Posted on 04/01/2012 12:15:28 PM PDT by ShadowAce
A few months back I was at the main Apple Store in New York City. I wanted to buy a case for my sons iPod touchbut it was December 23. The crowds were so thick, I envied sardines.
Fortunately, I knew something that most of these people didnt: I could grab an item off the shelf, scan it with my iPhone and walk right out. Thanks to the free Apple Store app, I didnt have to wait in line or even find an employee. The purchase was instantly billed to my Apple account. I was in and out of there in two minutes.
Apple, in other words, has reached new heights in reducing frictionwhich benefits it as much as its customers.
Friction is a hassle. Steps. Process. And in this increasingly technified world, there is still a surprising amount of red tapeand few examples of push back. We stress about things like price, storage and processor speed, instead of beauty, elegance and low friction.
Why do some stores still make us sign credit-card slips? There is no legal or bank requirement to collect signatures. That bit of friction was originally intended as a security measurebut when is the last time you saw a clerk compare your signature with one on the back of the card?
Why, in this day and age, are we still typing in our address and credit-card details into Web forms, over and over again? Companies like Apple and Amazon have figured it out. Low friction means more sales. Apple has its app; Amazon has its 1-Click Buy button. You dont have to enter any extra information. You see something you want, you click, and youve just bought it.
Every Web site that makes you fill in a form, or wait for a confirmation e-mail, or take some test to prove that you are human is adding frictionand losing sales. All of us, sooner or later, will wind up sitting there with a comment to make or a product to buy, see how many hoops we have to jump through and then back out: Oh, forget itnot worth it.
Actually, low friction doesnt just mean more sales. It means more of any behavior youre trying to encourage. Take, for example, the right to vote.
The formula for predicting someones likelihood to vote is something like PB + D > C, where P is the probability that your vote will make a difference, B is the benefit to you if your candidate wins, D is the gratification you get from voting, and C is frictionthe hassle of registering to vote, then getting to the polling place, standing in line, and so on. Clearly, lowering the friction would increase turnout.
Imagine if we could register and vote onlineor vote by making a few taps in a phone app. Voter turnout would likely skyrocket. And that would make for a real democracy. (Fear of manipulation is supposedly the reason were not there yet. But we could get there if we really wanted to.)
Or what about the obesity epidemic? Weve tried almost every solution under the sunexcept reducing friction. You can buy coffee with a tap on a Starbucks app, so why not healthy foods? Why cant you get an apple, banana or bag of baby carrots in more vending machines or from a market with an app tap? Eating right still takes more effort than eating junk. Change the friction coefficient, and you change the game.
Next time youre shopping for a digital camera, dont ask how many megapixels it has. Ask how many steps it takes to turn on the manual focus. When you buy a laptop, dont just care about its screen size; care about how many touch tones are required to get you to tech support. When you buy a phone, see how many taps it takes to e-mail a photo.
And if youre on the other side of the tableif youre the vendordont just figure out how to attract customers. Figure out how to eliminate the friction you present to them.
Low friction = identity theft!
There’s a lot of friction between myself and this article . . .
Reminds me a scene from “The Jetson’s” George comes home from work pooped. “I had to press the button 10 times today” he moans to Jane.
Fracking friction, friend.
Don’t spoil it, Kroil it!
How does Apple distinguish between the frictionless buyer and a shoplifter?
scan it with my iPhone and walk right out. Thanks to the free Apple Store app, I didnt have to wait in line or even find an employee. The purchase was instantly billed to my Apple account. I was in and out of there in two minutes.
So, how does WalMart Security know that you paid for an item that you are “just walking out with” ?
Because even when they are available in that way, hardly anyone buys them. Show me something really healthy that comes in chocolate and I'll show you a very popular food. Otherwise, just shut up. You're talking stupid.
Gravity’s a hassle, too. But try living without it.
I agree with you, hardly anyone would buy them. Sometimes candy bars sit in vending machines for weeks; no problem. How appetizing are those bananas and apples when they're black and covered with fuzzy green mold? Yum!
Friction could mean thoughtfulness and effort. There should be thoughtfulness and effort in the really important transactions we make, like voting for who will govern us.
Walmart Security doesn’t give a shiz about shoplifters... they just set their margin to cover for shrinkage. It’s cheaper NOT to look for and arrest shoplifters.
Those cameras all over are to cover for lawsuits.
It is just so nice to be here in flyover country. In a little while I shall go down to my dock with a cold beverage and enjoy the lake at sunset.
Imagine if we could register and vote onlineor vote by making a few taps in a phone app. Voter turnout would likely skyrocket. And that would make for a real democracy.Democracy, yes - but not a Republic.
Gravity sucks.
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