Gay Phones must DIE!
https://www.forbes.com/sites/elizab...phone-x-doesnt-make-you-happier/#739e2e4d2333
Don't Be Surprised If Apple's iPhone X Doesn't Make You Happier
Elizabeth Harris , Contributor
I focus on the psychology of money and financial decisionmaking. Opinions expressed by Forbes Contributors are their own.
Senior Vice President of Worldwide Marketing at Apple, Philip Schiller, speaks during a media event at Apple's new headquarters in Cupertino, California on September 12, 2017. / JOSH EDELSON/AFP/Getty Images
Apple’s latest creations have all the allure we’ve come to expect from the company’s carefully orchestrated marketing machine. Celebration of an
anniversary? Check. Sleek designs? Um, always.
Upgrades? Check and check. For if you already possess an iPhone, a new model may be baked into your mobile phone service plan creating a habit of anticipating the next, yes, upgrade.
But before automatically forking over nearly $1,000 for
iPhone X, it may be worth examining how most of us react when presented with a new, “improved” product. Welcome to the world of comparison neglect, where we don’t adequately investigate and weigh alternatives and can be easily swayed by the perception of that so-called “upgrade.”
Aner Sela, a marketing professor at the University of Florida’s Warrington College of Business, studied this tendency toward comparison neglect — particularly when presented with upgrades. His work (specifically in the context of smart phones) shows that few people actually compare features unless we are
prompted to do so (more details on the
study are here) which is the last thing a company with the insane marketing savvy of Apple is going to do for you. And
early reports of
slower sales for iPhone 8 suggested some may have been holding out for
iPhone X which began
pre-order sales today and will be
available in stores next week.
Sela’s strategy? He says that whenever you get a whiff of a major marketing push or hear upgrade, that’s the time for closer scrutiny. Developing this discipline might “help people to develop skills and literacy to make better upgrade decisions that will eventually be more rewarding in the long term,” Sela says.
How to begin? Slow your decision-making by asking:
- Do whatever new features are being introduced merit the cost of purchasing a new one?
- If so, what is truly important to you?
- How much do you value them?
Sure, there may changes — in the case of iPhone X, wireless charging, facial recognition capabilities and higher-resolution photography are, well,
cool. But are you
actually dissatisfied with what you have now? Can you use the phone for what you need it for? Is it
good enough?
Sela’s study shows that
simply asking people to compare options may alter their choice — a reminder to think concretely of the features they already had significantly decreases the tendency to upgrade.
Next, consider that we are easily impressed by feature improvement, an idea advanced by the University of Chicago’s Graduate School of Business’s Christopher Hsee — something he and his co-authors call
medium maximization. Is the product completely novel or just an incremental improvement (like a larger screen)? Will the new facial recognition software, for instance, truly enhance our security and is that something you value? “We forget those features are not valuable in and of themselves,” Sela says.
There’s also a natural urge to try and replicate the feelings of excitement and enthusiasm we may have experienced when a truly innovative new product first emerged — like that very first
iPhone. Yet attempting to recreate that feeling may be like reconnecting with an old flame — offering the remembrance of love but not the same rush of feelings. Or as Sela puts it about the iPhone, “Not every new generation is groundbreaking, but we seek out that experience.”
It’s the feeling you can’t put your finger on as you start picturing what it will be like to hold the iPhone X, a desire that you can’t quite name. As Sela could tell you, that’s the marketers winning you over, the tell-tale sign that the hoopla is working.
Finally, watch out for
opportunity cost neglect. Shane Frederick, a professor of marketing at Yale University’s School of Management finds that much of the time we don’t adequately weigh the tradeoffs in making a choice —
what are you giving up to get this? Frederick’s and his collaborators’
research suggests some benefit in reframing the question. Instead of
should I buy this or not? Try:
Should I keep the cash and save it and use it for other things? In other words, making the alternative of not buying something more valuable and vivid and you’ll likely alter the outcome.
To be sure, everyday purchases don’t necessitate challenging each potential acquisition — think how exhausting a trip to the grocery store would be. But big-ticket items are definitely worth that extra effort even if in the end you decide to go ahead and buy that new car/house/computer/phone.
“We can’t and sometimes don’t need to use all these muscles and tricks when most of the purchases we make are routine or benign,” Sela says. “But whenever we’re faced with an unusual or slightly out of the ordinary frivolous decision, it’s a good idea to open that tool box and see if it changes that decision.”