ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Michael Norton - Social science researcher
Through clever studies, Michael Norton studies how we feel about what we buy and spend.

Why you should listen

Michael I. Norton is a professor of business administration in the marketing unit at the Harvard Business School. He holds a B.A. in Psychology and English from Williams and a Ph.D. in Psychology from Princeton. Prior to joining HBS, Professor Norton was a Fellow at the MIT Media Lab and MIT’s Sloan School of Management. His work has been published in a number of leading academic journals, including Science, the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, Psychological Science, and the Annual Review of Psychology, and has been covered in media outlets such as the Economist, the Financial Times, the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, and the Washington Post.

His research has twice been featured in the New York Times Magazine Year in Ideas issue, in 2007 (Ambiguity Promotes Liking) and 2009 (The Counterfeit Self). His “The IKEA Effect: When Labor Leads to Love” was featured in Harvard Business Review‘s Breakthrough Ideas for 2009.

More profile about the speaker
Michael Norton | Speaker | TED.com
TEDxCambridge

Michael Norton: How to buy happiness

Filmed:
4,136,439 views

At TEDxCambridge, Michael Norton shares fascinating research on how money can indeed buy happiness -- when you don't spend it on yourself. Listen for surprising data on the many ways pro-social spending can benefit you, your work, and (of course) other people.
- Social science researcher
Through clever studies, Michael Norton studies how we feel about what we buy and spend. Full bio

Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.

00:15
So I want to talk today about money and happiness,
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which are two things
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that a lot of us spend a lot of our time thinking about,
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either trying to earn them or trying to increase them.
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And a lot of us resonate with this phrase.
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So we see it in religions and self-help books,
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that money can't buy happiness.
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And I want to suggest today that, in fact, that's wrong.
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(Laughter)
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I'm at a business school, so that's what we do.
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So that's wrong, and, in fact, if you think that,
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you're actually just not spending it right.
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So that instead of spending it the way you usually spend it,
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maybe if you spent it differently,
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that might work a little bit better.
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And before I tell you the ways that you can spend it that will make you happier,
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let's think about the ways we usually spend it
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that don't, in fact, make us happier.
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We had a little natural experiment.
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So CNN, a little while ago, wrote this interesting article
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on what happens to people when they win the lottery.
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It turns out people think when they win the lottery their lives are going to be amazing.
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This article's about how their lives get ruined.
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So what happens when people win the lottery
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is, number one, they spend all the money and go into debt,
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and number two, all of their friends and everyone they've ever met
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find them and bug them for money.
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And it ruins their social relationships, in fact.
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So they have more debt and worse friendships
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than they had before they won the lottery.
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What was interesting about the article
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was people started commenting on the article, readers of the thing.
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And instead of talking about
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how it had made them realize that money doesn't lead to happiness,
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everyone instantly started saying,
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"You know what I would do if I won the lottery ... ?"
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and fantasizing about what they'd do.
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And here's just two of the ones we saw that are just really interesting to think about.
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One person wrote in, "When I win, I'm going to buy my own little mountain
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and have a little house on top."
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(Laughter)
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And another person wrote, "I would fill a big bathtub with money
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and get in the tub while smoking a big fat cigar
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and sipping a glass of champagne."
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This is even worse now: "Then I'd have a picture taken
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and dozens of glossies made.
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Anyone begging for money or trying to extort from me
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would receive a copy of the picture and nothing else."
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(Laughter)
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And so many of the comments were exactly of this type,
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where people got money
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and, in fact, it made them antisocial.
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So I told you that it ruins people's lives and that their friends bug them.
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It also, money often makes us feel very selfish
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and we do things only for ourselves.
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Well maybe the reason that money doesn't make us happy
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is that we're always spending it on the wrong things,
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and in particular, that we're always spending it on ourselves.
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And we thought, I wonder what would happen
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if we made people spend more of their money on other people.
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So instead of being antisocial with your money,
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what if you were a little more prosocial with your money?
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And we thought, let's make people do it and see what happens.
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So let's have some people do what they usually do
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and spend money on themselves,
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and let's make some people give money away,
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and measure their happiness and see if, in fact, they get happier.
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So the first way that we did this.
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On one Vancouver morning, we went out on the campus
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at University of British Columbia
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and we approached people and said, "Do you want to be in an experiment?"
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They said, "Yes."
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We asked them how happy they were, and then we gave them an envelope.
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And one of the envelopes had things in it that said,
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"By 5:00 pm today, spend this money on yourself."
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So we gave some examples of what you could spend it on.
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Other people, in the morning, got a slip of paper that said,
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"By 5:00 pm today, spend this money on somebody else."
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Also inside the envelope was money.
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And we manipulated how much money we gave them.
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So some people got this slip of paper and five dollars.
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Some people got this slip of paper and 20 dollars.
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We let them go about their day. They did whatever they wanted to do.
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We found out that they did in fact spend it in the way that we asked them to.
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We called them up at night and asked them,
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"What'd you spend it on, and how happy do you feel now?"
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What did they spend it on?
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Well these are college undergrads, so a lot of what they spent it on for themselves
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were things like earrings and makeup.
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One woman said she bought a stuffed animal for her niece.
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People gave money to homeless people.
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Huge effect here of Starbucks.
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(Laughter)
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So if you give undergraduates five dollars, it looks like coffee to them
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and they run over to Starbucks and spend it as fast as they can.
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But some people bought a coffee for themselves, the way they usually would,
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but other people said that they bought a coffee for somebody else.
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So the very same purchase,
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just targeted toward yourself
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or targeted toward somebody else.
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What did we find when we called them back at the end of the day?
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People who spent money on other people got happier.
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People who spent money on themselves, nothing happened.
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It didn't make them less happy, it just didn't do much for them.
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And the other thing we saw is the amount of money doesn't matter that much.
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So people thought that 20 dollars would be way better than five dollars.
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In fact, it doesn't matter how much money you spent.
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What really matters is that you spent it on somebody else
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rather than on yourself.
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We see this again and again
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when we give people money to spend on other people instead of on themselves.
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Of course, these are undergraduates in Canada --
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not the world's most representative population.
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They're also fairly wealthy and affluent and all these other sorts of things.
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We wanted to see if this holds true everywhere in the world
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or just among wealthy countries.
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So we went, in fact, to Uganda and ran a very similar experiment.
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So imagine, instead of just people in Canada,
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we said, "Name the last time you spent money on yourself or other people.
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Describe it. How happy did it make you?"
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Or in Uganda, "Name the last time you spent money
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on yourself or other people and describe that."
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And then we asked them how happy they are again.
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And what we see is sort of amazing
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because there's human universals on what you do with your money
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and then real cultural differences on what you do as well.
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So for example,
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one guy from Uganda says this.
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He said, "I called a girl I wished to love."
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They basically went out on a date,
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and he says at the end that he didn't "achieve" her up till now.
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Here's a guy from Canada.
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Very similar thing.
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05:26
"I took my girlfriend out for dinner.
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We went to a movie, we left early,
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and then went back to her room for ... " only cake -- just a piece of cake.
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Human universal -- so you spend money on other people,
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you're being nice to them.
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Maybe you have something in mind, maybe not.
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But then we see extraordinary differences.
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So look at these two.
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This is a woman from Canada.
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We say, "Name a time you spent money on somebody else."
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She says, "I bought a present for my mom.
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I drove to the mall in my car, bought a present, gave it to my mom."
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Perfectly nice thing to do.
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It's good to get gifts for people that you know.
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Compare that to this woman from Uganda.
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"I was walking and met a long-time friend
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whose son was sick with malaria.
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They had no money, they went to a clinic and I gave her this money."
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This isn't $10,000, it's the local currency.
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So it's a very small amount of money, in fact.
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But enormously different motivations here.
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This is a real medical need,
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literally a life-saving donation.
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Above, it's just kind of, I bought a gift for my mother.
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What we see again though
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is that the specific way that you spend on other people
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isn't nearly as important
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as the fact that you spend on other people
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in order to make yourself happy,
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which is really quite important.
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So you don't have to do amazing things with your money to make yourself happy.
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You can do small, trivial things and yet still get these benefits from doing this.
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These are only two countries.
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We also wanted to go even broader and look at every country in the world if we could
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to see what the relationship is between money and happiness.
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We got data from the Gallup Organization,
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which you know from all the political polls that have been happening lately.
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They ask people, "Did you donate money to charity recently?"
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and they ask them, "How happy are you with your life in general?"
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And we can see what the relationship is between those two things.
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Are they positively correlated? Giving money makes you happy.
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Or are they negatively correlated?
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On this map, green will mean they're positively correlated
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and red means they're negatively correlated.
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And you can see, the world is crazily green.
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So in almost every country in the world
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where we have this data,
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people who give money to charity are happier people
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that people who don't give money to charity.
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I know you're all looking at that red country in the middle.
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I would be a jerk and not tell you what it is,
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but in fact, it's Central African Republic.
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You can make up stories. Maybe it's different there for some reason or another.
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Just below that to the right is Rwanda though,
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which is amazingly green.
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So almost everywhere we look
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we see that giving money away makes you happier
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than keeping it for yourself.
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What about your work life, which is where we spend all the rest of our time
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when we're not with the people we know.
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We decided to infiltrate some companies and do a very similar thing.
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So these are sales teams in Belgium.
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They work in teams; they go out and sell to doctors
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and try to get them to buy drugs.
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So we can look and see how well they sell things
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as a function of being a member of a team.
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Some teams, we give people on the team some money for themselves
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and say, "Spend it however you want on yourself,"
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just like we did with the undergrads in Canada.
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But other teams we say, "Here's 15 euro.
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Spend it on one of your teammates this week.
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Buy them something as a gift or a present and give it to them.
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And then we can see, well now we've got teams that spend on themselves
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and we've got these prosocial teams
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who we give money to make the team a little bit better.
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The reason I have a ridiculous pinata there
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is one of the teams pooled their money and bought a pinata,
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and they all got around and smashed the pinata and all the candy fell out and things like that.
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A very silly, trivial thing to do,
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but think of the difference on a team that didn't do that at all,
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that got 15 euro, put it in their pocket,
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maybe bought themselves a coffee,
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or teams that had this prosocial experience
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where they all bonded together to buy something and do a group activity.
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What we see is that, in fact, the teams that are prosocial sell more stuff
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than the teams that only got money for themselves.
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And one way to think about it
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is for every 15 euro you give people for themselves,
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they put it in their pocket, they don't do anything different than they did before.
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You don't get any money from that.
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You actually lose money because it doesn't motivate them to perform any better.
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But when you give them 15 euro to spend on their teammates,
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they do so much better on their teams
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that you actually get a huge win on investing this kind of money.
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And I realize that you're probably thinking to yourselves,
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this is all fine,
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but there's a context that's incredibly important for public policy
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and I can't imagine it would work there.
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And basically that if he doesn't show me that it works here,
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I don't believe anything he said.
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And I know what you're all thinking about are dodgeball teams.
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(Laughter)
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This was a huge criticism that we got
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to say, if you can't show it with dodgeball teams, this is all stupid.
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So we went out and found these dodgeball teams
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and infiltrated them.
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And we did the exact same thing as before.
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So some teams, we give people on the team money, they spend it on themselves.
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Other teams, we give them money
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to spend on their dodgeball teammates.
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The teams that spend money on themselves
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are just the same winning percentages as they were before.
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The teams that we give the money to spend on each other,
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they become different teams
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and, in fact, they dominate the league by the time they're done.
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Across all of these different contexts --
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your personal life, you work life,
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even silly things like intramural sports --
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we see spending on other people has a bigger return for you
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than spending on yourself.
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And so I'll just say, I think if you think money can't buy happiness
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you're not spending it right.
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The implication is not you should buy this product instead of that product
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and that's the way to make yourself happier.
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It's in fact, that you should stop thinking
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about which product to buy for yourself
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and try giving some of it to other people instead.
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And we luckily have an opportunity for you.
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DonorsChoose.org is a non-profit
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for mainly public school teachers in low-income schools.
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They post projects,
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so they say, "I want to teach Huckleberry Finn to my class and we don't have the books,"
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or "I want a microscope to teach my students science
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and we don't have a microscope."
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You and I can go on and buy it for them.
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The teacher writes you a thank you note. The kids write you a thank you note.
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Sometimes they send you pictures of them using the microscope.
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It's an extraordinary thing.
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Go to the website and start yourself on the process
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of thinking, again, less about "How can I spend money on myself?"
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and more about "If I've got five dollars or 15 dollars,
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what can I do to benefit other people?"
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Because ultimately when you do that, you'll find that you'll benefit yourself much more.
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Thank you.
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10:51
(Applause)
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Translated by Jenny Zurawell

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ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Michael Norton - Social science researcher
Through clever studies, Michael Norton studies how we feel about what we buy and spend.

Why you should listen

Michael I. Norton is a professor of business administration in the marketing unit at the Harvard Business School. He holds a B.A. in Psychology and English from Williams and a Ph.D. in Psychology from Princeton. Prior to joining HBS, Professor Norton was a Fellow at the MIT Media Lab and MIT’s Sloan School of Management. His work has been published in a number of leading academic journals, including Science, the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, Psychological Science, and the Annual Review of Psychology, and has been covered in media outlets such as the Economist, the Financial Times, the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, and the Washington Post.

His research has twice been featured in the New York Times Magazine Year in Ideas issue, in 2007 (Ambiguity Promotes Liking) and 2009 (The Counterfeit Self). His “The IKEA Effect: When Labor Leads to Love” was featured in Harvard Business Review‘s Breakthrough Ideas for 2009.

More profile about the speaker
Michael Norton | Speaker | TED.com