4 Ways to Win Your Competitor's Customer Habits

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Nir Eyal

NirAndFar.com

4 Ways to Use Psychology to Win Your

Competition’s Customers Habits

Customer habits are a HUGE

competitive advantage. tweetable

tweetableWhen you see this bird, click it to send a quick tweet.

(don’t worry, you can still change the text before tweeting)

Companies win by

establishing strong

habits tweetable

First …

What is a habit?

Impulses to do

behaviors with little to

no conscious thought.

Habits are:tweetable

Using a product or

service automatically

For example:

Habit-Forming

Products have

HOOKS

HOOKS have 4 parts:

NirAndFar.com

There are FOUR ways to win

customer habits with better

HOOKS tweetable

1. Faster HOOKS

The faster users pass through a

HOOK, the greater the product’s

habit-forming potential

tweetable

vs.

For example :

Netflix won habits from Blockbuster

Get everyone in

the car, go to the

store, pick out the

movie, pay, drive

back home, watch.

The movie is sitting

on your counter

ready to watch.

2. More frequent HOOKS

Behaviors done more often

have a higher habit forming

potential

Studies show:

tweetable

When you remember you

need something AND

you’re at your computer.

Whenever you remember

you need something …

because you always have

your phone.

vs.

For example :Amazon mobile winning habits from Amazon web

3. More rewarding HOOKS

Products can change

habits when using them

feels better – the reward is

more rewarding.

tweetable

vs.

Knowing image

self-destructs means

people share more

interesting pics

Facebook is forever

so people share less

racy, funny, and

interesting images

For example :

Snapchat winning over Facebook users

4. Easier to enter

HOOKS

Removing barriers to entry

gets customers into your

HOOKS.

tweetable

• Complex

• Expensive

• Download

• Easy

• Free

• Cloud-based

For example :

Google docs takes on Office

vs.

Monopoly

of the mindWin with …

Faster

Higher Frequency

More Rewarding

Easier to enter

HOOKStweetable

Want more? These slides are based on an essay by Nir Eyal.

Click below to read the original article.

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