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R&D ON MESSAGING: GETTING AND STAYING AT TOP OF MIND JONATHAN ZINMAN DARTMOUTH COLLEGE CFSI Miami June 10, 2010
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Overview of Talk What we know Getting from cutting-edge social science research… …to value-added development in messaging to customers. What we don’t know Concepts for dealing with those unknowns How we prove and refine those concepts
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Messaging: What We Know Consumer attention is limited Sometimes profit when attention is low Bank overdraft fee Sometimes profit by grabbing attention at key moment Debt “on demand” Savings at 401(k) enrollment
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What we know: Challenges to effective messaging KISS: avoid information overload Most people undervalue value-added in personal finance The customer is not always “right”, especially at first Many people lack clear goals Even more people lack clear tasks Even those with tasks struggle to stay “on”
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Messaging: What We Don’t Know Message what: optimal content? Message when: optimal timing? Message how much: duration, frequency? [customization] Message + what else: bundle? Product (features)
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Messaging: How We Learn Take concept based on Cutting-edge research Business intuition/experience/constraints Test it using randomized-control field trials “gold standard” in direct marketing, retailing (both finance and goods), medicine Evaluate and refine Virtuous cycle
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Experimentation & the Learning Organization: A Virtuous Cycle Experiment Innovate Evaluate
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From R to D: Example Phase 1 R&D project with 2 banks Concept: bundle SMS reminders with programmed savings accounts Test: randomize SMS reminders to save among new programmed-savings customers Randomize content too Evaluate Balances increase; reminders that mention client goals are particularly effective Reminders cost-effective for 1 bank
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From D to R: Example Consolidate, refine, build on Phase 1 Phase 2 projects with several banks Expand what worked in Phase 1 Test new concepts Timing Duration Bundle with goal-setting & planning tools Different approaches for “auto-pilot” vs. “hands on wheel”?
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Thank you!! [extra slides follow…]
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Message What? Thoughts on Crafting Content Objective: salience Tension: information overload Strategies Mentioning specific goals probably helps How elicit those goals? Need plan too? “A goal is not a plan” What else, if anything? Remind of plan? Progress toward goal? Distance to goal?
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Message When? Thoughts on Timing Right Get people when they’re (il)liquid Depending on what you’re selling Get people when demand is high Messaging, not education Get people around task due dates Get a captive audience
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Message How Much? Breaking In, Wearing Out Tension: habit formation vs. tuning out Early and often probably helps But for how long? Need to vary content over time to mitigate “tuning out”?
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Message + What Else? Thoughts on Features, Bundles Goal-setting tools Plan-making tools Linked accounts Pathways to other products Customization Customer is not always right
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From Research to Development: Impulse Saving How critical are features that streamline saving? Automatic transfers (“pay yourself”) One-click transfers If critical do we make these a strong boilerplate in the signup process? E.g., how much do you want to auto-transfer from checking to saving the day after each paycheck deposit date? (click here if you do not want to auto-transfer) If someone doesn’t sign up for auto-, do we remind them? When, how often, and what’s the message?
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From Research to Development: Pricing Pilot testing can help pin down optimal pricing, given a bank’s strategic objectives and revenue- model Free? Fee? Teaser pricing?
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