BIBaP Roundtable

November 2016

Personalise
Concentrated young businesswoman explaining market research results in graphs to mixed race colleagues. Focused group of diverse employees holding brainstorming meeting, discussing project ideas.
Time

08/11/2016 - 12:00 - 13:00

Address

UNSW

Description

  • November 08, 2016
  • Speakers:
    1. Andreas Ortmann
    2. Gigi Foster
    3. John Roberts
  • Topic: Big Data, Behavioural Economics, and Big Theory

The UNSW Business School research network on Behavioural Insights for Business and Policy held an invitation-only roundtable on the afternoon of November 8, 2016. This explored how three core themes – Big Data, Behavioural Economics, and Big Theory – can be harnessed in order to reinforce their value added to business (profit and not-for-profit) and government entities. Big Data has the advantages of large sample sizes and associated statistical power, unobtrusive data collection, and objective measures, but tends to be backward-looking by its very nature. Behavioural Economics offers a nuanced understanding of how real people make decisions, and how this decision-making can be facilitated by defaults and nudges.

Effective defaults and nudges, in turn, are informed by Big Theory –insights of behavioural social science that have shown to be robust across a variety of contexts. Participants had the opportunity to benchmark their use of behavioural economics with the latest in academic research and industry best practice, and to engage in constructive discussion with their fellow participants and the roundtable speakers and facilitators. Three members of the Behavioural Insights research network sketched the key ideas related to the Big Data, Behavioural Economics and Big Theory to provide background and to facilitate roundtable discussions of how behavioural insights could be used in order to obtain an evidence-based competitive advantage within an organisation, in relations with customers and suppliers, and regarding partners and other stakeholders.

Research Roundtable Speakers

Professor Andreas Ortmann, Professor of Behavioural and Experimental Economics. Associate Professor Gigi Foster, co-author of The economics of multitasking (Palgrave Macmillan 2016) and An Economic Theory of Greed, Love, Groups, and Networks (Cambridge University Press 2013).

Professor John Roberts, Professor of Marketing and a Fellow of both London Business School and Fudan University. JR has extensive senior executive experience and the company that he founded, Marketing Insights, an Asian leader in strategic marketing consulting, is now a part of the world’s largest marketing information company, A C Nielsen. *The UNSW Business School research network on Behavioural Insights for Business and Policy develops and applies best practices to ensure behavioural insights from experimental research in Economics, Finance, Risk, Marketing, and Psychology are credible and robust. More details visit Behavioural Insights for Business and Policy.

Research Roundtable Presentations