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3 psychological tricks to help you save money

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    We all know that saving is important
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    and is something that we should be doing.
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    And yet, overall, we're doing
    less and less of it.
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    [The Way We Work]
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    We know what we need to do.
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    The question is: How do we do it?
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    And that's what I'm here to teach you.
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    Your savings behavior
    isn't a question of how smart you are
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    or how much willpower you have.
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    The amount we save depends
    on the environmental cues around us.
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    Let me give you an example.
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    We ran a study in which, in one group,
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    we showed people
    their income on a monthly basis.
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    In another group, we showed people
    their income on a weekly basis.
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    And what we found was that people
    who saw their income on a weekly basis
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    were able to budget better
    throughout the month.
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    Now, it's important to know
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    that we didn't change
    how much money people were receiving,
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    we just changed the environment
    in which they understood their income.
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    And environmental cues
    like this have an impact.
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    So I'm not going to share tricks with you
    that you already know.
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    I'm not going to tell you
    how to open up a savings account
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    or how to start saving
    for your retirement.
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    What I am going to share with you
    is how to bridge this gap
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    from your intentions to save
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    and your actions.
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    Are you ready?
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    Here's number one:
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    harness the power of pre-commitment.
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    Fundamentally, we think about ourselves
    in two different ways:
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    our present self and our future self.
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    In the future, we're perfect.
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    In the future, we're going to
    save for retirement,
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    we're going to lose weight,
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    we're going to call our parents more.
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    But we oftentimes forget
    that our future self
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    is exactly the same person
    as our present self.
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    We know that one of the best times to save
    is when you get your tax return.
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    So we tried an A/B test.
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    In the first group, we texted people
    in early February,
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    hopefully before
    they even filed for their taxes.
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    And we asked them,
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    "If you get a tax refund,
    what percentage would you like to save?"
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    Now this is a really hard question.
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    They didn't know if they would
    receive a tax refund or how much.
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    But we asked the question anyway.
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    In the second group, we asked people
    right after they received their refund,
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    "What percentage would you like to save?"
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    Now, here's what happened.
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    In that second condition, when people
    just received their tax refund,
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    they wanted to save about 17 percent
    of their tax refund.
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    But in the condition when we asked people
    before they even filed their taxes,
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    savings rates increased
    from 17 percent to 27 percent
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    when we asked in February.
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    Why?
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    Because you're committing
    for your future self,
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    and of course your future self
    can save 27 percent.
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    These large changes in savings behavior
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    came from the fact that we changed
    the decision-making environment.
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    We want you to be able
    to harness that same power.
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    So take a moment
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    and think about the ways in which
    you can sign up your future self
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    for something that you know today
    will be a little bit hard.
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    Sign up for an app that lets you
    make savings decisions in advance.
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    The trick is, you have to have
    that binding contract.
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    Number two: use transition moments
    to your advantage.
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    We did an experiment with a website
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    that helps older adults
    share their housing.
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    We ran two ads on social media,
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    targeted to the same
    population of 64-year-olds.
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    In one group, we said,
    "Hey, you're getting older.
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    Are you ready for retirement?
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    House sharing can help."
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    In the second group,
    we got a little bit more specific
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    and said, "You're 64 turning 65.
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    Are you ready for retirement?
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    House sharing can help."
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    What we're doing in that second group
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    is highlighting that
    a transition is happening.
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    All of a sudden,
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    we saw click-through rates,
    and ultimately sign-up rates, increase
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    when we highlight that.
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    In psychology, we call this
    the "fresh start effect."
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    Whether it's the start of a new year
    or even a new season,
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    your motivation to act increases.
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    So right now, put a meeting
    request on your calendar
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    for the day before your next birthday.
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    Identify the one financial thing
    you most want to do.
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    And commit yourself to it.
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    The third and final trick:
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    get a handle on small, frequent purchases.
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    We've run a few different studies
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    and found that the number one purchase
    people say they regret, after bank fees,
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    is eating out.
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    It's a frequent purchase
    we make almost every day,
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    and it's death by a thousand cuts.
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    A coffee here, a burrito there ...
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    It adds up and decreases
    our ability to save.
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    Back when I lived in New York City,
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    I looked at my expenses
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    and saw that I spent over 2,000 dollars
    on ride-sharing apps.
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    It was more than my New York City rent.
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    I vowed to make a change.
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    And the next month,
    I spent 2,000 dollars again --
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    no change, because the information
    alone didn't change my behavior.
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    I didn't change my environment.
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    So now that I was 4,000 dollars
    in the hole, I did two things.
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    The first is that I unlinked
    my credit card
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    from my car-sharing apps.
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    Instead, I linked a debit card
    that only had 300 dollars a month.
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    If I needed more,
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    I had to go through the whole process
    of adding a new card,
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    and we know that every click,
    every barrier, changes our behavior.
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    We aren't machines.
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    We don't carry around an abacus every day,
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    adding up what we're spending,
    in comparison to what we wanted.
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    But what our brains are very good at
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    is counting up the number of times
    we've done something.
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    So I gave myself a limit.
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    I can only use ride-sharing apps
    three times a week.
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    It forced me to ration my travels.
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    I got a handle on my car-sharing expenses
    to the benefit of my husband,
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    because of the environmental
    changes that I did.
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    So get a handle on whatever
    that purchase is for you,
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    and change your environment
    to make it harder to do so.
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    Those are my tips for you.
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    But I want you to remember one thing.
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    As human beings, we can be irrational
    when it comes to saving
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    and spending and budgeting.
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    But luckily, we know this about ourselves,
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    and we can predict how we'll act
    under certain environments.
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    Let's do that with saving.
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    Let's change our environment
    to help our future selves.
Title:
3 psychological tricks to help you save money
Speaker:
Wendy De La Rosa
Description:

We all want to save more money -- but overall, people today are doing less and less of it. Behavioral scientist Wendy De La Rosa studies how everyday people make decisions to improve their financial well-being. What she's found can help you painlessly make the commitment to save more and spend less.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED Series
Duration:
05:50

English subtitles

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