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Podcast Episodes

What is behavioral economics? Why does it matter to you?

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Podcast Episodes

What is behavioral economics? Why does it matter to you?

210. How Minds Change with David McRaney

Today I am very excited to introduce you to David McRaney, you may have heard of his first book You Are Not So Smart which is an international bestseller that is now available in 17 languages. He went on to create an awesome podcast of the same name and wrote a second book You Are Now Less Dumb. I highly recommend both of those and his podcast…and today we are talking about his new book, which just came out this week, called How Minds Change.

As you will hear us talk about in the interview, this book is a fascinating journey we take along with David as he seeks to answer the question, “How do minds change?” The book is filled with interesting stories, lots of science, and fun anecdotes. I really enjoyed it and learned so much along the way, some of which you can hear about in today’s episode. Join us to hear all about it!

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IN A RUSH?

HERE'S A 2 MINUTE TIP.

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SHOW NOTES:

  • [00:43] Today I am very excited to introduce you to David McRaney. You may have heard of his first book You Are Not So Smart which is an international bestseller that is now available in 17 languages. He has a phenomenal podcast of the same name.
  • [03:35] David shares about himself, his background, and how he found himself in this space. 
  • [05:30] When his second book came out, he started a podcast. His podcast has been the centerpiece of his world for the last twelve years. 
  • [07:55] David found something that he was interested in and wanted to find the answer to and he started to dig. 
  • [09:01] Don’t jump into anything because you are trying to get rich quickly or because it is the hot new thing. 
  • [10:27] Don’t follow the trends. Take the content you are skilled at and marry it to the thing you are obsessed with. Then plug away at it. 
  • [13:39] Everything that you do builds a skill set that you can laterally apply to other stuff later. 
  • [15:56] He writes his books by taking the reader along with him on the journey so they are able to learn with him. 
  • [16:40] David shares about the cookie segment that he had on his podcast for 100 episodes. He and Melina bond over baking and business.
  • [19:41] He started the cookie segment because of several cookie studies he read and he knew there was a way to put it into his show. 
  • [22:26] He has gotten access to many different people in interviews for the book, podcast, and other work – how can you do the same? 
  • [24:27] You can email anyone and at least they will tell you no, but 75% of the time people say yes. 
  • [25:34] He explains in his emails that he is reaching out because he needs them and it would be a better show/book/project if they are part of it. 
  • [27:33] When people realize that you genuinely care and are interested they are more likely to say yes. 
  • [28:13] One of the biggest parts of How Minds Change is the exploration of “The Dress” and the neuroscience behind it. 
  • [30:37] Reaching out to his connections often led to other connections and allowed him to create even more connections.
  • [33:14] He shares about “The Dress.” The dress is an image that appeared on the internet where people could not agree on what they saw. 
  • [35:23] With the dress, truly you saw it either one color (black and blue) or the other (white and gold) and you couldn’t see it any other way. 
  • [37:32] When we see something that is overexposed we have no choice, the brain lowers the overexposure a bit to try to help us see what the image actually is. 
  • [39:43] Everything you experience is only happening in your brain. Every color you see is an illusion. Colors are things the brain makes. 
  • [42:23] There are two humongous populations of human beings that have had different life experiences, and because of those different life experiences they disambiguate an ambiguous image with a different kind of disambiguation than the other side and this leads to different conclusions.
  • [43:57] When we try to prove that we are right, we miss out on getting to the deeper truth of the matter. 
  • [45:04] Pascal’s team recreated the dress image using Crocs. They used Crocs and paired them with socks because it was an inanimate object with no default color. 
  • [46:49] It seems like older people see white socks version because they have more experience in their lives with socks that weren’t colored. 
  • [48:28] David shares about his new book, How Minds Change.
  • [51:41] His book is an explanation of how people do and do not change their minds, understanding the nature of the resistance, and discovering what you have to do to overcome that resistance. 
  • [54:54] Melina shares her closing thoughts.
  • [55:55] One of my favorite things that David said in our conversation was that you need to “listen your way into changing somebody’s mind” — it isn’t about force or proving someone that they are wrong, there is so much interesting work showcased in the book about how people can actually change their own minds when they are asked the right thoughtful questions and someone takes the time to listen.
  • [57:18] If you enjoy the experience I’ve provided here for you, will you share about it? That could mean leaving a rating/review or sharing the episode with a friend (or 10!)

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