In today's Whiteboard Friday, Rand dives into how processing fluency impacts web marketing, and explains why things which are easier for us to digest are more likely to induce action.
For reference, here is a still of Rand's whiteboard.
Video Transcription
"Howdy Moz fans, and welcome to another edition of Whiteboard Friday. This week I want to start with a conundrum. In fact, it's a conundrum from a research project that is based on a fluency bias. Fluency bias being one of the many cognitive biases in the field of psychology.Video transcription by Speechpad.comLet me start by asking you a question. Do you believe the statement, "What alcohol conceals, sobriety unmasks"? So a large number of participants in a research study were asked whether they believed this, and a second group, another group of participants in the same study were asked separately whether they believed the statement, "What alcohol conceals, sobriety reveals." What do you think were the results? Take a minute to guess.
People believed this one massively more by a shocking margin. And you would think to yourself, "Well, I am not nearly so foolish a person as to think that my belief in a statement like this would be biased by rhyme, conceals/reveals," and yet that is exactly what happened time and time again. This study can be reproduced with success. Far more people believe "What alcohol conceals, sobriety reveals," rather than the alternate use of the word "unmasks."
This is called, one of my favorite cognitive biases in the world, the "rhyme as reason" bias. Rhyme as reason. Let me give you another famous example that some of you have probably already jumped to. Do you remember Johnny Cochran in the famous O.J. Simpson trial, declaring to the jury, "If the gloves does not fit, you must acquit. If the glove does not fit, you must acquit."
So human beings, especially in the marketing and technology world, are trained, we are trained to think that people are logical, that people consider the rational outcomes, the rational inputs, and they come to a rational decision based on those inputs. And yet a cognitive bias, like rhyme as reason, would suggest that's not really the case at all. We are biased by all sorts of things.
Rhyme as reason is one of many fluency biases. The fluency bias or the fluency processing bias essentially suggests that things which are more easy for us to comprehend, which are more simple for us to digest, lots of good examples here. Attractive people on magazine covers are more likely to draw our eyes. Concepts that are simple for us to understand, phrases that we've heard many times, things that relate to things in our memory, all of these are simpler for us to understand and therefore more credible, more believable, and more likely, in the marketing world, to induce action.
Let's take this over to web marketing for a second and think about things where this happens. Page speed load time. When something loads more quickly, not only are we more likely to stay on the page, we're more likely to trust the brand more. We're more likely to recommend it to others. We're more likely to use it ourselves.
In fact, when Microsoft did a famous research study where they increased the amount of time before search results were returned by a mere 250 milliseconds, which is undetectable to the human eye, right? If you were shown a film strip and then there was a 250 millisecond cut, your eye could not detect it. Your brain would not know that you had been shown that image, and yet what they found was that abandonment rates went up. People searched less, and they searched less often, and they were less likely to return to the site.
This is fluency bias at work. The aesthetic attractiveness of a website's or a web page's layout is likely to drive us to take more action or to take less action, to recommend something, to tweet it, to share it, to link to it. No wonder, right?
The pronounceability of a brand name. One of my favorite, favorite examples is that a study looked at the pronounceability of stock market ticker symbols during their IPO, at a public market offering. And you would think to yourself, "Now, wait a minute. These are some of the smartest human beings in the world, who are working at hedge funds, who are working at large investment portfolios. There is no way that they are going to be taken in by the pronounceability of a stock ticker symbol." Why does it even matter whether a stock ticker symbol is pronounceable or not? And yet pronounceability has a high correlation with more successful IPOs in their first two weeks after offering.
Insanity. Insanity. We are all subject to this. No matter how smart you believe yourself or you audience to be, fluency biases, processing fluency, and cognitive biases as a whole are undoubtedly having an effect on your audience.
The familiarity of user experience. Some of you have seen some of the screen shots from Moz Analytics and probably maybe a few of you have gotten access to the private beta, and over the next couple of months more people will. Inside that product you'll notice that it looks very similar to another product. Right? There's sort of a, "Oh, look at that. There's the navigation on the left-hand side. There's a little graph up here, and the time frame is over here, and then there's a chart of data down here." That reminds me a lot of Google Analytics, which many people who are watching this Whiteboard Friday and might be using Moz Analytics are almost certainly familiar with. And that is no error. That familiarity of user experience, that, "Oh, yes. I have been here before. Oh, yes. I am familiar with how to use a web analytics product or a search engine or an e-commerce site."
There's a reason that these follow into patterns and why these patterns are successful when they are repeated and deviation from those patterns can actually be dangerous. The legibility of font and text in a blog post, in a piece of content can influence whether it's shared more or less.
The ease of discovery and shareability of something. If something is very easy to copy and paste inside my browser so that I can easily tweet it, or if I am sent a link by somebody in an email that just says, "Hey, if you would retweet this that would be great," and it goes directly to their tweet, wow, this is very easy. It's very easy for me to share it, and therefore I am more likely to do so. Processing fluency dictates it is thus.
I would urge you, whenever you're thinking about your marketing campaigns, whether those be in the SEO world with things like your domain name, your title, your URL. Your URL, in a study by Bing, domain name and URL, the little part in the search results that's green, actually had a significant biasing effect on where clicks went. Almost as significant, in fact, a little more significant than whether there was a rel=author profile picture, according to Google. These are separate studies, but the data should match up.
The readability of that content. Social, the sharing time. When was it shared? Was it shared at a time when I'm going to see it? Was it shared at a time when I'm likely to be on a device where I'm more likely to share? Maybe that's mobile if it's a retweet. Maybe that's desktop if it's something where I actually want someone to take action, or a laptop, or a tablet.
The length of the content. Length is very much a part of processing fluency because very long articles, depends on the subject matter, but we have a tendency not to read or to comprehend and process all of that information.
In advertising, your copy, your layout, your design, this is classic ad agency world stuff that people have been doing for decades. And in content, the style, the UX, the complexity of that content.
Again, another really good example, Moz's own search ranking factors, which are produced every two years, and this summer we're coming out with a new version. It will be first presented at MozCon and then appear on the web. But the complexity of the new UI, that we launched in 2011, made it such that engagement on those pages was far less because you had to click over to different tabs to actually see the numbers, as opposed to seeing it all on one page. It reduced the shareability, the number of links it got, as compared to when it was done in 2005, 2007, and 2009. Fascinating, fascinating stuff.
If you were investing in web marketing channels, in content marketing and SEO, in social, and advertising of any kind, I would urge you to think about the fluency of the work that you're producing and whether people can really consume it as effectively as you're hoping they can. This can have a big impact on the effectiveness of the work that you do.
All right everyone. I hope you've enjoyed this edition of Whiteboard Friday, and we'll see you again next week. Take care."
It seems that a lot of people (myself included) would like to believe that we can be unbiased when we want to be--that we can always make the rational decision. But this tendency that we have towards what is simple, easy to understand and familiar just goes to show that we are constantly being faced with choices to make and we make a lot of our decisions subconsciously, rational or not. That's not always a bad thing, but it is an interesting look at human behavior.
I definitely can see how the concept of processing fluency impacts a whole bunch of things that we do on the web. Obviously, it's related to a lot of usability issues, but this Whiteboard Friday has me thinking about how easy it is for users to visually process the images on a website, the sales copy or product descriptions, the colors of a brand logo...
Lots of interesting stuff. Thanks for another great WBF!
<gush>First off, Rand, amazing WBF! This and the last one by David Mihm are two of my all-time favorites. </gush>
Rebecca, I agree--we totally like to believe we don't view information through our own special goggles, but to constantly maintain an objective perspective requires a ridiculous amount of effort unless you're a Zen master. Water flows down the path of least resistance, and humans do, too (we are mostly water, after all. Haha).
When designing a conversion funnel, I like to imagine the users effortlessly exploring these pristine halls filled with interesting artifacts that are just out of reach (gotta whet that appetite!), and then suddenly they're at these beautiful pearly white gates where they have to present an offering of dough to get in. Haha.
Really solid data Rand, you guys have really outdone yourselves with this one.
I like Moz, just becoz.
I love rhyme as reason. People love to like things that rhyme, and it is also one of my favorite cognitive biases to toss around in a tweet.
This really gives a ton of food for thought for day to day marketing. I don't think most people realize all of the thought that goes into a single post. Factoring basic things such as grammar and spelling is one thing. Adding in persuasive writing, making the post actually interesting to your audience, and now adding fluency can really make the publishing process very complex. Now I see why Moz has 3-4 people moderate each post.
Moz is king of fluency, and it is interesting how you all have implemented a ton of these changes with your re-brand: domain name , load time, attractiveness, legibility of font, sharability (probably more). :)
I love rhyme as reason as well...I have not rented a VHS tape from blockbuster in the last 15 years but I will never forget "Be Kind, Please Rewind"
This takes "Don't make me think" to a whole new level. People love familiarity, and an easy intuitive experience.
Nice! I always forget, life is perceived through emotional filters first. For Marketers , using emotion will bring us devotion. ( <<< Or, using Adaptive fluency will increase your results.). Man, good thing I don't make a living writing content! Thanks Rand!
Loved video, as always. I'm pretty sure it's "Alcohol reveals what sobriety conceals", but we get message.
Does Rand look like Will Wheaton to anyone else?
Also, cool vid.
he does it to me :)
Cognitive biases and heuristics -- we all agree other people have 'em, but usually refuse to acknowledge that we, ourselves, have them... Which is a cognitive bias (or two) in itself: Illusory superiority... Dunning–Kruger effect.
In my personal experience, I've confirmed the rhyme-as-reason bias is most effective when you use it in short-form messaging. Believe me, if you talk in rhyme constantly, you'll be labelled a troll or pimp.
Shakespeare would have been richer now if he were born this century.
To all marketing forms, hire poets.
Recently while doing keyword research I discovered the "rhyme as reason" theory
It was simple to think that people would do searches in a logical and structured way and most keyword tools funnel you into this kind of thinking but alas I thought to myself "People don't search like this" and are we as digital marketers feeding the machine with logical search queries that we are forgetting how Joe, Peter and Mary search for specific things different.
So I decided to extract the online marketing side out of my keyword research and process search queries within the rhyme as reason theory and voila I started generating more high user intent traffic. Thanks Rand for this WBF.
Interesting post Rand! I have been using the flesch score as an overall measurement of digestibility of my blog posts. I try and keep them as easy to read and follow as I can. I never though about rhyming though? Maybe that's why rappers are so popular :)
Hey Rand thanks for whiteboard Friday related to the importance of fluency and rhyming in web marketing. I have used rhyming in social networks and advertising but now i will try to implement it in SEO as well.
Yet another awesome WBF. Most consumers would not recognize just how significant 'rhyme' can be in the overall directability, yet in a nutshell you summarily made the point that it has a huge impact.
Absolutely spot on! Excellent Whiteboard Friday! I would mention few points I like most,
First, Your online presence should reflect your brand. It's possible that your brand is already established offline, but online, you should keep in mind that your competitor is just one click away. When someone comes on website of brand "XYZ" and it doesn't impress as much he/she is impressed by their offline presence, there high chances to try some other brands.
Second, very particular to readability. User agent specific rendering is now almost compulsory to get traffic from every possible way. For example, a blog or news post, pagination in mobile version is really good option which highly improve the readability.
Retain the customer is lot easier then to find new one. It's always important to satisfy your customer. One mobile and other recharge's platform in India provide support through twitter. They don't have any contact no. But in context, they have more than one million app download in Android only. I must say they have chose right platform for support (without spending a penny).
And that's why we all love 'Cat in the Hat'! - Great WBF Rand
David
Hi Rand, Thanks for yet a great whiteboard Friday,
In my experience, we tend to forget the Usability factors that come with any user interface.
Learnability. How quickly can a new visitor learn the user interface to accomplish basic tasks?
Efficiency. How quickly and easily can users perform tasks.
Memorability. Can a returning visitor remember how to effectively use your site or do they need to relearn everything.
Errors & Error Frequency. How many error are made, how severe and how easy to recover from them.
Satisfaction. How pleasant is it to use.
Excellent WBF - straight away "Beans Means Heinz" and "Mash Gets Smashed" adverts popped into my head and made me smile. Both ads are from my childhood and I still remember them. Excellent marketing.
Thanks for this post - this sounds a really sad observation for the evolved mammals we are but we indeed do many things based on the cues we get...
Rand - I must say - you energize my outlook on things and it is always a good time watching your passion illustrated through your portal.
I hope as MOZ continues to grow - your input, opinions etc are not lost as you become more "high-demand" as being a PRO customer for a while now - I can say your thoughts and tools you offer have molded my consulting in an agile way.
Thanks and much love to you MOZZERS!
your pal,
Chenzo
This was way much more awesomer than what I had at first anticipated. ;)
The rhyme thing seemed low key though interesting, but it got real good!
-Gary.
i really love whiteboard fridays - one reason for joining the community
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Good as ever.
Great WBF, Rand must have recently read, You Are Not So Smart: Why You Have Too Many Friends on Facebook, Why Your Memory Is Mostly Fiction, and 46 Other Ways You're Deluding Yourself by David McRaney. This book discusses the examples given on fluency bias (If the glove doesn't fit, alcohol reveals etc, stock market ticker symbols) as well as many other cognitive biases. Recommend it.
Dealing with or implementing the marketing strategies is not a simple thing as just blindly following the steps while it's necessary to check whether you are going in the right direction or not so keep checking the outcomes so that could make further updation in strategy if necessary.
I am like to read it, there is I am wait about the feature at this software :D
Rand this is a great article. It is awesome how you take how people are in the real world and show how that information can help with SEO. I will definitely become more aware.
Another good whiteboard Friday. It is fascinating that the algorithims of search engines have gotten to a level where SEO's can develop content with more than keywords and internal links in mind. Now, we can begin to integrate some traditional marketing studies analysis and data. The job duties of an SEO are constantly evolving and it is a great time to be involved in the field.
Something is niggling in the back of my head and has been since I saw this video Rand.
Surely the statement is 'What sobriety conceals, alcohol unmasks' and 'What sobriety conceals, alcohol reveals'.
I might be wrong (and therefore I apologise in advance) but hey just had to throw that in here!
David
Only just caught up on this Rand, but great bit of psychology to start the day today.
Just wanted to pick up on something we found on the readability thing: we rebranded and redesigned the website around this time last year and used a font we thought was fresh and clear and worked fine on all our machines in the office.
It wasn't until one brave visitor to the site told us that the font wasn't very readable that we had a second look at it - investigated alternatives and changed it that we saw an improvement in enquiries through the website. So completely agree with you there.
The other thing that we have tested time and again with ours (and our clients) websites is the 'ease of use' factor. Make a form short, simple and quick and enquiries flow more readily.
Just wanted to share some of our experience - you've made me want to go back to my cognitive biases book I have sat on our shelf here in the Summit Web office now!
And even if I think "this whiteboard friday wouldnt be that good or interesting for me" I watch it - I read it - I think different. I really love Fridays more because of whiteboard friday than caused by the coming Weekend...
a great post like allways - thx Rand - I only have a G+ to follow You and Matt Cutts :) I am from germany - G+ isnt in use here really - ok some employees from google may hang arround there :)
Ok - I found nearly 20 persons with the same interests ...
There are so many cognitive biases humans use, fluency is just one example. For marketers in can be very valuable to understand that decisions are not made logically most of the time.
Great WBF, I can personally relate to a number of points here, especially pronounce-ability of brand name. As a customer, I am definietly less likely if I'm not sure how to pronaunce the name of a brand/product.
Fascinating WBF! Keep the marketing and psychology posts coming. :)
Nice :)
Hello Rand. Honestly, I thoroughly enjoyed today's WBF! The article true made me aware about the fluency and rhyming. I just tried this way in performing Social Media, but will try in SEO also. It will bring up so fresh lime Soda effect in my content. :)
Great guide. Thanks!
Last week I watched your video on Wistia about "how Moz creates Whiteboard Friday Videos" that was awesome. Thanks for all your tips and advice.
As always another Great WBF :)
Thanks for this great piece of knowledge.
Will be waiting for Moz's 2013 edition of the Search Engine Ranking Factors.
Great whiteboard friday as usual. Any chance you could share a link to Microsoft's study of loading time on it's customers behaviour. Cheers
Good read on that Microsoft Study below: https://www.nytimes.com/2012/03/01/technology/impatient-web-users-flee-slow-loading-sites.html?_r=1
In fact, when Microsoft did a famous research study where they increased the amount of time before search results were returned by a mere 250 milliseconds, which is undetectable to the human eye, right? If you were shown a film strip and then there was a 250 millisecond cut, your eye could not detect it. Your brain would not know that you had been shown that image, and yet what they found was that abandonment rates went up. People searched less, and they searched less often, and they were less likely to return to the site.
That reminds me of the Selective Attention Test https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vJG698U2Mvo that was done. There are many different facets of perception and how our perception of things influence our decisions even though we think they are rational. We're so irrational...it's unbelievable how much.
Well this is eye opening to me about the fluency drift here and putting it in a true context in how we should write better for the memorability aspect for the consumer...I think we sometimes all lose sight of it. Great whiteboard!
Hi, Rand thanks for Another edition of whiteboard Friday related to the importance of fluency and user experience as well. Thanks again.
I've been following Moz for a long time, and quite frankly I'm glad that you re-branded. People had the wrong picture that it is all about technical SEO stuff, when in fact I've learned more here about things like UX, conversion optimization, marketing in general, than any other place on the net.
While watching this, I found myself shouting, "What? Rhyming affects believability? What??" Needless to say, it's startling how such a seemingly minor change can affect so much. What I wonder now though is, should we scrutinize every single word in our marketing materials and website to find opportunities to optimize for processing fluency? Of course, prioritization would be important, and by reviewing the most prominent things like taglines and such we can get the most bang for our buck.
Anyway, thanks for making this. Very helpful stuff. I look forward to more Whiteboard Fridays.
Keep changing the intro Rand! Loving the diversity :D I tend to love having the video at the top or having something on a post I can quickly look at (e.g. image, infographic, video, short but bolded text) just to get an idea of it, if there's nothing there that I can quickly understand if this post is going to be good or bad, I tend not to read it or get bored a lot quicker. Now I know I do this.. but I've figured out I do a lot of weird things that is probably affected by the 24/7 advertising and branding I've been exposed to since I was tiny! Most small brands can't afford to show themesleves off to you all the time, that's why these kind of techniques are great! Great example: We moved out share buttons on my site from the bottom to the top, our shares went up 400%!
Compelling subject as always Rand. There are two departures that I would like to make.
(1) "There's a reason that these follow into patterns and why these patterns are successful when they are repeated and deviation from those patterns can actually be dangerous." While there is some validity in this concept, it should not inhibit exuberant experimentation. We humans are an adaptable species and will venture forth into the unknow iff the allure is tempting enough. We have Apple.com to thank for the big honking hero graphic UI. We have Google to thank for the stripped down search UI. Both, incredibly radical user experience concepts at their time. IMHO,
patterns should be suggestive, not dictatorial.
(2) While it is true that people will not read online (except for their iPads, tablets, etc), this should not inhibit document length. Studies at the University of Washington have demonstrated that the paperless office only existed on Krypton and will never make it here as Web users will print, print, print long documents. They also bookmark long pages for future reference, email the URL to themselves or write it down on a piece of paper. Again, lots of coping mechanisms. Document length can be influential in creating a sense of authority for the search engines if the content is noteworthy. Again, IMHO, document length should not be a factor in messaging. There are user experience design concepts that compensate.
Many thanks for a thoughtful start to my Friday.
marianne
Rand@
Its always a pleasure to read your post. Previously i had done a research to findout the impact of visitors on my website, i noticed there is a huge difference of visitors as well as queries once i ignored the fluency, fluency is not less than habit if you are willing to get the desired results. I appreciate your Wine example Rand...... a very informational article.
My new Tag Line: "I am the SEO master because I run faster!" Do I get the job? hehe ;-) Great post Rand as usually your post reminds us that there are 101 facets to SEO and to venture out into all possible realms to improve and grow our personal knowledge and experience. Happy Friday!
As a psychology major in college turned SEO, I can't help but see the huge potential many psych studies can provide to the evolution of web design and content creation. Things like priming and selective disregard would be very interesting topics to discuss! Good stuff Rand!
Rand, I don't know how you continue to make WBFs better and better, but thank you. This was awesome. I hope folks around here don't get tired of me sharing these every Friday....too bad if they do, 'cause I'm just going to keep doing it.
Really Rand, you make my attempts at blogging look lame...but I'll persist just the same! :-)
Thanks again Rand. I love whiteboard Fridays and always open up the full screen. Thought of taglines under the brand....and if they had a rhyme how much more impact it might have.....so here are a couple of ideas on a Friday afternoon for inbound marketing ....
(brand logo)
What Goes Around Comes Around With Inbound Marketing (and variations...ideas?)
Inbound (reminds me of a missle or bomb warning)
so....maybe a title following tagline: The Inbound Marketing Missile - A Direct Hit
brand logo (Rand you are helping my brand)
Outbound is Out - Inbound is In (the title of page with h1 tag: - Why We Do Inbound Marketing)
(can I get some link juice from that, editors? Rand's white paper video is on the blog:)
Ti's the season for reason!
Once again, another awesome WB Friday! Rand, you are very good at explaining things. I can always understand even some of the more complex talks you've given, even if my a.d.d won't let me focus long enough to watch or read all of it!
Keep it up, can't wait to try the new analytic's feature.
What other biases challenge Web marketers?
Interesting facts I must say. The points made are very clear except for the pronounce-ability of brand name. I am not too sure how this fits into the whole picture of influencing visitors to take action.
However, I must comment that this Whiteboard Friday video is awesome and informative!
Great video, please apply this to parts of the new Moz site. A lot of stuff is hard to find, especially the tools. I can only access the Crawl Test tool by going to the help section and finding it on the sidebar, it's not even in the tools section!
Happy WBF!
Great stuff on marketing. It's no secret that psychology and marketing are close bed fellows going hand in hand together. We see 'neuro-marketing' having an effect in the real market. I find that share-ability is EXTREMELY important and everyone should be including share buttons for nearly all your content.
can some body help me how to download seo moz software thanks
There is no download required. Start a free trial to start using the platform!