel-based thinking
That does very little because until that negative experience is addressed
That positivity is worth very very little
One of the ideas that you talked about right at the start, and I want to return to, is the
idea that more organizations should act like ethnographers. We cannot understand what is
holding us back until we take the time and trouble to see things from the points of view
of our customers and clients and partners. Can you talk about this idea and the importance
of applying the principles of ethnography as we go through life, Lauren? Yes. Friction, as we said, is a process of discovery.
It requires understanding the needs of the people that we are trying to serve.
And the better insight we have, the better position we are to understand and remove the frictions that hold people back.
And there are different ways to achieve that level of insight and perspective.
One can be talk to people, and when you're talking to people, the best question is a simple one. it's simply asking why. And you might ask it more than once, because
often it takes a while to really understand the true issue holding people back. And another
interesting technique is to bring the people you are attempting to serve into the process,
because now you can better understand your idea or innovation through their lens,
through your perspective because you have them in the room with you.
I'm wondering, Lauren, you've done all this thinking and work about the roles of fuel and
friction. Have you applied this in your own life? Do you find yourself, you know, applying
fuel to solve a problem and stopping yourself and saying, let me try and understand the
source of the friction.
Yes, absolutely.
So one example that immediately comes to mind is my life-long effort
to convince my father to buy a mobile phone.
So my father's in his mid-90s, he fought in World War II,
fascinating guy, and still active,
despite his age, still takes walks in the woods, is quite independent.
But because of that independence and living alone, I worry a lot about him, and I and the
rest of the family would feel a whole lot better if he had a communication device that is
hip.
Fortunately, he tracks all societal ill
to the innovation of the cell phone.
And for years, I've been using all the influence
persuasion nudge techniques to try and convince him
to get a cell phone, but he is a classic resistor.
And I suspect all of those techniques simply
pushed him further along the path. I would love to be able to say I have now succeeded in that
effort, but I haven't, because now there is such deep suspicion and resistance time I even broached the subject. But if I were to start over,
if I hadn't so effectively solidified
his anti-mobile phone views
with all of my pushing and reactants,
I might say something like,
so dad, a friend of mine is trying to find the right phone
for his grandmother and she's about your age. Would you be willing to
come with me and look at phones? I'd like to see which ones seem better for her. And what I'm
attempting to do in that process is not to push him down this path, but to create an environment and room
for him to begin to discover this technology on his own.
That's one way you could move from reactants to say self-presuasion.
Lauren Nordgren is a psychologist at Northwestern University. Along with David Chonthel, he's the author of the book, The Human Element, overcoming the resistance that awaits new ideas. Lauren, thank you for joining me today on Hidden Brain.
Thank you so very much, this has been delightful.
So very much this has been delightful.
Hidden Brain is produced by Hidden Brain Media. Our audio production team includes Bridget McArthei, Annie Murphy-Paul, Laura Correll, Kristen Wong, Autumn Barnes, Ryan Katz, and Andrew Chadwick.
Tara Boyle is our executive producer. I'm Hidden Brain's Executive Editor.
Our unsung heroes today are Jimmy Hart and Ty Hyman. Jimmy and Ty are sales engineers at
Sweetwater, a company that sells equipment and software for musicians and producers.
Whenever we reach out, they respond quickly and helpfully. As Laura Nordgren might say, they reduce all the frictions that might get in the way of
our work.
As an added bonus, they are delighted to work with.
Thank you, Jimmy and Ty.
Coming up next week on our success 2.0 series, the psychology of self-doubt.
How to cope with nagging feelings of insecurity,
and even make them an ally.
We don't acknowledge accomplishments
to the extent that they should be acknowledged,
and so we sometimes just minimize them.
I'm Shankar Vedantam.
See you soon.