Baking the Illusion
The Betty Crocker Egg Theory and Why We Desperately Want to Labor for Our Products
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- 4,99 €
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- 4,99 €
Publisher Description
In the mid-20th century, food companies introduced the ultimate convenience: instant cake mix. All the modern housewife had to do was add water and bake. Surprisingly, the product flopped entirely. Focus groups revealed that women felt guilty using it; it was simply too easy to feel like real baking.
Baking the Illusion explores the fascinating psychological pivot that saved the industry. General Mills brought in a psychologist who suggested a counterintuitive solution: remove the powdered egg from the mix. By forcing the consumer to crack a fresh egg and add it themselves, the perceived effort justified the final product. Sales immediately skyrocketed.
This book dives deep into the "Effort Justification" bias, a cornerstone of modern behavioral economics. It details how humanity inherently distrusts solutions that are completely frictionless. We assign artificially high value to things that demand our sweat, tears, or time, even if the objective quality remains unchanged.
Understand the mechanics of your own satisfaction. By recognizing how corporations engineer artificial hurdles into their products, you can stop confusing struggle with value and make clearer, more rational decisions about where you invest your energy.