Psychology drives our behaviour, and yet we struggle miserably to forecast the impact it will have. Therefore, we cannot predict behaviour with any real accuracy, except with the benefit of hindsight, or across the average, assuming we ask the right questions.
There are five important psychological factors that profoundly impact the sorts of decisions, big and small we make every day.
Status, Certainty, Autonomy, Relatedness, Fairness.
Psychologists put them together into the ‘SCARF’ model as they set about understanding the drivers of behaviour, which centres around ‘away’ movements to minimise threats, and ‘towards’ movements to maximise rewards.
Status. We all know it is important, that is how Mercedes manage to squeeze 4 or 5 times the money out of buyers than a perfectly adequate, reliable, and outfitted with bells and whistles Korean or Chinese alternative. It is why people pay tens of thousands for a watch, assume crushing debt to have a luxury car in the drive, and Louis Vuitton is the world’s most valuable luxury brand.
Certainty. Uber nailed this one. The time we wait for a taxi is different to the time we wait for an Uber, even when the Uber wait is longer. This is because we are waiting with certainty, we know when the Uber will arrive, we know where it is right now, and we can walk out of the building as it pulls up, which adds a feeling of status to the equation. By contrast, call a taxi and then wait, uncertain when it will turn up.
Autonomy. We all like to feel we are making our own decisions, even when we are not. We love that feeling of freedom, even when it is an illusion, or inside a tiny arena of personal space.
Relatedness. Human beings are social animals, we like to feel like others are aware of us, and concerned with our needs, views, and ideas. It is like being in a book club, there are psychological rewards to being in a group that values your presence. We also need the group for protection, as it is the outliers that become a lion’s breakfast.
Fairness. Instantly we rate things on a fairness scale, we like to be seen as fair, even when we are diddling the books. Is it fair that the bloke next door who does the same job gets paid 20k more?
None of these things appear in economic models.
It was Einstein (amongst others) who said, ‘not everything that matters can be measured, and not everything that can be measured matters’.