# Efficacy of personalized feedback in encouraging sustainable washing behavior: evidence from a pilot study in Germany

**Authors:** Laura Höpfl, Ivan Đula, Francisco Kiss, Rebecca Walter, Maria Wirzberger

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2024.1473953 · 2025-01-28

## TL;DR

A pilot study in Germany explored how personalized feedback influences sustainable washing habits, finding that participants became more aware of energy and cost impacts.

## Contribution

The study introduces a personalized feedback approach to encourage sustainable washing behavior and evaluates its effectiveness through mixed methods.

## Key findings

- Participants felt more knowledgeable about energy and cost impacts of washing programs.
- No significant differences in washing behavior were found between user clusters.
- Most participants expressed willingness to switch to dynamic energy pricing if it saved costs.

## Abstract

Reducing household energy consumption through behavioral changes is a key strategy in addressing the emissions driving the climate crisis. Behavioral changes in affluent households toward more sustainable practices can have a significant positive impact. Prior research highlighted the role of individual values and motivational factors in shaping sustainable clusters. A more personalized approach toward encouraging the resulting clusters of people to adopt more sustainable strategies seems promising. Such an approach could incorporate aligned feedback, which has been proven to be a powerful mechanism throughout learning processes.

Over 9 weeks, a pilot study with 50 participants investigated the impact of different types of feedback on washing behavior. The within-subjects design included (1) a baseline condition, (2) feedback on energy consumption (kWh), and (3) feedback on monetary costs per cycle (EUR). Data collection encompassed pre- and post-condition surveys, a final comprehensive survey, and a diary-formatted table. The primary objective was to evaluate the potential for individualization. Asynchronous structured interviews were conducted at the end to explore participants' perceptions and washing behaviors.

While we found effects for the feedback manipulation, we found no differences between user clusters in individual washing behaviors. Furthermore, participants qualitatively reported habitual changes, feeling more knowledgeable about the monetary impacts of specific washing programs and temperatures, and wished for a more accessible preset time function. Most participants expressed willingness to switch to a dynamic energy price if it translated to significant cost savings.

Our findings may support the notion that individualized behavior change strategies are promising. In general, these strategies should be easily applicable, cost-effective, and promote habits to be exerted regularly. Arising methodological limitations suggest further research in this domain. From an applied perspective, our research provides valuable insights for designing products, services, and regulations by governments and companies, empowering them to develop more effective strategies for reducing energy consumption.

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

4 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11811938/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11811938