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Breaking the Habit Research Streams

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Title: Breaking the Habit Research Streams


1
Breaking the HabitResearch Streams
  • Randy Salzman
  • TDM Research and Consulting

2
Why?Congestion Externality
  • In US, 226 million vehicles
  • Over 3.7 billion hours of travel delay and 2.3
    billion gallons of wasted fuel annually in
    congestion
  • Cost 63 billion in 2003
  • Congestion delayed travelers 79 million more
    hours and wasted 69 million more gallons of fuel
    in 2003 than in 2002
  • Individual drivers spent three times as much time
    stuck in traffic in 2003 an average 47 hours
    than 1983.
  • Texas Transportation Institute, 2005

3
Why? Global Warming Externality
  • Transportation causes 33 percent of US CO2
    emissions 1,959 million metric tons the
    largest single amount in economy while
    producing 11 percent GDP
  • C02 emissions to GDP fell 23 percent since 1990
    due to drops in industrial and commercial
    emissions amid overall economic gains
  • U.S. vehicle miles traveled are increasing over
    two percent annually and as much as 6.2 percent,
    erasing those industrial/commercial C02 gains
  • Americans drive 2.9 trillion miles/year in 411
    billion car trips, 87 percent alone
  • US-DOT, US-EIA, US-DOC

4
Why? Foreign Policy Externality
  • Americans drive 2.9 trillion miles/year in 411
    billion car trips, 87 percent alone
  • 70 percent of 19 million oil barrels/day into
    fuel tanks. 163 billion gas/diesel gallons
    annually in cars
  • 63 percent of oil imported (12.2 million barrels
    daily)
  • 251 billion annually to import oil. Largest
    amount in US trade deficit
  • US-DOT, US-EIA, US-DOC

5
Why? Foreign Policy Externality
  • US 2.7 of worlds oil reserves, 5 of
    population, uses 26 of worlds oil (USGS)
  • Much oil from countries who dont like America
  • 9 of 11 OPEC nations are Islamic. Two major
    exporters, Iran and Venezuela, angry at US,
    w/Nigeria in civil war
  • 2 in 3 barrels of proven oil in Persian Gulf
    states

6
Why? Foreign Policy Externality
  • Past 30 years, US engaged in petrol-imperialism
  • US puts up a democratic façade, emphasizes
    freedom of the seas (or pipeline routes) and
    seeks to secure, protect, drill and ship oil
  • US military become global oil protection force
  • Kevin Phillips, American Theocracy
  • Three in four worldwide call US in Iraq blood
    for oil in 2002 survey of 33,000
  • Pew Charitable Trust, 2003

7
Why?We Have No Choice
  • Theres really no doubt were going to have to
    change our habits. Were going to have to design
    our cities differently. Were going to need
    greater population densities and more public
    transportation.
  • We could be in deep trouble as a social
    system. How do we achieve fairness when the
    gridlock between rich and poor already stops us
    from having an energy policy.

We could see democracy entering its death
throes. Charles Maxwell, the energy guru often
called the dean of energy analysts
8
Driving Reasoning Isnt Rational
Yet TDM arguments are rational and long-term With
facts and figures, we emphasize
  • Global Warming
  • Pollution
  • Congestion
  • Health Issues
  • Foreign Policy Concerns
  • Safety
  • Space and Land Use
  • Parking

9
Rationality doesnt work
  • We often forget
  • Few want less in life
  • We cant quite change EVEN our lifestyles
  • How, then, can we address the world?

10
My Rides
  • Brutus and Blanche
  • Rides are more than transportation
  • Smug Front
  • CAFÉ rebound effect

Transport is not simply about physical
movements, it is about money, time, effort,
comfort, safety, reliability, habit, addiction
and culture. Transport in
Transition, by Stephen Peake
11
My Favorite Ride
  • For 30 years, Ive been promoting bicycle
    commuting
  • with logical, rational arguments
  • and for 30 years Ive been failing

12
Why Failing?
  • Some of the responses
  • My children need to get safely to school
  • Its not my job to tell our employees how to get
    to work
  • Where will I put my make-up on?
  • Arent you scared?

13
Rationality?
  • Rational answers to those and other responses are
    ineffectual
  • Rational, fact-filled arguments bore people
  • Cause cognitive dissonance

In the U.S. federal system, rational analysis is
a factor in only 12 percent of governmental
votes The World of the Policy Analyst, 1992
14
Best Description of Democratic Political
Leadership
  • See which way the parade is going and get in
    front
  • Media directs the paradeBUT
  • 1. Editors/publishers/bloggers/broadcasters are
    drivers
  • 2. Auto lobby spends advertising dollars
  • 3. Readers/listeners want simple, digestible
    stories
  • 4. Our arguments are long, upsetting, complex
  • 5. And dont come with ad dollars

15
Govt/media is MORE rational
  • The economic concept of the rational consumer
    does not exist
  • Advertisers seek the child market because, once
    hooked, he or she rarely changes brands
  • He or she sees more advertising AFTER buying
  • He or she does not want to hear bad news
  • He or she has been taught since birth that
    buying equals happiness
  • He or she has learned to expect instant
    gratification
  • He or she likes simplicity, not complexity

16
Hmmm
  • Were talking about individual behavioral change
  • on a massive scale
  • in the short term
  • almost without governmental support
  • in cultures which prize individuality
  • with little in the way of substitutions
  • which generally require decades to build

17
Still, we better try
  • We could be in deep trouble as a social
    system
  • We could see democracy entering its death
    throes.
  • Most analysts say the West has about 10 years to
    alter our oil consumption significantly before
    Peak Oil and Global Warming overwhelm our
    economies
  • And perhaps destroy our planet

18
So how to change behavior
  • Push methods (Sticks) Command and Control
  • 1. Higher gasoline taxes
  • 2. Londons congestion charge
  • 3. Higher parking charges
  • 4. Higher vehicle registration fees
  • 5. Key the paint jobs on all Hummers

19
So how to change behavior
  • Pull methods (Carrots)
  • 1. Education like Travel Awareness programs
  • 2. Enticements to try alternatives
  • 3. Strong leadership
  • 4. Subsidies
  • 5. Cash-out parking

20
TDM proponents have beenExpecting a Miracle
  • Saul at Damascus is a miracle because
    instantaneous behavioral change DOES NOT happen
  • Individuals do not hear one argument, one time
    and change their minds, much less their behavior
  • Behavioral change, instead, is a long,
    complicated, variable process unique to each
    individual

21
Self-Determination Theory
  • To be autonomously motivated involves feeling a
    sense of choice and volition as a person fully
    endorses his or her own actions.
  • Richard Ryan, Psychological Needs and the
    Facilitation of Integrative Processes,1995
  • Autonomous choice requires a decision that is
    accompanied by the experience of endorsement and
    willingness.
  • Moller, Ryan Deci, Self-Determination Theory
    and Public Policy, 2006

Autonomous choosers often become
additional mavens, and salesmen to move
society TO/FROM the necessary sustainable
tipping point
22
Intrinsic vs Extrinsic MotivationAutonomy vs
Control
  • Doing because its interesting, fun, satisfying,
    enjoyable
  • No coercion
  • Satisfies our basic psychological needs
  • Helps personal growth and affirmation
  • Pull methods
  • Doing due to pressure, cost, to forestall a
    punishment, achieve an outer-directed goal
  • To illustrate to others
  • Drives wealth, fame and image-consciousness
  • Push methods

23
Intrinsic Extrinsic MotivationAutonomy vs
Control
  • Autonomy-supportive policies provide meaningful
    information, not intended to frighten or pressure
  • Autonomy-supportive communications illustrate
    what is right for them the audience
  • Autonomous actions are internalized, maintained
    over time
  • And, again, the thems can become the uss

24
Intrinsic Extrinsic MotivationAutonomy vs
Control
  • Endangered Species Shoot, shovel and shut-up
  • London Booming market in fake license plates
  • Washington, D.C. Ebay market in free transit
    passes
  • Speed bumps less effective than rumple strips

25
Intrinsic Extrinsic MotivationAutonomy vs
Control
  • One third of car drivers indicated desire to
    reduce driving, but only 7 percent thought likely
  • Stradling, Meadows Beatty, Helping drivers out
    of their cars. 2000
  • Gain mastery, self esteem, autonomy, protection
    and prestige through car
  • Ellaway, Macintyre, Hiscock, Kearns, In the
    driving seat. 2003
  • After repeated drive choice, driving more
    frequent EVEN if easy walk distance
  • Garling, Fujii and Boe, Empirical tests of
    determinants of script-based driving choice. 2001

26
Intrinsic Extrinsic MotivationAutonomy vs
Control
  • Owning car gives me freedom
  • Or
  • Owning car is a significant burden

Agree with first Two-thirds
Agree with both One-third
Only two people statistically insignificant
agree solely with significant burden Handy,
Weston, Mokhtarian, Driving by choice or
necessity, 2005
27
Intrinsic Extrinsic MotivationAutonomy vs
Control
  • Individual behavior change does occur with
    learning over time
  • Richards, Turning intelligence into effective
    action, 2004
  • Short-term car-use behavioral change can occur
    EVEN if attitudinal change doesnt
  • Garvill, Marell, Nordlund, Effects of increased
    awareness on choice of travel mode, 2003
  • Some short-term auto usage change holds over if
    change in environment
  • Fujii, Garling, Kitamura, Changes in Drivers
    Perceptions and Use of Public Transport During
    Freeway Closure, 2001.

28
Intrinsic Extrinsic MotivationAutonomy vs
Control
  • Positive news

Ozone Alerts reduce individual driving Down 3.6
mile/day
Reduce it significantly if employer
program Down 11.6 mile/day
In the worlds worst driving city Atlanta,
Georgia, USA Henry Gordon, Driving less for
better air, 2003
29
Behavioral Change Model
  • Upstream before become drivers works best but
    car as freedom in teen years counters
  • Works better along with contextual/environmental
    change like moving, like gas/park price hike
  • Providing options/incentives but not too many
    allows autonomy with subtle extrinsic motivation
  • Since 1990, Cornell University in NY
  • has pushed and pulled and sang the praises of TDM
  • And today has 52 percent of employees arriving
    on alternative transport
  • Student parking permits halved in six years and
    26 percent now have purchased transit passes

30
Behavioral Change ModelSeven Stages of Change
  • 1. Awareness of Problem
  • Issues of automobile externalities, like
    congestion, global warming, foreign policy
  • 2. Accepting Responsibility (We have met the
    enemy and he is us!)
  • Understanding the personal, corporate,
    organizational relevance
  • 3. Perception of Options
  • Recognize that there are other methods of
    transport
  • 4. Evaluation of Options
  • Consider if one or more option is viable
  • 5. Making a Choice
  • Truly desire to modify own behavior
  • 6. Experimental Behavior
  • Getting out and trying that choice
  • 7. Habitual Behavior
  • Adopting for long-term

31
Seven Stages of ChangeTo affect consumer in
stages
  • 1. Awareness of Problem
  • 2. Accepting Responsibility
  • Whenever individual moves from one stage to next
  • Provide positive feedback
  • Thanks for becoming part of the solution
  • Public Info/Media Coverage
  • Seek Small Groups
  • Reiterate Externalities
  • Reiterate Specific Facts
  • Tell Positive Stories
  • Accept Defensiveness
  • Distance from Arguments

32
Seven Stages of ChangeTo affect consumer in
stages
  • 3. Evaluation of Options
  • 4. Making a Choice
  • Whenever individual moves from one stage to next
  • Provide positive feedback
  • Good thinking. For all options, you know theres
    a guaranteed ride home, right?
  • Target Leaners
  • Personalized Marketing
  • Focus on Journey Type
  • Bypass Defensiveness
  • Address Disincentives to Change
  • Provide Incentives to Try
  • Emphasize Doing whats right
  • Keep Press Distant

33
Seven Stages of ChangeTo affect consumer in
stages
  • 5. Making a Choice
  • 6. Experimental Behavior
  • 7. Habitual Behavior
  • Whenever individual moves from one stage to next
  • Provide positive feedback
  • I cant wait to see you in six months.
    Everybodys healthier and happier.
  • Focus on Type of Journey
  • Solve Disincentives
  • Illustrate Positive Personal Effects
  • Encourage Defensiveness
  • Ask for Feedback
  • Use as Example for Media, Internal Coverage
  • Ask for Support and Promotion

34
Understand the IndividualAll of Us Have
  • Opinions and Attitudes -- most of which support
    our behavior, including auto behavior
  • Avoid Cognitive Dissonance we shut down when
    faced with fact that our actions dont match who
    we claim to be
  • Latitudes of Acceptance areas around given
    attitudes in which well accept counter opinions.
    Stay inside LAT
  • And gradually move itrather than the attitude
  • Me I wont accept that my van, Brutus, is evil
    but I will accept that how I use him MIGHT be
  • My Beloved She wont accept that she should
    sweat at work but she will accept that she MIGHT
    take a shower at work

35
Americans Must Change BehaviorRemember
  • We could be in deep trouble as a social system
  • We could see democracy entering its death
    throes.
  • And Remember
  • Most analysts say the West has about 10 years to
    alter our oil consumption significantly before
    Peak Oil and Global Warming overwhelm our
    economies
  • And perhaps destroy our planet

36
TDM ProtoType Plan
  • Employer Based
  • 1. Save on Parking
  • 2. Save on Health Care
  • Utilizes Social Marketing (Guilt)
  • Utilizes Individualized Marketing
  • Underscored by extensive communication,
    marketing, behavioral change and consumer
    behavior data
  • Utilizes Carrots, sticks AND tambourines

37
TDM ProtoType PlanThink Globally, Act Locally
  • Discuss auto externality issues w/staff at
    monthly department/division meetings for 1 year.
    Socially market externalities in short,
    five-to-10 minute segments (one externality each
    meeting) led by know-nothing upper management
  • 1. Illustrates that management behind right
    thing. Upper management follows short basic
    script
  • 2. Allows framing of discussion. Max 10
    slides allows advocate to direct information flow
  • 3. Eliminates off-message questions. Keeps
    meeting short for departments benefit
  • 4. Allows monthly reiteration of same, simple
    right thing message in context. The company
    cares. Hope you do too
  • 5. Reinforces changers. Helps assure them
    they made right decision

38
Social ProtoType Health Externality Discussion
Maximum 10 slides
  • The greatest potential for organizational health
    benefits accrue if sedentary adults become
    moderately active on regular basis
  • Like walk to transit stop daily
  • Or active daily transportation
  • Business Every spent on fitness returns 3.15
    in health benefits alone
  • Doctors prescribe walks
  • Some employers pay bonus for fitness

39
TDM ProtoType PlanThink Globally, Act Locally
  • Monthly ask employees following externality
    discussion if want more info or consider another
    transportation mode. Sign each up for dialogue
    marketing
  • 1. Allows work with only employees beyond Stage
    1 and, therefore, more likely to address habit
    while building all toward Stage 2
  • 2. Allows bypass/isolation of advocates for
    auto lobby
  • 3. Builds towards individual and corporate
    tipping point
  • 4. Very similar to WAs TravelSmart

40
TDM ProtoType PlanThink Globally, Act Locally
  • Have knowledgeable advocate individually market
    that employee with data and rewards for
    attempting other commute styles. Likely require
    several individual meetings.
  • Again, very similar to Western Australias
    successful TravelSmart program.
  • 1. About 50 percent of called households refuse
    to hear more
  • 2. Still so effective that 135,000 families
    targeted this year
  • 3. Cost 50 per household
  • With social marketing, moves the mass as well as
    the low hanging fruit.

41
TDM-ProtoTypeIndividualized Marketing
  • Discover commute needs
  • Show options Hike, bike, car-van pool, transit
  • Bus schedule from nearest stop Perhaps free
    pass
  • Bike shop discounts
  • Nearby employees working similar hours
  • Emphasize guaranteed ride home program
  • Emphasize flex car possibilities
  • Solve other disincentives

42
TDM ProtoType Plan Individualized Marketing
  • In each company department, train first commute
    changers to become individualized marketers
  • 1. As known entities, they become living proof
  • 2. And can be compensated for cash-out parking
  • Constantly connect driving externalities to media
    articles
  • Illustrates personal rewards of those changers
  • 1. Women lose weight
  • 2. Men save money

43
TDM Prototype ProgramEffects
  • Combines social individualized marketing
  • Utilizes effective communications, marketing,
    consumer behavior, behavioral change and
    leadership research data
  • Will generate hard fact, not stated preference,
    data (Guaranteed ride home sign up park charge
    removal from pay check)
  • Can then devise program aimed beyond individual
    work place
  • Can get positive press as sustainable
    corporation and niche marketing
  • Convinces autonomous decision makers to aid in
    the promotion of TDM
  • Aids carry-over into other aspects of
    sustainability
  • Reinforces right decision before, during, after
    the fact

44
TDM Research Streams
  • Which externality discussion causes what
    demo/psychographic of consumer to move along
    ladder of behavioral change
  • Which incentive causes what consumer to
    experiment with new behavior
  • What amount of reinforcement is necessary to seal
    habitual change
  • How does alternative transportation effect public
    health
  • What effect does personal leadership have on
    consumer behavior
  • What are the effects of the number and types of
    communications
  • Toward a better model for transportation
    improvements (4-step and Transim)

45
In the End,We Must Produce This Research
  • We could be in deep trouble as a social
    system
  • We could see democracy entering its death
    throes.
  • Again
  • Most analysts say the West has about 10 years to
    alter our oil consumption significantly before
    Peak Oil and Global Warming overwhelm our
    economies
  • And perhaps destroy our planet

46
Stop Pleading, DemandingResearch Educational
Potential
  • Breaking
  • The
  • Habit
  • Randy Salzman
  • TDM Research Consulting
  • salz_at_rocketmail.com
  • US 434-987-2754
  • 434-979-3982
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