The graphic above highlights a few of our behaviour change techniques: Personalised SMART goals and feedback, social proofs, and impact reframing.
Goals
Setting fair and achievable goals can be a highly effective motivational technique. In fact, goal-setting theory is supported by decades of psychological research involving thousands of participants in different countries and a diverse range of tasks. When goals are set correctly, people pay more attention to relevant information, put in more effort, persist for extended periods, and seek out knowledge and strategies relevant to the goals.
Signol’s goals are presented in a user-friendly and accessible format. Still, behind the scenes, they are generated with sophisticated models that consider what’s within reach for each individual, given their historical performance and current circumstances (such as vehicle type, routes, and environmental conditions). In other words, Signol’s goals are highly personalised to each individual and adjusted to ensure they match the genuine opportunities the individual has to perform a desired behaviour. We are also very cautious about continuously increasing someone’s goals as they make progress because we want to avoid rewarding individuals’ hard work by changing the target – this is a top concern for pilots and seafarers. We pair each goal with dynamic and positive feedback that recognises the individual’s efforts – regardless of their goal result. This ethos of positive reinforcement runs throughout the Signol service and ensures pilots and seafarers receive the recognition and support that employers can’t always provide on an individual basis.
Social proof
Signol’s social proof technique offers airline pilots and seafarers relevant and actionable insights into what social norms exist around fuel-saving behaviour among their peers. Signol’s social proofs, however, are quite distinct from the previous examples in tax letters and household energy reports. Simply highlighting what most other pilots or seafarers do with regard to fuel-saving practices is not particularly relevant, as the other pilots and seafarers may have faced very different operating conditions. While the tax letters and household energy reports limited the social norm to the area in which people lived to ensure some relevancy – Signol’s social proofs account for multiple operational factors based on what’s relevant to each fuel-saving behaviour, such as route, airport, or aircraft type. In this way, our social proof insights highlight what most other professionals did under the same or similar operating conditions – encouraging pilots and seafarers to follow suit if possible.