General Information
Project description
When firms in the UK do not follow the Financial Conduct Authority’s (FCA) Rules or Principles, and consumers incur financial losses as a result, the FCA seeks to ensure customers receive adequate compensation, or redress. In 2011/12, the FCA helped obtain over £150 million worth of redress for consumers. Instances where consumers are due redress do not often receive publicity. Instead, the firm alerts customers to a potential issue, usually in the form of a letter that gives customers information, which they need to answer. Yet some customers do not respond, even when it is in their interest to act. Reasons may be that the relevant information is obscured or more complex than necessary, or that consumers suffer from inertia, but firms may not have sufficient incentives to correct these issues on their own.
People receive a lot of mail, much of it advertising, and have to sift through it in a limited amount of time. They have to decide which letters to open, look at, and read. Even if a consumer reads a letter and intends to act on it, there may be further barriers to responding, or they may procrastinate and forget. Much of this decision-making is quick and automatic. Insights from behavioral science suggest how firms may help consumers pay suitable attention to communication about redress due to them.
Detailed information
Final report: Is there a final report presenting the results and conclusions of this project?
Final report
Hypothesis
A distinctive envelope, key messages made salient and immediate, excess text reduced, the firm reassuring consumers that claiming redress will be easy and reminders should increase the number of consumers claiming due compensation.
How hypothesis was tested
Over a five-week period, the firm contacted groups of consumers with various letters. Some received the original envelope and letter designed by the firm with no reminder letter (control), and others received random combinations of the seven features above, for a total of 128 possible combinations.
Dependent variables
Increase in response rates VS Control letter
Analyses
See report
United Kingdom
London
Who is behind the project?
Project status:
Completed
Methods
What is the project about?
Date published:
25 June 2021