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3 mins
May 27, 2021
Written by
Jérémy Moreau

This article helps HR professionals use the behavioural science of âmental accountingâ to improve the effectiveness of financial recognition programmes.
You would argue blind that youâd value ÂŁ1 the same way no matter where you held it.
But it turns out that we feel more or less willing to spend that ÂŁ1, depending on things like how we got the money, whether itâs a coin or held digitally, and how itâs labelled.
The research behind this shows that we behave as if we have a set of imaginary coin jars in our heads. And we split our money between these coin jars.
Behavioural scientists call this âmental accountingâ. And have demonstrated that which mental account we hold our money in affects how we spend it.
To illustrate this in practice, imagine two different scenarios.
In the first scenario, you get a letter from HMRC telling you that youâve underpaid your tax in the previous year and owe ÂŁ500 to make up the shortfall.
If youâre like most people, you are likely to be livid, knowing that you will have to find the cash â possibly by raiding your savings account.
In the second scenario, you get a letter from HMRC telling you that youâve overpaid your tax in the previous year by ÂŁ500, and are therefore the recipient of a ÂŁ500 tax rebate.
If youâre like most people in this situation, youâre delighted to receive this âwindfallâ. You might even contemplate going straight out and buying yourself an expensive treat.
The interesting thing about these two situations â one that leaves you livid, the other delighted â is that in financial terms they leave you in exactly the same position. In the first, youâve underpaid, are now making up the difference; in the second, youâve overpaid and are being compensated.
But how we respond is governed by our mental coin jars. The first is labelled an unexpected debt, which needs to be dealt with; the second a bonus or windfall, which can be frivolously frittered away.
This is relevant to organisations. Letâs take financial recognition. We want these gifts to be impactful.
We might think that the best thing you can do to make a financial reward more impactful is to increase its size. But the research shows that several factors are at least as important to staff receiving financial recognition, including:
Who in the organisation the money comes from
When itâs given to them
How it is described and labelled (is it a âbonusâ or a âthank you?â)
Relative value compared to the rewards others get
Whether they are given instructions how to use it (âthis is for Xâ)
You can use the principles of mental accounting to increase the impact of your financial recognition by:
Doing it at a different time to payday
Presenting it in a tangible format, such as in cash within a card, ideally with a personalised note
Being clear that itâs a thank you for a specific action (âthis reward is for Xâ)
Giving a suggestion on how to use it (âthis is for you to do Yâ)
Gifting an additional, smaller sum for peer recognition (âthis is for a colleague who helped you achieve Xâ)
This helps deliver the biggest wellbeing boost to the individual, but also encourages people to think about rewards as a collective endeavour.
This article was written by Owain Service, CEO of CogCo He previously co-founded the Behavioural Insights Team and was Deputy Director of the Prime Ministerâs Strategy Unit. He is an Honorary Professor of Behavioural Science at Warwick University.
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