What House MD Wants Us to Know
About Consumer Research
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I’m a big fan of the Fox Television series House. There’s something about the way that Hugh Laurie’s character navigates his way through life that is as appealing as it’s unattractive. Perhaps it’s that for him wisdom is the panacea for life’s anguish, not wealth or love, although of course House himself appears as driven as people fixated on the more traditional goals. Or perhaps it’s that he has the sort of self-confidence and personal conviction that we’d all like to possess, and through watching him we can have a taste of how that might feel. I know that one thing I do share with this TV character is his firm belief that people don’t tell the truth. As someone who’s watched and interviewed more consumers than most people, it’s usual that there’s a wide gap between what people do and what they tell me. As House says, "I've found that when you want to know the truth about someone that someone is probably the last person you should ask."
Is this unfounded cynicism or healthy scepticism? Well, lots of research exists that shows that our perceptions of ourselves are distorted; people think that they’re better looking, better driving and better thinking than average – mathematically speaking we can’t all be right (but since you’re reading this you can take it from me, you’re lovely and smart). But is this a conscious action on the part of the fibber concerned, or does it happen unconsciously? Researchers were interested in two aspects of deception. Our desire to see ourselves as better than we really are (self-enhancement) and our capacity to say things that make us look good to those around us (impression management). To work out whether we know we’re doing it they gave people mentally taxing things to think about (remembering an eight digit number or counting songs) whilst responding to questionnaires designed to gauge levels of self-enhancement (such as “My first impressions of people are usually right”) and impression management (“I have never dropped litter in the street”). Keep reading to find out what they discovered (and whether House is right to be so sceptical)... »
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