A leading behavioral economist shows how to improve our thinking and decisions in an age of screens.
We think differently on screens. We might even think differently on different types of screens. The medium shapes the message.
By drawing on the latest research, behavioral economist Shlomo Benartzi shows that many of the nudges and cues that influence our offline choices fail to work online. Instead, our digital behavior is driven by a new collection of quirks and tendencies, such as the screen location effect, in which the precise location of an item on a display can make us far more likely to pick it.
Until we understand how people really think on screens, we ll never be able help them think better. Using provocative case studies, Benartzi shows how the right kind of digital intervention can help consumers cut wasteful spending, lose weight, and shop more effectively. It can even save lives.
We think differently on screens. We might even think differently on different types of screens. The medium shapes the message.
By drawing on the latest research, behavioral economist Shlomo Benartzi shows that many of the nudges and cues that influence our offline choices fail to work online. Instead, our digital behavior is driven by a new collection of quirks and tendencies, such as the screen location effect, in which the precise location of an item on a display can make us far more likely to pick it.
Until we understand how people really think on screens, we ll never be able help them think better. Using provocative case studies, Benartzi shows how the right kind of digital intervention can help consumers cut wasteful spending, lose weight, and shop more effectively. It can even save lives.
"This book is a real eye-opener. It describes how we really function in a screen-based society, and how the digital world is changing our thinking about ourselves and others."
ROBERT SHILLER, winner of the Nobel Prize in Economics; professor of economics at Yale University; author of Finance and the Good Society
"We know that the way we organize a buffet influences the choices people make. What is much less clear is the way online environments influence our decisions. In this useful book, Benartzi and Lehrer give us precise insights about the relationship between what we see on the screen, what we think, and what we choose."
DAN ARIELY, professor of psychology and behavioral economics at Duke University; author of Predictably Irrational
"Our lives increasingly depend on the interaction of bounded minds with bound-less information on screens. In this insightful book, Benartzi explores the human experience in the digital world and considers the many ways social, psychological, ethical, and financial we might make screens serve us better. A fun, important, and revelatory read!"
ELDAR SHAFIR, professor of psychology and public affairs at Princeton University; coauthor of Scarcity
"What makes businesses such as Uber and Amazon so disruptive is nothing other than the magical power of the screen. Change the interface and our behavior changes. We like to believe that our preferences exist independently of the medium in which we express them. But as this book so brilliantly explains, this is very far from the truth."
RORY SUTHERLAND, vice chairman, Ogilvy & Mather UK
"If you think you know how screens influence human behavior, think again. This book is a must-read for investors, business owners, and anyone else with a stake in how people make decisions in the digital age."
BILL HARRIS, CEO of Personal Capital; former CEO of Intuit and PayPal
ROBERT SHILLER, winner of the Nobel Prize in Economics; professor of economics at Yale University; author of Finance and the Good Society
"We know that the way we organize a buffet influences the choices people make. What is much less clear is the way online environments influence our decisions. In this useful book, Benartzi and Lehrer give us precise insights about the relationship between what we see on the screen, what we think, and what we choose."
DAN ARIELY, professor of psychology and behavioral economics at Duke University; author of Predictably Irrational
"Our lives increasingly depend on the interaction of bounded minds with bound-less information on screens. In this insightful book, Benartzi explores the human experience in the digital world and considers the many ways social, psychological, ethical, and financial we might make screens serve us better. A fun, important, and revelatory read!"
ELDAR SHAFIR, professor of psychology and public affairs at Princeton University; coauthor of Scarcity
"What makes businesses such as Uber and Amazon so disruptive is nothing other than the magical power of the screen. Change the interface and our behavior changes. We like to believe that our preferences exist independently of the medium in which we express them. But as this book so brilliantly explains, this is very far from the truth."
RORY SUTHERLAND, vice chairman, Ogilvy & Mather UK
"If you think you know how screens influence human behavior, think again. This book is a must-read for investors, business owners, and anyone else with a stake in how people make decisions in the digital age."
BILL HARRIS, CEO of Personal Capital; former CEO of Intuit and PayPal