When we let our hearts choose for us, we are more
influenced by people who resemble ourselves, a PhD study from BI Norwegian
Business School shows.
Every day we have to make a number of choices, and it is
not always easy to know what the right choice is. That is why we often seek
advice from others before making decisions. The Internet provides us with
entirely new ways of finding out what other people feel about different
products and services.
Many of us book hotel rooms online. Unless we are already
familiar with the hotel, we will probably read reviews by former guests at the
hotel before making up our minds. Such reviews are written by many different
types of guests, families with small children, families with older children,
single travellers, older guests and many other groups.
If you are a 25 year old student, for instance, you might
attach different weight to a review from a student of your own age (the
reviewer is similar to you) than you would to the comments from a 60 year old
professor (who is different from you).
Influence
from those who are similar
In his PhD study at BI Norwegian Business School, Ali Faraji
Rad has conducted seven experiments to see whether we are more easily persuaded
by people who are similar to us than by people who are dissimilar to us. He
also looked at what circumstance might make the differences greater.
In all the experiments, participants were asked to
imagine that they were going to book a hotel room online, and that they were
reading a review of the hotel they were considering. Participants were then
given a negative review of this hotel, along with a profile of the reviewer.
The profiles were designed to create a feeling of similarity or dissimilarity
with the participant in the experiment.
"Participants were more influenced by reviewers who
were similar to themselves than by reviewers who were dissimilar. This
difference was greatest when the choice of hotels was based on emotions and not
logic," explains Ali Faraji Rad.
Logic
and feelings
In the first experiment, half of the participants were
asked to use logic in evaluating the hotel, while the others were was asked to
base their evaluation on feelings. Those participants who based their
evaluation on feelings, were influenced by reviewers similar to themselves.
Similar reviewers had no influence on participants who
chose their hotel room on the basis of common sense and logic.
In the second experiment, half the participants were
asked to write down some thoughts on why it is good to use logic when making
decisions, while the other half was asked to write about why it is good to use
our emotions when making decisions.
In this way, participants were primed to base their
choice on logic or emotions.
The second experiment showed the same results as the
first one. Participants who used their emotions were influenced, while those
who followed their sense of logic were unaffected by reviewers who resembled
themselves.
Business
or pleasure
In experiments 3 and 4, Ali Faraji Rad instructed half of
the participants to imagine that they were going away for fun, while the other
half thought they would be travelling with work.
Previous studies have shown that we are more likely to
use our emotions when we travel for fun than if we have more functional motives
(such as a business trip).
Those participants who were thinking of a trip for fun
were, as expected, more affected by the similar reviewer than those who were
told to imagine a business trip.
Near
and within reach
One half of the participants in the fifth experiment were
asked to evaluate the hotel and imagine that they would be travelling next
week, while the others were told they would be going in a year's time.
Participants who thought they were going next week were
more influenced by similar reviewers than those who were to travel in a year's
time. "Our choices are more based on emotions when they concern the near
future."
In the sixth experiment, half the participants were told
to imagine they were in a lottery where the chance of winning the hotel package
was 1 to 5, while the other half received much longer odds, 1 to 5000.
Participants with the best chance of winning were more
influenced by the similar reviewer than participants with longer odds.
"With a good chance of winning we feel that the trip
is within reach, and we base our choice more on feelings," says
Faraji-Rad.
Information
in one's memory
In the seventh and final experiment of the PhD study,
half the participants had to remember a seven-digit figure while assessing the
hotel. The other half only had to remember a two-digit figure.
Earlier research has shown that we are more likely to use
our emotions when we have to retain too much information in our memory.
Those participants who had to remember the seven-digit
figure were more influenced by the similar reviewer (than by the dissimilar
reviewer), even when they envisioned going on a business trip.
Reference:
Ali Faraji-Rad: When the message feels right.
Investigating how source similarity enhances message persuasiveness, Series of
Dissertation 8/2012. BI Norwegian Business School.
Image Source: http://www.sxc.hu/photo/1387838
Image Source: http://www.sxc.hu/photo/1387838
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