Note to readers: Soch to Success is a weekly column to enhance critical thinking skills for you to achieve success. Each article is packed with insights, tools, and a roadmap to action.
Have you ever been forced to screech to a halt to save a pedestrian from getting hit by your car? It just happened to me. It wasn't screeching and halting, but yes, it was a sudden, unexpected break. Short and stout, a middle-aged man, wearing a green sweater and a blue mask, was right in front of my car, staring at me in bewilderment.
Jaywalking is considered a safe behaviour by many. Now imagine you had to halt at a star painted on the road? That's what a Colombian mayor did years ago to prevent deaths caused by jaywalking. You may argue we do not even have zebra crossing marked on many roads but that is a debate for another day—we still have people dying in road and rail accidents.Mayor Antanas Mockus, whose work is now published as a case study by Harvard, used different strategies to change behaviour of the people of the city, including painting stars on spots where pedestrians had died in traffic accidents. A mathematician and philosopher, Mockus was the rector of the National University in Bogotá, Colombia, before serving two terms—1995 to 2004—as the mayor of the Colombian capital city.
In an opinion piece, The art of changing a city, he wrote, “Bogotá’s traffic was chaotic and dangerous when I came to office. We decided the city needed a radical new approach to traffic safety. Among various strategies, we printed and distributed hundreds of thousands of “citizens’ cards”, which had a thumbs-up image on one side to flash at courteous drivers and a thumbs-down on the other to express disapproval. Within a decade, traffic fatalities fell by more than half.”

Also read:You can change the game with a 'nudge'
This is what the mathematician mayor of Bogota did. He used insights that influence behaviour and designed solutions that were not easy to miss, that were engaging to bring in change. Behaviour insights consider three factors that influence behaviour:1 Individual factors: Self-image consciousness, fast and slow decision-making or biases, rewards and penalties, the time factor, etc.
2 Social factors: How people think and act is many times influenced by people around them. Jumping a signal while driving because the one in front of you jumped is an example or to litter in a public space like parking, roads, etc is another example of copying behaviour.
3 Environmental or design factors: Nudges and other design elements are chosen to bring a change in behaviour. These are externally designed like mime artistes on the streets or messages through voice on phone.
While mimes were strategically placed to influence behaviour of pedestrians and car drivers, they worked on the self-image of the individuals. Similarly, star-painted spots became reminders as an environmental design factor to influence behaviour. “The distribution of knowledge is the key contemporary task,” Mockus said. “Knowledge empowers people. If people know the rules and are sensitized by art, humour, and creativity, they are much more likely to accept change.” This is what he did. He used creativity and humour to influence people.
Marketers of most websites use this as a marketing tool. You may have noticed that when you register on a site, it has a tick mark about receiving promotional material, you are given the option to opt out of it. Similarly, you can design a change in communication and keep it EAST - easy, attractive, social and timely to make it effective.
The thought that I want to leave you with is what do you do when you want to change your behaviour? The article will continue next week with more examples on behavioural economics and ways to bring those ideas into our own lives.(Vishakha Singh, author of a forward-thinking course SHIFT, is a business strategist & a design thinking practitioner. She writes at www.habitsforthinking.in, offering insights into the ever-changing business environment.)
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