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256. Incorporating Habits Into Your Business Strategy (Refreshed Episode)

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Manage episode 353332282 series 2371695
Indhold leveret af Melina Palmer. Alt podcastindhold inklusive episoder, grafik og podcastbeskrivelser uploades og leveres direkte af Melina Palmer eller deres podcastplatformspartner. Hvis du mener, at nogen bruger dit ophavsretligt beskyttede værk uden din tilladelse, kan du følge processen beskrevet her https://da.player.fm/legal.

Habits are foundational to everything we do. When we think about habits we tend to think about the “bad” ones, things we want to change but there is so much more to it. Our brains run on habits, and without them, we couldn’t function. Many episodes of this podcast that have been dedicated to habits and related topics throughout the years, and this is the first one, which originally aired in the fall of 2019.

Since then, I’ve interviewed habits expert Wendy Wood and discussed habits with Richard Chataway (links to their episodes in these notes). I included habits heavily in my books and the reason I chose to refresh this episode right now is because of this upcoming Friday’s guest.

Cassie Holmes, the author of Happier Hour is my guest on Friday, and I thought that some reflection on habits is the best way to set you up to get the most out of that conversation. When you look at your day, what makes you happy? What is serving you and what isn’t? What has become a habit and what you should be more thoughtful about? This episode will help you in that process to understand further what a habit is, how they work, and what to keep in mind as you look to reinforce some and change others.

The main thing to remember is that we need habits. They aren’t inherently bad. Most of them are good. Understanding them and leveraging them is where the opportunity lies.

Show Notes:
  • [00:37] Today’s episode is all about habits. Habits are foundational to everything we do.
  • [02:45] You have a lot more good habits than bad ones. You just aren’t consciously aware of the vast majority of them.
  • [04:27] Sorting by color is a form of habitual purchasing. Even with infrequent purchases, the place you go and look is based on habits.
  • [06:25] The human brain essentially works on many many associations.
  • [09:03] Up to 95% of all buying decisions are habitual.
  • [11:09] Unfortunately the idea that it takes us 21-30 days to create a habit is wrong.
  • [13:33] 21 days is not the magic number for making or breaking a habit.
  • [15:16] A 2009 study from the European Journal of Social Psychology found the average number of days it took to form a habit was 66 days. (But don’t let that fool you…the range of data points matters!)
  • [16:58] We approach habit changing all wrong.
  • [18:20] Habits are made up of four phases: cue, craving, response, and reward.
  • [19:31] Habits form because your brain is trying to find predictable ways to get rewards. A cue is a signal to the brain that there is a reward around and that instantly leads to craving/desire/filter for that item.
  • [21:21] If you want to change a habit or start a new one, the cue and reward phases are driving the behavior.
  • [22:44] Cues have been found to fall into one of five categories: location, time, emotional state, other people, and an immediately preceding action.
  • [24:27] You aren’t craving the thing, but rather the reward it provides.
  • [27:05] When we know the cue and the reward our brain wants we can work to change the habit.
  • [29:31] One other crazy brain trick is word choice.
  • [31:27] Saying “I don’t” is empowering. This was your choice. It affirms the choice you made and makes you feel determined and full of willpower. (This is very different from “I can’t.”)
  • [33:12] You should be confident that you made this choice so you can firmly say “No, I don’t do that.”
  • [35:04] We can check our notifications and emails every couple of hours or a couple of times a day (instead of every instant as we get continuous pings, dings and buzzes) and it will be fine. Once the cue is gone, we won’t look at our phones as much and we can be more productive.
  • [38:07] Interrupting shoppers' habitual sequence can be a problem depending on your business positioning.
  • [39:05] As the brand leader you don’t want to do too much to shake things up or rock the boat.
  • [41:59] The habits of your current and potential customers are important to consider when building out your strategies.
  • [42:28] Melina’s closing thoughts
  • [43:29] We are all surrounded by habits all day, they are a huge portion of the 35,000 decisions we all make each day. Understanding the rules of your habits is the first step in identifying which are working well for you and which you might want to let go of because they aren’t serving you well.
  • [44:58] You want to focus on the right stuff at the right time and not changes habits that you don’t need to.

Thanks for listening. Don’t forget to subscribe on Apple Podcasts or Android. If you like what you heard, please leave a review on iTunes and share what you liked about the show.

I hope you love everything recommended via The Brainy Business! Everything was independently reviewed and selected by me, Melina Palmer. So you know, as an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases. That means if you decide to shop from the links on this page (via Amazon or others), The Brainy Business may collect a share of sales or other compensation.

Let’s connect:

Learn and Support The Brainy Business:

Get the Books Mentioned on (or related to) this Episode:

Top Recommended Next Episode: Good Habits, Bad Habits, with Dr. Wendy Wood (ep 127)

Already Heard That One? Try These:

Other Important Links:

  continue reading

379 episoder

Artwork
iconDel
 
Manage episode 353332282 series 2371695
Indhold leveret af Melina Palmer. Alt podcastindhold inklusive episoder, grafik og podcastbeskrivelser uploades og leveres direkte af Melina Palmer eller deres podcastplatformspartner. Hvis du mener, at nogen bruger dit ophavsretligt beskyttede værk uden din tilladelse, kan du følge processen beskrevet her https://da.player.fm/legal.

Habits are foundational to everything we do. When we think about habits we tend to think about the “bad” ones, things we want to change but there is so much more to it. Our brains run on habits, and without them, we couldn’t function. Many episodes of this podcast that have been dedicated to habits and related topics throughout the years, and this is the first one, which originally aired in the fall of 2019.

Since then, I’ve interviewed habits expert Wendy Wood and discussed habits with Richard Chataway (links to their episodes in these notes). I included habits heavily in my books and the reason I chose to refresh this episode right now is because of this upcoming Friday’s guest.

Cassie Holmes, the author of Happier Hour is my guest on Friday, and I thought that some reflection on habits is the best way to set you up to get the most out of that conversation. When you look at your day, what makes you happy? What is serving you and what isn’t? What has become a habit and what you should be more thoughtful about? This episode will help you in that process to understand further what a habit is, how they work, and what to keep in mind as you look to reinforce some and change others.

The main thing to remember is that we need habits. They aren’t inherently bad. Most of them are good. Understanding them and leveraging them is where the opportunity lies.

Show Notes:
  • [00:37] Today’s episode is all about habits. Habits are foundational to everything we do.
  • [02:45] You have a lot more good habits than bad ones. You just aren’t consciously aware of the vast majority of them.
  • [04:27] Sorting by color is a form of habitual purchasing. Even with infrequent purchases, the place you go and look is based on habits.
  • [06:25] The human brain essentially works on many many associations.
  • [09:03] Up to 95% of all buying decisions are habitual.
  • [11:09] Unfortunately the idea that it takes us 21-30 days to create a habit is wrong.
  • [13:33] 21 days is not the magic number for making or breaking a habit.
  • [15:16] A 2009 study from the European Journal of Social Psychology found the average number of days it took to form a habit was 66 days. (But don’t let that fool you…the range of data points matters!)
  • [16:58] We approach habit changing all wrong.
  • [18:20] Habits are made up of four phases: cue, craving, response, and reward.
  • [19:31] Habits form because your brain is trying to find predictable ways to get rewards. A cue is a signal to the brain that there is a reward around and that instantly leads to craving/desire/filter for that item.
  • [21:21] If you want to change a habit or start a new one, the cue and reward phases are driving the behavior.
  • [22:44] Cues have been found to fall into one of five categories: location, time, emotional state, other people, and an immediately preceding action.
  • [24:27] You aren’t craving the thing, but rather the reward it provides.
  • [27:05] When we know the cue and the reward our brain wants we can work to change the habit.
  • [29:31] One other crazy brain trick is word choice.
  • [31:27] Saying “I don’t” is empowering. This was your choice. It affirms the choice you made and makes you feel determined and full of willpower. (This is very different from “I can’t.”)
  • [33:12] You should be confident that you made this choice so you can firmly say “No, I don’t do that.”
  • [35:04] We can check our notifications and emails every couple of hours or a couple of times a day (instead of every instant as we get continuous pings, dings and buzzes) and it will be fine. Once the cue is gone, we won’t look at our phones as much and we can be more productive.
  • [38:07] Interrupting shoppers' habitual sequence can be a problem depending on your business positioning.
  • [39:05] As the brand leader you don’t want to do too much to shake things up or rock the boat.
  • [41:59] The habits of your current and potential customers are important to consider when building out your strategies.
  • [42:28] Melina’s closing thoughts
  • [43:29] We are all surrounded by habits all day, they are a huge portion of the 35,000 decisions we all make each day. Understanding the rules of your habits is the first step in identifying which are working well for you and which you might want to let go of because they aren’t serving you well.
  • [44:58] You want to focus on the right stuff at the right time and not changes habits that you don’t need to.

Thanks for listening. Don’t forget to subscribe on Apple Podcasts or Android. If you like what you heard, please leave a review on iTunes and share what you liked about the show.

I hope you love everything recommended via The Brainy Business! Everything was independently reviewed and selected by me, Melina Palmer. So you know, as an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases. That means if you decide to shop from the links on this page (via Amazon or others), The Brainy Business may collect a share of sales or other compensation.

Let’s connect:

Learn and Support The Brainy Business:

Get the Books Mentioned on (or related to) this Episode:

Top Recommended Next Episode: Good Habits, Bad Habits, with Dr. Wendy Wood (ep 127)

Already Heard That One? Try These:

Other Important Links:

  continue reading

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