Behavioural Finance Consulting

Consumer Behaviour

Behavioural Blind Spots in Financial Services

Understanding financial behaviour requires more than analysing balances and transactions; it demands insight into the psychological forces that shape money‑related decisions. A five‑part framework—comprising demographics, surveys, tasks, data, and interpretative context—provides a comprehensive profile of how individuals think, feel and behave with money. When these elements are combined, they uncover tendencies such as overspending, overconfidence or risky borrowing and reveal whether observed behaviours stem from enduring patterns or temporary strain. Tailored interventions, including financial education, personalised advice, or product design, can then be deployed to strengthen financial resilience. Psychological profiling benefits consumers by enhancing self‑awareness; advisers by improving the relevance of guidance; firms by informing product development; and regulators by targeting protections more precisely. Ultimately, a deeper understanding of why people act as they do is essential to shaping a financial ecosystem that works for everyone.

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The Hidden Value in Financial Product Marketing

Financial products pose unique challenges in marketing due to their intangible nature, long-term impact, and complex structure. Unlike everyday consumer goods—where decisions are driven by sensory experience, intuition, immediacy and emotions—financial products demand clear understanding, analytical thinking, trust, and a strong grasp of delayed value. Understanding the key differences between these two categories reveals why traditional marketing approaches often fall short in financial services. Effective financial marketing must blend analytical clarity with emotional resonance to engage clients and support confident, long-term decision-making.

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