Wind energy is a top-choice energy source

Most industry members and advocates know that wind power is a top-choice energy source. It’s affordable, it’s reliable, and it’s clean. But how does one impress that extraordinary combination of attributes upon the world? One speaker at the WINDPOWER 2015 Conference & Exhibition will shed some light on this question.

Jonah Berger, Wharton School of Business faculty member and best-selling author, has spent the last decade looking into and explaining why certain products get more word of mouth than others, and why certain online content goes viral. In his book Contagious, he makes a science of the illusive concept of word of mouth and social transmission.

Berger has said that he became interested in the topic when he read Malcolm Gladwell’s The Tipping Point and contacted him to find out what other research was available. Gladwell’s answer: There’s still not all that much out there. So Berger went to work.

“This book is really a researched-based look at … the science of social transmission or the psychology of talk,” Berger says in a video on the book. “[It’s about] understanding what leads people to talk about and share one thing rather than another, how companies, organizations and individuals can leverage this science to help their own products, ideas, and behaviors succeed.”

Berger outlines six basic principles that cause everything from products to workplace rumors to policy initiatives  to become contagious. Those principles: Social currency, Triggers, Emotions, Public, Practical value, and Stories (STEPPS).

“Just like if one person has a cold and you touch that person or talk to that person you might catch a cold, contagious content is things, ideas, behaviors and products that are more likely to spread from one person to another,” he explains. “You can think of [STEPPS] almost as a recipe, a set of principles that make things succeed.”

In the wind energy context, the implications of Berger’s work are significant. The electric industry is not a sexy one in the first place. When the lights flip on, the average person does not think about the chain of technology, from generation to transmission and distribution, happening behind the switch.

Yet the industry knows it can provide America with 20 percent of its electricity by 2030 and 35 percent by 2050, and generate this electricity with zero pollution. Achieving such benchmarks, of course, involves a conscious public policy choice.

With the added benefit of providing fresh perspective from outside the industry, Berger will share insights that can inform the discussion on effectively communicating wind’s outstanding benefits.

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