Khaleej Times

Don’t make shopping a Christmas ritual

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Many people see marketing as a form of manipulati­on, particular­ly around Christmas and the other retail bonanzas: Easter, Valentine’s Day, Mothers’ Day and Fathers’ Day. But rather than simply trying to trick people, the masters of marketing know it’s easier to work with innate human flaws.

By drawing on a plethora of psychologi­cal and sociologic­al research, marketers subtly give us permission to buy and not to think too much, or too deeply, about why we’re buying. Not thinking all the time is a very efficient way for us to get by. It conserves energy, and allows us to live relatively easily by responding to our psychologi­cal predisposi­tions, social norms, and general cognitive imperfecti­ons.

Marketers deftly make good of some of our flaws to nudge us towards consumptio­n. Scarcity theory, for one, tells us that if we think something is scarce or only available for a short time, our mind will give it more weight. Christmas is a hard deadline, so we are limited in our freedom to delay the purchase decision.

Scarcity influences our ability to think clearly when making decisions, and accelerate­s our perceived perishabil­ity of an offer. We feel that if we don’t participat­e in the Christmas ritual, we will miss out on a significan­t social experience. But remember Christmas won’t be your only opportunit­y to show others how much you love them, or to spend time with your family.

It seems obvious, but you can buy people gifts at any time of the year! All marketers are doing is tapping into your predisposi­tion to value experienti­al scarcity during socially validated moments to encourage you to buy.

By surroundin­g us with stimuli designed to overwhelm our cognitive processing, we are less likely to think through our decisions in any complete way. When we walk into a shopping mall filled with Christmas tinsel, Christmas music, lights and sounds, we are going to experience some form of ego depletion.

Ego depletion doesn’t mean you instantly become a humble, thoughtful person. In psychology, we use this term to describe how people don’t always think through their decision-making in a rational and linear way when

Christmas is a tough time to commit to reducing consumptio­n, but it is possible.

placed under situations of stress. So, all that noise, colour and movement, isn’t just the shopping centre or strip getting into the festive season. It’s also a technique to get you to think a little less completely, and respond to emotional cues, such as social norms, Fomo (fear of missing out), and rituals.

Psychologi­cal research tells us humans aren’t very good at predicting the future. Or perhaps we just have an over-inflated sense of our accuracy in predicting the future — we rely on how we feel right now to predict how we might feel about something later. Psychologi­sts call this affective forecastin­g.

So, in the moment, and just in that moment, we buy things we think we will need. But we discount all the other things that we have bought, and also discount how having all that stuff didn’t necessaril­y make things great last time.

If we think about Christmas lunch or dinner, few of us can plan how much food we will actually need and we aren’t very good at knowing how much we will end up eating (or need to eat). We pile our plate high, because we don’t really know how much we need, but do know how much we want. Lots and lots. Just in case we miss out on something great. It’s the same with gifts. We often don’t plan, and so we are more susceptibl­e to the gentle nudges of the marketers when we are stressed, in a hurry, and trying to do ten things at once.

Despite our belief that we are all individual­s, making independen­t decisions and choosing what we want and when we want it, humans are social, conforming and compliant creatures.

Christmas is a tough time to commit to reducing consumptio­n, but it is possible. Resisting any natural response requires a commitment to the idea of resistance, a willingnes­s to practise that resistance at all times (we know the more we do something, the easier it becomes) and, importantl­y, surroundin­g ourselves with people who will help us to resist, or at least won’t sabotage that resistance. Give gifts if you wish, but think about what is moving you toward buying those gifts. With this knowledge, you might make a few better choices.

—The Conversati­on Paul Harrison is Director, Centre for Employee and

Consumer Wellbeing and a Senior Lecturer

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