Beyond Behavior Change
Behavior change is fast becoming the holy grail of the sustainability sectors.
In our quest, we tend to be preoccupied with how we’d know it when we see it (measurements, metrics, observable outputs, profits, sales). This is understandable. We do need behavior change to be scaled up radically, if we are to avert some of the direst ecological threats we face. However, in the rush to uncover the most effective technology, tool, widget or methodology to help “unlock” this elusive magic box, we seem to be overlooking something quite fundamental.
That is, when we become solely focused on ‘getting’ behavior change, we overlook the most important part - change.
When we overlook the verb in behavior change, we run the risk of turning behavior change into a ‘thing,’ as if a concrete object. We also are unwittingly acting like engineers when we need to be thinking more like psychologists. Behavior change is dynamic. It is also nonlinear, driven by cognitive, affective and social levers. When we rush into solutions and applications too quickly, we short-circuit the potential to go deeper, and get the results and traction we need.
"Deeper" in this case involves uncovering (or decoding) what is actually experienced for people when it comes to sustainability and sustainable brands. Experience does not mean opinion, view, attitude, or belief. Experience is how we feel and create meaning. It is not rational or always conscious. It can be confusing and contradictory and tangled. It’s our job to sort through the ‘tangle’ so we can be more informed and meet people where they are.
Therefore, I suggest we need to focus less on ‘behavior change’ and more on meaning change. Meaning largely drives and informs what we call “behavior.” And meaning is constructed through our interactions, relationships, contexts, histories and practices. When we commit ourselves to investigating meaning, we are investigating behavior change. We are just going about it a bit less frontally, and more laterally. And this will likely get where we need to go faster.
What does this mean for our research and practices? As I’ve written here before, it involves several key steps. First, it requires us to bring an attitude of genuine inquiry to our work. In order to address behavior change on the levels required – beyond quick fixes and incentives, which we know don’t have the desired traction – we need to reframe behavior change to include meaning and relationships. And then be prepared to listen. What does this product mean for people? What are the conflicts, dilemmas or concerns that may arise? Can we then systemically code and analyse this data for our strategies? (I would say, absolutely yes.) Taking our cue from the brilliant work of LoveMarks and Emotional Branding, we need to infuse how we approach behavior change with similar verve, innovation and inquiry. We need to ask different questions, and become better listeners.
Second, a meaning-centered approach to behavior change is also about recognizing what change is about. Here we can look to the groundbreaking work of change management professionals, such Cynthia Scott who recognize that change of any kind is also about loss. We like to avoid thinking about and acknowledging loss in our fields, but this is to our detriment and diminishes our efficacy. The more we understand about resistance and how we relate with change, the more effective we will be at becoming “change agents.” Yes, behavior change is about change.
Third, we need to critically evaluate how well our tools and frameworks get us where we need to go. Is it time to redesign and consider more innovative approaches that may be less conventional but deliver richer insight? Given the resources, time and constraints, how deep can we go in our research and strategies? Rather than discounting depth and process as being too time-consuming or expensive, we need to consider instead the question: can we afford not to innovate how we approach consumer behavior change? I’d wager the answer is no.
The bottom line is that behavior change is anything but a rational process; we are driven largely by unconscious, irrational and meaning-based motivations. We may like to think it is all about stimulus and response (think, B.F. Skinner, Pavlov's dog), but it's more complicated. In our obsession with metrics, we run the risk of missing the most important insight of all: the dilemmas, conflicts and ‘tangles’ that may impede the behavior changes we all seek to inspire.
Moving forward and developing innovative approaches to behavior change requires thinking differently about behavior, change and who we partner with to help us get there. And the more case studies we can generate, the more we can share best practices, the better off we all will be. It's a win-win.
Renee Lertzman provides practical and professional guidance on sustainability communications, public engagement, and outreach strategies. Through consultations, presentations, and the development of written materials and online resources, Dr. Lertzman helps companies, organizations, and individuals incorporate psychodynamic and psychosocial dimensions into the planning, design and implementation of communications initiatives.
Dr. Lertzman’s work supports both private and public entities seeking to better understand the dynamics of behavioral change and responsiveness to sustainable practices, and speaks directly to issues of ‘traction’ by drawing attention to emotional, psychodynamic dimensions of sustainable initiatives. Her unique approach invites us to reframe conceptions of public outreach and engagement… [Read more about Renee Lertzman]
This Month's SB Issue in Focus - Information Technology as a Platform for Sustainable Innovation
Guest Editors: Bart King and Marc Alt
In the first decade of the 21st Century, Information Technology laid a new foundation for business as usual, changing the way we communicate with stakeholders and the way we collect data. Now, the analysis of our "big data" is beginning to yield opportunities for improving the efficiency of operations and gaining insights to consumer behavior. Increased monitoring and optimization of flow networks for electricity, water and transportation have the potential to create massive resource savings, while software and virtual collaboration tools are bringing ever greater human resources to bear on the challenges of sustainability.
Call for Content!
During the month of May, we will be publishing a “SB Issues in Focus” Editorial package on the topic of “Information Technology as a Platform for Sustainable Innovation.” This is a great opportunity to share your company's insights, showcase innovations and present solutions. Find out more!





Comments
Tools for behavior change?
Renee, thanks for your insights. I enjoyed getting a perspective on behavior change from the standpoint of a researcher. As a practitioner, I would like to know if you can recommend any tools for going deeper with clients during the inquiry process.
Also, it seems that getting society to reduce consumption will be very difficult as long as external stimuli such as advertising are pushing people to consume. Consumption is embedded into our culture in so many ways that it's second nature. Is the goal to "convert" people and companies and hope they will influence others around them (and eventually policy makers) - or should we be striving for some other goal? What are your thoughts?
conversion vs support
Thanks Anna. Tools for going deeper is complicated terrain – it involves employing a mix of methodologies to explore less conscious dimensions, being more "lateral" than "frontal" in how we investigate, and how we analyze the data. Tools include using free-association, designing multiple interviews per participant or group, and knowing how to skillfully facilitate, eliciting and designing questions, and conducting the data analysis. It's hard to say exactly what tools because it requires some orientation for working with unconscious dimensions. (This is what psychosocial research addresses, particularly in the UK, in a research context.) It also means giving up the need to have ‘control’ and take more risks.
Yes: pressures to consume are extremely intense and systemic. The reason why it's important to go 'deeper' here is to examine what needs, investments are being met through consumption, and attempting to 'meet' this or redirect in different ways. In order to do so, again we need to know what we're dealing with. Hence the need to listen and attend differently to what is being conveyed. I am not sure the goal is to "convert" - that’s not a framework I tend to use. (Even if the goal is for change.) I am more interested in supporting and facilitating changes that are there, waiting for tapping and channeling, than "conversion," although certainly conversion experiences are desirable. A conversion experience however is an experience - felt, sensed, integrated into our meaning systems. This is where we often fall down- in our obsession with behavior change we're so focused on levers that we don't focus on recognizing change is systemic and meaning-based. Which is why of course I’m arguing for a meaning-based approach for deeper (consumer) shifts.
Certainly we’d want to encourage social diffusion - companies taking leadership roles and modeling what is possible is essential (same for policy) - and making it more accessible and desirable to take such steps. Internal organizational shifts are critical – as many others on this site often address. So to answer your question, yes the goal ultimately is to "support" companies and people to tap into their existing desires for a healthy and safe and quality world and life. This means coming to terms with the tensions we all manage around those goals, being honest and authentic about the challenges (and contradictions we all must contend with, given our current situation and the systems we must still engage with).
chicken & egg...
Hi Joel,
If I'm reading you correctly, yes, the experience of being inquired into, and being listened to, can have a profound impact on how we construct meanings. There's quite a lot in qualitative research that addresses how the interviews or participation in research informs and influences participants... Participants can benefit from being listened to and from being invited to reflect on their own experiences. The more 'depth' we encourage, the more revelation can happen - in a good way. I've heard from participants, who felt that the research made them focus on their experiences, and that the self-knowledge they gained was a valuable result of participation. I've also had participants tell me after a series of interviews that they decided to change some behavior, when of course I never suggested this nor explicitly led them to that place. I have no doubt, being involved in a process of inquiry and listening can in fact have secondary behavioral change impacts. (That goes for the researcher, too, of course. :))
Methods for eliciting meaning, driving change
Well said Renee! As a researcher, I'd be interested in hearing more about the approaches you recommend for diving more deeply to elicit meaning. I've had good experience with online immersive research that combines "homework" exercises with online diaries, photo sharing, and directed discussion. As far as case studies go, here's a good resource on best practices for initiating positive behavior (and meaning) change: http://www.positivedeviance.org/ From what I can tell, it draws from diffusion of innovation theory first posited by Everett Rogers and later Geoffrey Moore on harnessing social effects.
going deeper
Hi Carole!
Thanks for your response. Yes, PositiveDeviance (PD) is one of a number of approaches emerging from a social-practices based orientation. "Social practices" is gaining popularity in environmental sociology and sociology of consumption, and recognizes that we are "embedded" in our social worlds, and change happens systemically.
I think PD is suitable and appropriate in some contexts more than others. In terms of encouraging low-carbon practices, climate change mitigation is far more diffuse and systemic, I'd argue, than the issues targeted by PD interventions. And what I am suggesting is actually about taking more time to investigate the "Why" which PD actively disagrees with. As with most behavior change approaches, they focus on the "How." Which is fine for some situations but not for others.
This is why I believe its crucial to go 'deeper' to the level of meaning. This doesn't mean on the individual level only, as we produce and construct meanings socially. However, what is left out of most approaches and our research is first the level of inquiry: What does this object, brand, practice actually mean or signify for someone. And in tracking that (it is a process of tracking and is certainly not available at the most superficial level of research we tend to do, i.e. polling or surveying), we find not only unexpected associations and meanings, but conflict and dilemmas. We can hold simultaneously competing and conflicting desires and concerns. Our work is most effective, in my view, if we can go to that level -- rather than only being fixated on changing behaviors as if it's some machine that requires new and fancy stimuli and levers.
I totally agree, 'homework' is so effective, anything you can do to engage people's unconscious minds in the process, and give space for exploring what's there. (We tend not to provide enough space; perhaps the biggest limitation in current market research practices.) The methods I use, have training in and teach, are precisely about going to these levels, surfacing what is there (conflicts, hidden meanings, associations, identifications) and then feeding that back into a high level strategy which can be implemented. I agree online tools can be effective for this, if done skillfully, and I am a big advocate of face-to-face interviewing and using focus groups in an innovative, free-associative way. It's been hugely productive to help surface not only the top-level, but the richer levels of insight that capture where people may be "stuck" or investing their energies most.
Finally, I believe we will be seeing more social and conversation-based platforms for engagement and behavior change being leveraged; this is something I have talked about extensively and work with others to develop. It's my hope however, that these innovations are balanced and tempered with sensitivity to the meaning-based level of behavior. If we want sustainable branding and businesses to thrive, targeting behavior change is essential, but I think researchers can help move this thinking much further, through more innovative research practices.
Renee
going deeper
Hi Renee - Thanks for your thoughtful reply! I agree that approaches that go straight to "how" can miss important context. I like your emphasis on on uncovering dilemmas and competing desires, and find it interesting (and surprising) that PD disagrees with the need to probe for the "why".
I also think that an understanding of the "how" social mechanism helps change agents to apply the "whys" to best effect. To me, the power in uncovering the complex "why" (or perhaps more often "why not") comes when it is applied in the context of Diffusion of Innovation theory (as PD does), which says a minority will embrace new ways of doing things at first because they are innovators at heart; the rest wait until it seems like the accepted thing to do--but only if they understand the advantages for them personally, and it's easy to do (among other things).
And, the best way for later adopters to come to these conclusions is to learn from the people who have already made the change. Of course, depending on the innovation, both early and late adopters will have specific issues to overcome based on the meaning they ascribe to the situation. And, as Geoffrey Moore points out, there can be a "chasm" between early and late adopters (different values, different networks, etc.) that inhibits this process from occurring.
So it's our role as researchers to identify those issues, and figure out a way around or through them. As you point out, systemic issues like attitudes toward climate change require a deeper analysis.
In the end, then, I'd argue that we need both -- a nuanced understanding of the "why", and a social network "lever" to push (the "how").
Really enjoyed your post and this conversation!
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