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Good Communication Requires Experimenting with Your Language

Michael LucaOliver Hauser

February 04, 2016

Consider a delinquent taxpayer who receives one of the following two letters in

the mail:

Letter 1: We are writing to inform you that we have still not received your tax

payment of $5,000. It is imperative that you contact us.

Letter 2: We are writing to inform you that we have still not received your tax

payment of $5,000. By now, 9 out of 10 people in your town have paid their

taxes. It is imperative that you contact us.

The UK tax authority, HMRC (or, properly, Her Majesty s Revenue and Customs),

had been sending out a letter that looked a lot like Letter 1 for many years.

They didn t think that it was necessarily the most effective letter. In fact,

they hadn t thought much about the letter at all. After all, it was just a

letter, an administrative necessity.

But in 2010, a newly formed team of behavioral scientists inside the UK

government, known as The Behavioural Insights Team (BIT), set out to test its

effectiveness. Where HMRC saw administrative hassle, BIT saw opportunity, the

opportunity to collect overdue taxes by incorporating insights from behavioral

economics and social psychology into the tax letter.

BIT ran an experiment in which they sent out two letters something like

Letter 1 to a randomly selected group of delinquent taxpayers, and something

like Letter 2 (which incorporates a concept that psychologists refer to as

social norms) to another group. As it turns out, Letter 1 was costing the UK

tens of millions of pounds per year because it was simply less effective than

Letter 2. In response to Letter 2, delinquent taxpayers stepped up their game

and started paying their dues.

We take two lessons from this tax letter. First, we all have intuition about

what s most effective which letter is best, and how much of a difference it

makes. But the best managers have humility about their intuition, which is

sometimes off. Because of this, experimental methods are an important part of

the managerial process and can tell us what works and what doesn t.

Second, situations like the UK tax letter where we just do the same thing

over and over again without asking if it s really effective are very common.

And managers need to recognize these situations for what they are: unnecessary

risks. Why speculate when you can run an experiment to see what works? Just

look around your organization, and you will find opportunities all over the

place.

To see communication experiments in action, consider the following:

One of us (Luca, with coauthors Duncan Gilchrist and Deepak Malhotra) wrote a

paper showing that the impact of higher wages depends on the reference point of

the employee and reference points are often set through communication. More

generally, compensation letters are a great but often wasted opportunity to

engage with employees. For example, should you say, This raise is our token of

appreciation for the hard work that you do for this company or This raise is

our token of appreciation for the hard work that you do for your colleagues ?

Which of these is more effective at encouraging future motivation depends on

the motivations of an employee at a specific job, and can easily be tested

through a randomized controlled trial.

Companies routinely use text messages to reach customers, but not many take

advantage of an experiment to find out what works. Consider an example drawn

from government elections: in 2011, Neil Malhotra found (with coauthors Melissa

Michelson, Todd Rogers, and Ali Adam Valenzuela) that even a well-chosen

cold-text that is, a message sent to people who had not requested to be

texted increased voter turnout in the California elections. In this

situation, one experiment may not be enough. While the text messages saw large

effects, one might expect the effect to be smaller now that texts are such a

common tool.

Experiments can also tell when your intuition would have gotten it wrong. We ve

worked with organizations that were confident their advertising messages were

effective, only to learn through a trial that they had no effect at all.

Every year, there are new ways to communicate with customers and employees

letters, emails, texts, instant messages, chat apps. All of these are

opportunities for organizations to communicate effectively in order to achieve

their corporate objectives. The experimental method enables you to

systematically improve your communication with your customers and to roll out

changes that have proven successful. When done correctly, experiments can drive

success and create a culture of learning and innovation.

Michael Luca is an assistant professor of business administration at Harvard

Business School.

Oliver Hauser is a doctoral student at Harvard University.