Economy, Insights, IT, Knowledge, Future

Predictably Irrational by Dan Ariely

. Monday, June 15, 2009
0 comments

Below’s example is sourced from Dan’s Presentation from TED.com. You may checkout the full presentation here.

Firstly, try to look at a simple subscription form at Economist.com.

economist-picture

Anything wrong?

There are 3 options here.

  1. Web subscription for USD 59.
  2. Print subscription for USD 125.
  3. Print and web subscription for USD 125.

Now, your immediate attention is drawn to the comparisons of option 2 and 3. What kind of idiot will design this kind of options? It’s so obvious that nobody will ever choose options 2 right?

You’re absolutely right if you think this way. After all, 100 MIT students who were asked to choose amongst the options above, the result is as below:

  1. Option 1 : 16%
  2. Option 2 : 0%
  3. Option 3 : 84%

So, why don’t we just remove option 2?

Well, Dan Ariely, a behavioral economist did exactly that and retest the whole experiment again. This time, with just 2 options, the result came back as :

  1. Option 1 : 68%
  2. Option 3 : 32%

WOW! What just happened?

It turns out that when there were 3 options, the option 1 is mostly ignored. Instead, most people will zoom into option 2 (being the lesser intelligence option) and compared it against option 3. Nobody was actually comparing option 1.

Now, let’s start incorporating Option 2 into our life. (Eg. Bring a lesser attractive version of you to the bar and compare it against you. )

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Zemanta

. Saturday, June 13, 2009
0 comments

Image representing Zemanta as depicted in Crun...

Image via CrunchBase

Zemanta is a great tool to have while blogging. It’s a combination of Mediawiki, Blogspot and Picasa all rolled up in one. Now, I can just fire up Livewriter, and easily attach images onto the blog as well as tagging the relevant links (although most of it is linked back to Wikipedia).

It automatically links to popular sites based on the text in the blog. It also allow me to select images from its photo gallery or my own choosing. Sadly, it’s only Flickr at the moment. Most of my portfolios are in Picasa though. Finally, it also recommend tagging for SEO.

Nonetheless, this becomes a dilemma. I have just fallen in love with Chrome and Livewritter. However, with this, Firefox has just become a wiser choice to switch to again.

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]