2022年TED英语演讲稿:如何让选择更容易 2.pdf
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1、TED英语演讲稿:如何让选择更容易简介:面对商场里五花八门的商品,你的选择恐惧症又犯了吗 ? 美国哥伦比亚大学商学教授sheena iyengar研究如何让你在做选择时更容易。为了让你的选择省时省力,商家又会有哪些诀窍呢? do you know how many choices you make in a typical day? do you know how many choices you make in typical week? i recently did a survey with over 2,000 americans, and the average number of
2、choices that the typical american reports making is about 70 in a typical day. there was also recently a study done with ceos in which they followed ceos around for a whole week. and these scientists simply documented all the various tasks that these ceos engaged in and how much time they spent enga
3、ging in making decisions related to these tasks. and they found that the average ceo engaged in about 139 tasks in a week. each task was made up of many, many, many sub-choices of course. 50 percent of their decisions were made in nine minutes or less. only about 12 percent of the decisions did they
4、 make an hour or more of their time. think about your own choices. do you know how many choices make it into your nine minute 名师资料总结 - - -精品资料欢迎下载 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 名师精心整理 - - - - - - - 第 1 页,共 14 页 - - - - - - - - - category versus your one hour category? how well do you think you
5、re doing at managing those choices? today i want to talk about one of the biggest modern day choosing problems that we have, which is the choice overload problem. i want to talk about the problem and some potential solutions. now as i talk about this problem, im going to have some questions for you
6、and im going to want to know your answers. so when i ask you a question, since im blind, only raise your hand if you want to burn off some calories. (laughter) otherwise, when i ask you a question, and if your answer is yes, id like you to clap your hands. so for my first question for you today: are
7、 you guys ready to hear about the choice overload problem? (applause) thank you. so when i was a graduate student at stanford university, i used to go to this very, very upscale grocery store; at least at that time it was truly upscale. it was a store called draegers. now this store, it was almost l
8、ike going to an amusement park. they had 250 different kinds of mustards and vinegars and over 500 different kinds of fruits and vegetables and more than two dozen different kinds of bottled water - and 名师资料总结 - - -精品资料欢迎下载 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 名师精心整理 - - - - - - - 第 2 页,共 14 页 - - -
9、- - - - - - this was during a time when we actually used to drink tap water. i used to love going to this store, but on one occasion i asked myself, well how come you never buy anything? heres their olive oil aisle. they had over 75 different kinds of olive oil, including those that were in a locked
10、 case that came from thousand-year-old olive trees. so i one day decided to pay a visit to the manager, and i asked the manager, is this model of offering people all this choice really working? and he pointed to the busloads of tourists that would show up everyday, with cameras ready usually. we dec
11、ided to do a little experiment, and we picked jam for our experiment. heres their jam aisle. they had 348 different kinds of jam. we set up a little tasting booth right near the entrance of the store. we there put out six different flavors of jam or 24 different flavors of jam, and we looked at two
12、things: first, in which case were people more likely to stop, sample some jam? more people stopped when there were 24, about 60 percent, than when there were six, about 40 percent. the next thing we looked at is in which case were people more likely to 名师资料总结 - - -精品资料欢迎下载 - - - - - - - - - - - - -
13、- - - - - 名师精心整理 - - - - - - - 第 3 页,共 14 页 - - - - - - - - - buy a jar of jam. now we see the opposite effect. of the people who stopped when there were 24, only three percent of them actually bought a jar of jam. of the people who stopped when there were six, well now we saw that 30 percent of the
14、m actually bought a jar of jam. now if you do the math, people were at least six times more likely to buy a jar of jam if they encountered six than if they encountered 24. now choosing not to buy a jar of jam is probably good for us - at least its good for our waistlines - but it turns out that this
15、 choice overload problem affects us even in very consequential decisions. we choose not to choose, even when it goes against our best self-interests. so now for the topic of today: financial savings. now im going to describe to you a study i did with gur huberman, emir kamenica, wei jang where we lo
16、oked at the retirement savings decisions of nearly a million americans from about 650 plans all in the and what we looked at was whether the number of fund offerings available in a retirement savings plan, the 401(k) plan, does that affect peoples likelihood to save more for tomorrow. and what we fo
17、und was that 名师资料总结 - - -精品资料欢迎下载 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 名师精心整理 - - - - - - - 第 4 页,共 14 页 - - - - - - - - - indeed there was a correlation. so in these plans, we had about 657 plans that ranged from offering people anywhere from two to 59 different fund offerings. and what we found was
18、 that, the more funds offered, indeed, there was less participation rate. so if you look at the extremes, those plans that offered you two funds, participation rates were around in the mid-70s - still not as high as we want it to be. in those plans that offered nearly 60 funds, participation rates h
19、ave now dropped to about the 60th percentile. now it turns out that even if you do choose to participate when there are more choices present, even then, it has negative consequences. so for those people who did choose to participate, the more choices available, the more likely people were to complet
20、ely avoid stocks or equity funds. the more choices available, the more likely they were to put all their money in pure money market accounts. now neither of these extreme decisions are the kinds of decisions that any of us would recommend for people when youre considering their future financial well
21、-being. well, over the past decade, we have observed three 名师资料总结 - - -精品资料欢迎下载 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 名师精心整理 - - - - - - - 第 5 页,共 14 页 - - - - - - - - - main negative consequences to offering people more and more choices. theyre more likely to delay choosing - procrastinate even when
22、it goes against their best self-interest. theyre more likely to make worse choices - worse financial choices, medical choices. theyre more likely to choose things that make them less satisfied, even when they do objectively better. the main reason for this is because, we might enjoy gazing at those
23、giant walls of mayonnaises, mustards, vinegars, jams, but we cant actually do the math of comparing and contrasting and actually picking from that stunning display. so what i want to propose to you today are four simple techniques - techniques that we have tested in one way or another in different r
24、esearch venues - that you can easily apply in your businesses. the first: cut. youve heard it said before, but its never been more true than today, that less is more. people are always upset when i say, cut. theyre always worried theyre going to lose shelf space. but in fact, what were seeing more a
25、nd more is that if you are willing to cut, get rid of those extraneous redundant options, well theres an increase in sales, 名师资料总结 - - -精品资料欢迎下载 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 名师精心整理 - - - - - - - 第 6 页,共 14 页 - - - - - - - - - theres a lowering of costs, there is an improvement of the choosing
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