๐Ÿ’Ž The power of using nouns (being a voter) over verbs (voting)

You can stimulate group identity just by the way you have people talk about themselves or the way you phrase a question. For example, Gregory Walton’s research shows that if people say โ€œI am a chocolate eaterโ€ versus โ€œI eat chocolate a lot,โ€ it affects the strength of their preference for chocolate. โ€œEaterโ€ is a noun. โ€œEatโ€ is a verb. People who say โ€œI am a chocolate eater,” who use the noun instead of the verb, show a stronger preference for chocolate.

In a survey about voting, Walton’s experimenters asked, โ€œHow important is it to you to be a voter in tomorrow’s election?โ€ versus โ€œHow important is it to you to vote in tomorrow’s election?โ€ When the noun (voter) was used instead of the verb (vote), more people actually voted the following day. Feeling that you belong to a specific group affects your behavior.

When you ask people to do stuff, use nouns rather than verbs. Invoke a sense of belonging to a group and people are much more likely to comply with your request.

Excerpt from: 100 Things Every Designer Needs to Know About People (Voices That Matter)ย by Susan Weinschenk