4. How can we use { } to... [goal]
www.getmentalnotes.com
www.getmentalnotes.com
5. Social Proof Curiosity
We tend to follow the patterns of similar others When teased with a small bit of interesting
in new or unfamiliar situations. information, people will want to know more!
How can we use { } to... [goal]
To put people at ease or guide a decision, find creative When—and what—can you hold back? Reveal just enough
ways to show social activity. This can be in the form of stats to arouse interest, then tease someone into taking the next
(favorited by, number of views, comments), good positive step. You can also arouse interest by doing something unusual
reviews/ testimonials, or by providing visibility into the actions and unexpected—people will stick around long enough to
or outcomes of other users’ behaviors. determine what’s going on. Similarly, puzzles are intriguing.
See also: Bystander Effect, Testimonials, Identification See also: Pattern Recognition, Badges, Gifting
Mental Notes Sneak Preview | Find out more at www.getmentalnotes.com
www.getmentalnotes.com
25. 1. “TEMPERANCE. Eat not to dullness; drink not to elevation.”
2. “SILENCE. Speak not but what may benefit others or yourself; avoid trifling conversation.”
3. “ORDER. Let all your things have their places; let each part of your business have its time.”
4. “RESOLUTION. Resolve to perform what you ought; perform without fail what you resolve.”
5. “FRUGALITY. Make no expense but to do good to others or yourself; i.e., waste nothing.”
6. “INDUSTRY. Lose no time; be always employ’d in something useful; cut off all unnecessary actions.”
7. “SINCERITY. Use no hurtful deceit; think innocently and justly, and, if you speak, speak accordingly.”
8. “JUSTICE. Wrong none by doing injuries, or omitting the benefits that are your duty.”
9. “MODERATION. Avoid extremes; forbear resenting injuries so much as you think they deserve.”
10. “CLEANLINESS. Tolerate no uncleanliness in body, cloaths, or habitation.”
11. “TRANQUILLITY. Be not disturbed at trifles, or at accidents common or unavoidable.”
12. “CHASTITY. Rarely use venery but for health or offspring, never to dullness, weakness, or the injury of
your own or another’s peace or reputation.”
13. “HUMILITY. Imitate Jesus and Socrates.”
26.
27.
28.
29.
30. 2008 Personal annual report for Stephen Anderson
Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
Austin Miami San Francisco Seattle Mountain View New York Franklin Minneapolis
Mar 07 to Mar 11 Apr 10 to Apr 14 Apr 20 to Apr 22 Aug 21 to Aug 23 September 24 Sep 24 to Sep 26 Nov 06 to Nov 09 Dec 09 to Dec 11
You took 17 trips in 2008, which added In 2008, you spent
up to 55,753 km or 15% of the
distance to the moon.
323 43
In 2008, you mostly coincided with:
You have 52 travellers in your network. They travelled a
total of 1,753,265 km in 2008, and everyone on Dopplr
Kevin travelled a total of 1331.4 million km or 8.9 AU in 2008:
the approximate distance to Saturn from the Earth as
in Austin, Miami and San Francisco
of January 2009.
Peter
Your personal velocity for 2008 was 6.36
in Austin, Miami and Berkeley km/h, which is about the same as a duck. You spent the longest in Minneapolis, Jesse Spalding Your carbon for 2008
has a tip:
Jay Lots of great farmer's markets in the summer!
The 5 most popular cities in your network are San
in Minneapolis Minneapolis Farmer's Market on Lyndale Ave and
Francisco, Austin, New York, Miami and Chicago.
Cesar Chavez Ave or Nicollet Mall
Chris http://www.mplsfarmersmarket.com/
in Miami and San Francisco Mill City Farmer's Market on Chicago Ave and 2nd St.
The furthest distance you travelled was to New York S
Brandon (4,120 km from Mountain View), which is the 2nd most ...
popular city on Dopplr. The shortest distance you 6,606 kg CO2
in Miami and San Francisco travelled was to Austin (322 km from Plano), which is See more on the city page for Minneapolis on Dopplr. Based on figures from Fueleconomy.gov, 1 x Hummer
the 21st most popular city on Dopplr. H3 4WD truck produces nearly 10 metric tonnes of
CO2 a year. The visualisation above uses this figure to
illustrate your carbon from Dopplr as calculated by our
friends at http://amee.cc and is an approximation only.
The city images above sourced from Flickr and are used under a Creative Commons Attribution Licence: by pusgums, brickell by alexdecarvalho, Passing Under The Golden Gate Bridge by Dawn Endico, Seattle, Washington by fddi1, Apple I keyboard by Marcin
Wichary, smokin by mudpig and Spoonbridge and Cherry by TimWilson.
41. We've had other exercise equipment around the
house before, as well as gym memberships, yoga
classes, etc. None of them has been as
motivating as a simple set of exercises wrapped
in a system of game-like rewards. My wife's
experience with Wii Fit speaks volumes about
games potential to turn an often mundane
activity into entertainment that is delightful,
exploratory and highly meaningful.
http://www.lostgarden.com/2008/06/what-actitivies-that-can-be-turned-into.html
42. We've had other exercise equipment around the
house before, as well as gym memberships, yoga
classes, etc. None of them has been as
motivating as a simple set of exercises wrapped
in a system of game-like rewards. My wife's
experience with Wii Fit speaks volumes about
games potential to turn an often mundane
activity into entertainment that is delightful,
exploratory and highly meaningful.
http://www.lostgarden.com/2008/06/what-actitivies-that-can-be-turned-into.html
43. We've had other exercise equipment around the
house before, as well as gym memberships, yoga
classes, etc. None of them has been as
Could as simple
motivating o bset of rue ofwrapped
this aals e texercises
in a systemapgame-likens?
of plicatio rewards. My wife's
business with Wii Fit speaks volumes about
experience
games potential to turn an often mundane
activity into entertainment that is delightful,
exploratory and highly meaningful.
http://www.lostgarden.com/2008/06/what-actitivies-that-can-be-turned-into.html
44. Performance Reviews
Hiring & Recruiting Tools
Time Tracking
Invoices
Health Records Corporate Email Scheduling Apps
Project Management Software
Investment Tools
Sales Tracking
Online Training / E-Learning
Banking & Accounting Tools Marketing Managemen
Knowledge Sharing
File Manageme
Customer Relationship Management
45. “I can do what’s
Hiring & Recruiting Tools
Performance Reviews
Time Tracking
required ofices
Invo me.”
Health Records Corporate Email Scheduling Apps
Project Management Software
Investment Tools
Sales Tracking
“Wow, Training / E-Leara ng
Online
I’m having ni
great time, and getting
Banking & Accounting Tools
better every day!”
Marketing Managemen
Knowledge Sharing
File Manageme
Customer Relationship Management
53. Further reading...
http://johnnyholland.org/2010/01/27/when-data-gets-up-close-and-personal/
54. (sheet of paper + something to write with)
What are you working
on, right now?
What are some of the
business goals associated
with your project?
55. What do people have to do
in order for your business to
be successful?
brilliant question from Joshua Porter | bokardo.com
56. behaviors
What do people have to do
in order for your business to
be successful?
brilliant question from Joshua Porter | bokardo.com
57. behaviors
What do people have to do
in order for your business to
be successful?
business goals
brilliant question from Joshua Porter | bokardo.com
58. behaviors
What do people have to do
in order for your business to
be successful?
business goals
brilliant question from Joshua Porter | bokardo.com
61. Business goals
(Problems to be solved)
I’m lousy at responding to emails in a timely fashion,
important emails often fall through the cracks,
I sign up for email lists I intend to read but never do,
sifting through the avalanche of emails is only getting worse
I’d like email to be fun, and not feel like a burden and...
I suspect these are a universal problems, right!!?
62. Behaviors to encourage:
Never open an email twice
Read emails in the order they were received
Answer briefly
Respond in a timely manner
Only check email twice a day (or once an hour)
...and so on
66. +10 points for taking action!
Never open an email twice 0 for opening an email a second time.
-5 for opening it a 3rd time. (And so on)
Read emails in the order Dealing with an email in the order it
is received will get you +5 points.
they were received Skipping it will get you nothing.
You could set personal goals for this behavior.
Answer briefly 10 points for keeping it under 5 sentences. -1
point for every sentence over 5.
Respond within ‘x’ hours Responding within 48 hours gets you +15 points.
67.
68.
69. Meh. For this email, you only got 25 out of 40 possible points.
76. F inal Score
73%
YO U R A F T E R T H E M E E T I N G S C O R E :
By completing the 3 outstanding commitments (2 of which
* are overdue!), you can raise this score to 92%.
A perfect score is not possible for this meeting due to several
slow responses. Try to work on this in the future.
D E L I V E RY:
T H I S S C O R E I S A FA C T O R O F :
– decisions made
– commitments made (and kept)
– commitments completed as promised
– timely responses to all requests
Commitments agreed to be completed
after today’s date do not count against
the group score.
www.afterthemeeting.com
90. Ford and Honda's next-gen instrument clusters feature
trees (a vine in Ford's case) that grow more lush as
drivers learn to hypermile — the fine art of maximizing
fuel economy.
91.
92. After just a couple days of using
Fitbit, I got hooked on the idea of
keeping digital tabs on myself, and I
liked looking back at my activity log
over a period of time. I started taking
the long way walking to and from
my Washington, D.C., Metro stop.
Rather than rolling my chair over to
the printer to grab a printout, I stood
up and walked the four feet over to it
so I could log a few extra steps.
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703740004574513582518301794.html
93. ...monitoring the bloom
was the gentle nudge
[Andrew Chen] needed to
stay on track.
“It’s a nice reminder to be
more active without being
too numeric or cold...”
http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/12/10/fitbits-motivator-a-virtual-flower/
94. The little flower growing represents
anticipation and hope that something good
will happen, which is the flower growing...
When you push that button and see the
change, it's instant feedback, a reward.
Even though the device seems simple, it's
tapping into a complex psychology that
changes people's behavior... It hits the right
button.
These kinds of feedback systems tap into
basic human nature... Most humans are
naturally wired to nurture things and be
rewarded for doing so...
http://www.core77.com/blog/news/captology_how_the_fitbit_pedometer_really_motivates_its_users_15582.asp
97. “Ouch! You only responded to 38% of your
emails in a timely fashion. This may be due to
your lengthy (avg 17.4 sentences) replies.
For next month, focus on shorter responses in
a shorter timeframe.”
98. You responded to that email in under 2
minutes... That’s much better than your
average response time of 8.5 minutes.
Good job!
99. PHRASE 1
PHRASE 2
(dozens of different possible phrases)
www.afterthemeeting.com
121. PEOPLE WANT TO FEEL GOOD
ABOUT THEMSELVES.
-Put a positive spin on your comments.
-Bad performance? Present as a problem to be solved.
-Indicate next step necessary to improve a bad situation.
-Adjust target goals per individual (vs absolute).
122. PEOPLE GET BORED WITH THE
“SAME OLD THING.”
-How can you add variety, momentum, surprise,
narrative and similar ideas to your feedback?
-mix the unexpected in with the expected
124. the idea is for a system that makes previously
invisible aspects of people’s behaviour visible,
in order to help change individual and collective
behaviour.
-Dan Hill
http://www.cityofsound.com/blog/2008/01/the-personal-we.html
125. Feedback loops
the idea is for a system that makes previously
invisible aspects of people’s behaviour visible,
presented in an emotionally engaging way
in order to help change individual and collective
behaviour.
can affect individual and collective behaviors
by suggesting and reinforcing specific goals.
-Dan Hill
http://www.cityofsound.com/blog/2008/01/the-personal-we.html
126. What are your business
Goals?
Could your application—and
users—benefit from offering
personal feedback?
127. “That is the best gift an educator can give—
to get somebody to become self-reflective”
—Randy Pausch, The Last Lecture
128. Get a feedback loop and listen to it. Your
feedback loop can be this dorky spreadsheet
thing I did or it can just be one great man
who tells you what you need to hear. The
hard part is the listening to it.
—Randy Pausch, The Last Lecture
129. Thanks!! @stephenanderson
Stephen P. Anderson
www.getmentalnotes.com
www.poetpainter.com
www.slideshare.net/stephenpa