This humorous video takes a look at how Apple is focusing on marketing rather than innovating.
A Prank
Would you confuse an iPhone (4” screen) with an iPad Mini (7” screen)? The screen sizes are very different. Not even Samsung makes a 7” phone (their largest is the Mega at 6.3”; review in MobileSyrup). This video shows that people can be fooled into thinking old is new and into saying what they think the interviewer wants to hear.Familiarity
Can you tell- Pepsi from Coke
- coffee from tea
- cheap wine from pricey wine
Authority
We get fooled by signs of authority which imply trustworthiness such as a uniform, designations and experience. The Stanley Milgram obedience experiments in the early 1960s are extreme examples in which the subject thinks they are giving an unseen person increasingly strong electric shocks for making mistakes.Prison
The Stanford prison experiment (Wikipedia) split subjects randomly into guards or prisoners. The participants started adopted their roles very quickly with dire results.evenHow Familiar?
When you’re not familiar, you can get fooled … even by yourself. Perhaps calling someone a “financial advisor” makes them (and you) think they really are?We were in a health food store looking for supplements. Since the choices were confusing, we asked for help. We bought what was recommended … and the priciest (41% more than our usual). Did we make the right decision? We think so. Maybe that’s what really matters.
There are lots of things we don’t know. That makes us vulnerable … and profitable.
Links
- Jimmy Kimmel pranks people with the ‘new’ iPhone 5S (Mashable, Sep 12, 2013)
- The real difference between Coke and Pepsi (Business Insider, Dec 2012)
- Placebos are getting more effective (Wired, Aug 2009)
- Galaxy Mega 6.3 review (Mobile Syrup, Sep 9, 2013)
- The Milgram experiment (BBC video)
Podcast 237
direct download | Internet Archive page | iTunes
PS Do you think the new iPhones are really new?
No comments:
Post a Comment