Randy SalzmanTDM Research and Consulting
CommunitySocial MarketingTransportation Behavior
Program
Why America Must Address Driving Behavior• Drive 2.9 trillion
miles/year in 411 billion trips, 87 % alone
• Produce 45 percent of entire world’s automotive CO2
• Transport creates more greenhouse than other economic sectors
• And uses 70 percent of U.S. daily19 million barrels of oil
• Two-thirds imported• Creating national oil spill,
congestion, pollution externalities
• While our nation gets fatter and less healthy
• And the world believes we will spill “blood for oil”
USDOT, Texas Transportation Institute, U-Mass Center for Transportation, Pew Charitable Trust
But Our Culture Supports Driving
• Advertisers seek the child market because, once hooked, he or she rarely changes behavior
• ‘Engravings on brain’• The ‘license’ is a right of
passage• Car perceived of as ‘freedom’• The film hero always drives a
‘hot’ car• Media is supported by car
advertising dollars and product placement
• Media editors, bloggers, writers, designers, actors are all drivers
• Politicians cater to driving voters
To hold annual congestion loss at $87 billion, 4.2 billion hours,
must build over 16,000 highway miles annually
Global Warming, Peak Oil, Health, Congestion, Foreign
Policy, Parking, Space, Safety and Land Use
Need individual transport behavioral change…
…in the short term…on a massive scale
…with little institutional power…in a culture prizing individuality
…with generally poor substitutions…which often require decades to
build
Paradoxes• Drivers underestimate time/cost of car.
Overestimate time/cost of alternatives• Congestion caused by habitual, local
driving. Complex, multi-jurisdictional results
• Building roadways to fight congestion induces more traffic
• Voters react primarily to congestion. Politicians can’t be seen to be ‘attacking’ driving voters
• Alternative transportation ‘stated preference’ unreliable. Yet seek ‘stated prefer’ data for funding
Alternative Mitigation“Soft” Transportation Demand Management
• “Hard” – make people pay to drive• “Soft” – incentivize & educate them
w/Why & How to use alternatives• TravelSmart worldwide successfully
getting drivers out of single occupancy vehicles
• Bottom Line: Soft TDM is best approach to altering driving behavior in wide-open-space democracy
How America does TDM today
• Commute-oriented, “benefits day” handouts, CDs, web pages – Must “drive to” media
• But commute trip hardest to change• Generally, promoted by employer’s
low-level, human resource personnel• With scant public backing, usually
youngest planner on regional planning district staff
• Emphasis on time and dollar savings of using alternative commute modes
Better TDM Community Social Marketing
• Still employer based – tied to existing American TDM1. Save on parking, long-term health costs3. Connect well-known problems like global warming, oil dependency4. Doesn’t “threaten” potential voters or employees
• Underscored by Psychology, Marketing, Leadership and Consumer Behavior data
• Utilize consistent, simple corporate message
• Best: “Carrots, Sticks AND Tambourines”
Community Social Marketing
TDM Discuss auto ‘externality’ issues w/staff at monthly department/division meetings. Socially market driving issues in short, five-minute segments (one issue/externality each meeting) led by “know-nothing” upper management
1. Illustrates organization leaders behind “right thing” • Upper management follows short basic script
2. Allows “framing” discussion • Max 10 slides keeps upper management directing info flow
3. Eliminates off-message questions • “Keep meeting short for department’s benefit”
4. Allows monthly reiteration of same, simple “right thing” message
• “The organization cares. Hope you do too”5. Reinforces “changers”
• Assures them they made right decision
Social Marketing
Health Externality Discussion
• Doctors prescribe walks today• Business: Every $ spent on
fitness returns $3.15 in health benefits
• Fit: Average 3-5 less sick days• Some employers pay bonus for
fitness -- $7 to $14 per percentage/#pounds lost
Greatest potential for organizational health benefits accrue if sedentary adults begin regular, moderate activity
• Like walk to transit stop daily
• Or daily active transportation
Community Dialogue Marketing
TDM Monthly ask employees after social marketing/externality discussion if want more info or consider another transportation modeSign each individual up for dialogue marketing• Allows work with only employees most likely to
address habit while reminding mass of behavioral change need
• Allows bypass/isolation of advocates for auto lobby
• Builds towards individual and corporate “tipping point”
• Similar to ‘TravelSmart’ but employer-solution focus
• No one is coerced
Dialogue MarketingTDM
Have knowledgeable advocate individually market that employee
with data and rewards for attempting other commute styles
Akin to Australia’s “TravelSmart” program1. Western Australia: 135,000 families targeted in 2008, as
many as 12 personal contacts each, total of 418,000 households since 2000
2. Leadership support, from a distance3. All demographics – especially professionals – utilize
alternative transportation4. In Brisbane, undergoing $22.6 million project to market
324,000 households5. About $70 per household
With social marketing, nudges the mass as well as quickly gathers “low hanging
fruit”
Dialogue Marketing
In every Aussie city except Sydney• Perth: Have annual 13-percent reduction in car-miles driven
30 million less car trips with 88,000 tons less greenhouse gas annually• 27-percent increase active/muscle-powered transport
7 million more hours of physical activity annually from 9 million more walking trips & 4 million more cycling trips (up 58 percent)
• Stronger neighborhoods (Norman Rockwell effect)• Perth: Transit boardings up 4.2 million annually. 48 percent
return on investment annually. • 67:1 benefit-cost ratio – (auto projects 4:1)• Adelaide: GPS study found 18 percent reduction in KM driven.• Brisbane: Seeking diffusion, duration, carryover research in
324,000 home project – no health or political effect data – after 70,000 home project found 60 percent diffusion rate.
Perth opened new commuter rail in December 2007 90% approval ratings, 67,000 first-day riders.
Brisbane building huge bike/ped and busway system.
Dialogue Marketing Western AustraliaDecade later
Perth – a city of suburbs and freeways -- expanded TravelSmart conceptto individually, dialogue market
citizensEnergy, Water, Recycling
Originally, ¾ citizens didn’t want marketing. Today, 80 percent desire hearing how to change own
behavior.“People want to be part of the
solution. They just don’t know how.”Brög, TravelSmart founder, 2007
Long Term Results• Adelaide, 3-year GPS project. Drivers traveling
average 12.4 FEWER miles per day after TS marketing
• TS credited with re-vitalizing transit in Western Australia, Queensland and Victoria
• Both Conservative and Liberal politicians love “tax dollars at work” letters marketed to solely people who care
• Brisbane built two, $6.5 million “end of road” cycle centers, budgeted $100 million in bike-ped trails, considering downtown lanes for Bus Rapid Transit, opened fourth busway in 2009
• Several communities placed political ban on road building
• Fed 2010 budget: 55% to transit -- 80% to highways in US
Australia Expanding Rapidly
“Given the findings to date, the number of evaluations undertaken, and theirconsistency, Australia is now in a position to move beyond piloting TravelSmart to engage in large-scale interventions in all major metropolitan and large regional centres.
“There is little further need to undertake major evaluations of household projects, as the Australian and international data is in broad agreement, and there is little need to demonstrate the effectiveness of methods used.”
Report to the Department of Environment:Evaluation of Australian TravelSmart Projects in the ACT, South Australia, Queensland,
Victoria and Western Australia: 2001–2005
Dialogue Marketing TDM
• Discover transportation/commute needsConstantly tailor substitutions and adapt due to
on-going “action” research• Solve disincentives; Create incentives to mode
change• Show options: Hike, bike, car-van pool, transit,
telecommuteBus schedule from nearest stop; Perhaps free passBike shop discountsWalk/bike maps, discounts for walking shoesActively connect employees working similar hours
• Emphasize guaranteed ride home program• Emphasize “occasional parker” programs• Emphasize flex car possibilities
Present Opportunity• Administration seeking “Livable
Communities” projects which tie transportation to global warming, oil vulnerability and neighborhood development
• Research dollars available, as well, from CDC, Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, Rockefeller Foundation
• FHWA now seeking unique concepts in its “Non-motorized Transportation Pilot Program”
• EPA now seeking “Climate Showcase Communities” w/dollar grants and technical support
Human Behavior ConceptsNudge
Thaler & Sunstein, 2008
The Tipping PointGladwell, 2000
Fostering Sustainable Behavior Mackenzie-Mohr & Smith, 1999
Changing Minds Gardner, 2004
Psychological Needs and the Facilitation of Integrative Processes Ryan, 1995
Why We Do What We DoDeci & Flaste, 1996
Randy [email protected]
Randy SalzmanTDM Research and Consulting
CommunitySocial MarketingTransportation Behavior
Program
Community-based MarketingChange inevitable but most resist change
Self-Determination, Autonomous Decision Success“Autonomous choice requires a decision that is accompanied by the experience of endorsement and willingness.”
Deci, Why We Do What We Do
Seven Tools to Change MindsReason: Research: Resonance: Representational Re-Descriptions: Resources and Rewards: Real World Events: Addressing Resistances
Gardner, Changing Minds