Saturday, March 13, 2021

My thoughts on Daniel Kahneman or some of his own ideas.

 Some words from Daniel Kahneman's 2013 speech at Yale University.

Why agents don't take advantage of the markets?

Why are they being punished by those called "unfair?"

infant rationality. 

People overweigh present than future, they overweigh loss over gain.

They overweigh amount of lottery than winning minuscule chance of winning it. Overweigh the gained knowledge than future acquired knowledge. 

People underweight certain things. They underweight statistical cases, they focus on individual cases. 

Invariance rule. Certain factors should be given or deemed as 0. 20 % fat or 80 % fat-free.

We focus intently and narrowly on the problem at hand. 

People giving decisions now not thinking about further decisions in the future. What are they going to do then, consider; but they don't.

There are failures of objectivity. We think that the reasoning goes from premises to conclusions. Directional. There are certain things you assume and arrive at conclusion from those assumptions. Influences go another way. People believe in arguments because they believe in conclusions. Characteristic failures of rationality. Perfect rationality. 

Two agents, system1 and system2. System 1 is quick, intuitive and system 2 is slow. Class behaviour. 

Endowing agents with propensities or traits, easy to remember. 

System 2 is slow. Engages in activities that demand effort. Pupils dilate. Heartbeat increase. Type 2 activities; when people exert effort then that's type 2. When you make a left turn, you stop talking. They can't do other things, then type 2. Effortful activities. Effort. Limited capacity. Effortful activities are my activities. Focusing intently on one point, being kind to someone you don't love. Effortful. When our minds think it's effortful.

System 1, memory. You don't do them, they happen to you. They evoke memory. You can't help, those things just happen. 

You had WWI happened automatically. 

Upper-class British accent, "I have large tools on my back?" Brain surprised. Stereotype, incongruity and surprise. Detection under half a second. You don't have to think about it; it just happens to you. 

System 1 is not dumb, although system 2 requires some level of thinking. 

What do we do really well is system1. Skills are from system1. Intuitive skills. 

Our mind happens passively in system1.

The reporter is system1, the editor is system2. Endorse system 1, that's what system 2 does. Vague impressions become beliefs. Vague tendencies become decisions. System 2 is lazy. 

A and B cost 1.10 $. A cost 1 $ more than B. How much is B? Most people think it's 10 cents.

S2 does as little as possible. By large most things come from S1. Proposing, suggesting, impression, beliefs. 

How the mind works? What are the operating rules for S1? Heuristic. Does it work?

Even if S2 changes the story, S1's story is there. Characteristics of S1, which makes the failure of perfect rationality. S1 is a good storyteller. It's perfect rationality. S1 is a good storyteller. It's a machine. Looks for connections. It does it perfectly. The fact is the market went up or down. The mind looks for an explanation. Has to be a potential event that happened earlier and sufficiently surprising to be the cause. We tend to tell stories. S1 tells the best possible story, that is coherent and consistent. Hitler likes children, we don't like him but it's correct. 

Associative coherent story. Bothers us.  

Edit on 7th July 2021, Wed. Started reading Daniel Kahneman's "Thinking, fast and slow" book. I need to finish the first 50 pages of the book by this weekend. So, I will be adding some notes of mine here about the things that I have read between pages 1 and 50.

Contents. 

    Introduction.

Part I. Two systems.

    1. Characters of the story.

    2. Attention and effort.

    3. The lazy controller.

    4. The associative machine.

    5. Cognitive ease.

    6. Norms, surprises, and causes.

    7. A machine jumping to conclusions. (Let me guess it here; the author most probably talking about human beings and our inability to keep cool and wait until all data is gathered. We are jumping too early to final decisions.)

    8. How judgments happen.

    9. Answering an easier question. 

Part II. Heuristics and biases.

    10. The law of small numbers.

    11. Anchors.

    12. The science of availability.

    13. Availability, emotion and risk.

    14. Tom W's speciality.

    15. Linda: less is more.

    16. Causes Trump statistics.

    17. Regression to the mean.

    18. Taming intuitive predictions.

Part III. Overconfidence. 

    19. The illusion of understanding.

    20. The illusion of validity.

    21. Intuitions vs formulas.

    22. Expert intuition: when can we trust it?

    23. The outside view.

    24. The engine of capitalism.

Part IV. Choices.

    25. Bernoulli's errors.

    26. Prospect theory.

    27. The endowment effect. 

    28. Bad events.

    29. The fourfold pattern.

    30. Rare events. 

    31. Risk policies.

    32. Keeping score.

    33. Reversals.

    34. Frames and reality.

Part V. Two selves.

    35. Two selves.

    36. Life as a story.

    37. Experienced well-being.

    38. Thinking about life.

Conclusions.

Appendix A: judgment under certainty.

Appendix B: choices, values and frames.

Acknowledgements.

Notes 

Index.

    Introduction (pages 7-18)

The author writes that his purpose in writing this book is to improve people's vocabulary on judgments and choices of others, etc. and he has chosen the gossip as the style of the book; since he says it is much easier and fun to identify and label the mistakes of others. :) Author says questioning ourselves is difficult, but we can use the opinion of others. 

Systematic errors or biases occur frequently and we can identify them in some patterns. For instance, a confident public speaker or a beautiful model girl get more appreciation than their peers. 

There is a constant impression, short analyses are going on in our heads. Most of the time, we act accordingly. We sometimes let our feelings guide our decisions and even if the outcome is wrong or the result that we didn't expect at the beginning, we continue to trust our own decisions. An objective observer will notice our errors easily. I think this is one of the reasons why the author has chosen the style of gossip in this book. 

    Origins (pages 8-14)

Here, the author talks about how he met Amos Tversky, to whom he also dedicates this book, I guess; since, at the beginning of the book writes: "In memory of Amos Tversky." At the time, Amos was seeking an answer for the research of UMich (University of Michigan) on human statistics. In the beginning, Amos was optimistic about human intuition; however, when they gather and use their experience, hence, simple decisions, statistics etc. on basic problems. They found out that they better need to be pessimistic about human decision-making skills because they were inaccurate despite the years of practice. They realised that they believe in insufficient data more easily and don't collect more data and do a lot more observations. 

Kahneman notes that working along with Tversky was funny, "it is much easier to strive for perfection when you are never bored." They both questioned each other and analysed their answers. They discovered that human beings answer intuitively, even if it is a wrong answer, they continue to stick to that, generally. They used to predict the children's future professions; and there was no logical connection, only appealing ones, like surrounding, stereotypes, resemblance etc. As a teacher, I never fully know what I would do in the future. I wasn't expecting to teach English, the job I'm doing now. And I never know what will happen in the future; I can just predict it. When I cannot correctly predict my own future, even to the slightest degree, how come we predict other's futures? That's a difficult question, but the answer is obvious, I think - we can't, even if love to do so, we can't. 

People were given a sample person, his characteristics; and that person would be questioned about the future job of that sample. And there you are, we will reach our final decisions based on the surroundings, etc. because they are appealing to us. We love to make judgments without sufficient prior knowledge. We don't look at other useful statistics, like shortage of some professions, some others are present everywhere etc. There is another thing that adds up to our error, that's the ease of memory search. We don't want to fatigue our brain when we are trying to recall something. Here, they used the first letter vs third letter words; participants were given a letter and asked to come up with the word that has the given letter either at the beginning or at the third position. I think I don't need to tell you about the results since you can guess it easily. (See, even here I have the bias, misjudgment.) He thought that politicians break the law more compared to usual citizens; but later on, thinking carefully he finds out that the transgression of politicians is more likely to be reported compared to his subjects. This is also another example of the reliance on the availability heuristic. 

I came to realise that Kahneman uses the word "heuristic" a lot. Let's have a look at this word in various dictionaries. Cambridge dictionary online, the definition of "heuristic:/hjʊəˈrɪstɪk/"

    (education), adjective; (of a method of teaching) allowing students to learn by discovering things themselves and learning from their own experiences rather than telling them things;

     (business English), noun; a method of learning or solving problems that allow people to discover things themselves and learn from their own experiences. 

During the 70s, people or scientists let's say, used to believe that humans have rational thinking skills; and they only depart the intelligence when they are under influence of the extreme feelings like anger, fear, love, etc. Daniel and Amos wrote a paper where they defied that popular belief of that time. People give importance to what they can recall easily while neglecting other things. Thus, the authoritarian regimes don't want media or let's say independent media. If something continuously pops up in the viewers' attention, then they are going to prioritise that thing. Equally important other things could be neglected if enough attention is not paid, by the media or the people themselves. (left at page 12) The author suggests we ignore the relevant statistical fact because it is just an incidental detail and may hinder us to arrive at sound conclusions. 

Their research got some criticism, as well. It helped them to better their findings. Eventually, their work made a big impact on the social sciences area. 

After their work on how people judge, they moved on to how people decide, especially under uncertainty. They were allowed to gamble; you win 130 $ if heads come, you lose 100 $ if tails come. Again, intuitive feelings or gut feelings blocked the rational decision mechanism and let people give biased decisions. "Prospect theory: an analysis of decision under risk," a theory of choice is their work and also one of the fundamental theories in behavioural economics. Amos Tversky (would have gotten the prize had he not died in 1996) and Daniel Kahneman (and some others maybe) gets Nobel Prize in 2002.

    Where are we now (pages 14-16)

To present how the mind works. There are a lot of flaws in intuitive thought. Even the experts may look like they are giving professional decisions, but in fact, they get to better decisions because of their plenty of experience. We see many examples of this expert intuition in real life; sometimes, the worker may see that something is going wrong and may save lives. Even our own daily experiences show that we have developed a lot of intuition; who is angry, what is dangerous, etc. Herbert Simon, after studying a lot of chess masters, says that "the situation has provided a cue; this cue has given the expert access to information stored in memory, and the information provides the answer. Intuition is nothing more or less than recognition." People develop valid intuition when they see the familiar structure and recall the best way to react. Even professionals make gut decisions from time to time like going all into some company for investment. When we face difficult questions where there is no easy solution present, we go for alternatives; like alternative questions, "do I like this company?" The answer to that question is easy yes or no and based on that answer that investor invested. That is the intuitive heuristics itself. 

When we can't find either solution or heuristic answer we find ourselves in deliberation. System 1 refers to fast thinking, be it intuitive thought, both heuristic and the expert, and automatic perception or memory. System 2 refers to slow thinking. 

    What comes next (pages 16 - 19)

A book consisting of 5 parts; 1 presents the fundamental elements of systems, 1 and 2. Part 2 asks the question - why is it so difficult for us to think statistically? And those difficulties of statistical thinking form part 3; our overconfidence in what we know, our inability to recognize our ignorance. We underestimate the chance factor in the events. Apparently, the author was influenced by Nassim Taleb and his book "The black swan." (I think we should read it, too) Part 4 is economics and decision making. Part 5 is about two selves, the experiencing and remembering selves of a person. People automatically check system 1 to get an answer, if they recall their past, especially the bad experience, then we again put ourselves under unnecessary pain. However, we don't feel as happy when we recall those moments of joy later on. That is an interesting question to deal with. Automatic system 1 and effortful system 2.

        Part I - Two systems (pages 19 - 105)

    The characters of the story (pages 21 - 32)

    Figure 1 (pages 21 - 22)

Multiplication effortful. Looking at the face of an angry woman, easy, automatic and intuitive.

    Two systems (pages 22 - 26)

System 1 operates automatically and quickly, with little or no effort and no sense of voluntary control. System 2 allocates attention to the effortful mental activities that demand it, including complex computations. We share system 1 skills with some other animals, as well. It can get better over time, like finding a better chess move for chess masters; or it can come innate-like recognizing the social nuances. In the expertise, the knowledge is stored in the memory and later accessed when faced with similar situations. You can't calculate the difficult multiplication and do a left turn in traffic; it overuses the attention sources in the brain. 

I remember once in a job interview, an eastern European company was opening its branch in Turkey, and in that interview, they criticised me for not being able to multi-task. And that man was so proud that he could multi-task, at least that was the impression he had on me. I hate that company, I hate those jerks. I prepared an e-commerce report about Turkey and sent them, I got no reply. They didn't inform me if I was accepted to the job or not; they even didn't thank me for the report. Nothing. They are total garbage.

When we are doing System 2, sometimes we may look blind to other things; we may only focus on one thing alone. 

    Plot synopsis (pages 26 - 27)

System 1 feeds system 2, and that's fine, usually. S2 is automatically activated when S1 cannot find an answer. When we see something unusual it may get our attention if we are surprised by the result of it, thus S2 gets activated. S2 also monitors our own behaviour; polite behaviour when we are angry, etc. System 1 is good at fast predictions, etc. It has some biases, as well, the systematic errors in particular circumstances. It doesn't have statistical knowledge or logic; you can't turn it off as well. When you are shown a word in the language you know well, you are going to read it, involuntarily. 

    Conflict (page 27)

    Figure 2 (pages 27-28)

System 2 is in charge of self-control, it tries to overcome the impulses of System 1. 

    Illusions (page 28)

    Figure 3 (pages 29-30)

We must learn not to trust our impressions, sometimes. Not all illusions are visual; there are illusions of thought called cognitive illusions. We are not taught to distrust our feelings. On the other hand, continuous vigilance consumes too much time and energy, it is inefficient. The best possible way is to recognize the patterns that humans make mistakes and try to avoid falling for that trap again, especially when the stakes are high. 

     Useful fictions (pages 30-31)

When we are doing some activities in System 2 our pupils dilate and our heart rate increases. 

    Attention and effort (pages 33 - 39)

    Mental effort (pages 33 - 39)

Eckhard Hess' eyes dilate when he looks at the same woman, but more beautiful in one picture, and it constricts while looking at another one. Buyers sometimes wear dark glasses to hide their interest from the merchants; this arises a question, is this the same reason the US police wear black sunglasses? Hess finds that our pupils dilate when we face some effortful task. The peak of pupils coincides with the maximum effort. In the experiment carried out by Kahneman and another student, when they asked too difficult tasks for the subjects, their pupils stopped dilating and actually shrank. System 1 takes control in emergency situations. 

The law of least effort says that if there are multiple solutions to a problem, most people will gravitate towards the one with the least effort. 

Prefrontal area of the brain that deals with the operations that require intelligence. It is much better developed in humans than other primates. (continue from page 39)

He gives the example of add-3; for instance, keep a number in your mind, say 1234; add 3 to every digit, say that number. That requires a lot of effort. Looks like slow thinking, because System 2 is involved, but in fact, our brain thinks very fast. It is like a juggler with several balls in the air. Storing 6 or 7 digits in our mind is effortful alike. 

    The lazy controller (pages 41 - 51)

We can walk and think, we can do pleasantries with people and still do little other activities which requires less effort; however, when you ask someone to do a difficult multiplication while walking that person almost stops. On the other hand, if a person increases walking speed then his full attention is drawn to what he is doing at that moment - walking fast or running. A person needs to resist the urge of slowing down. Self-control and deliberate thought apparently draw on the same limited budget of effort. 

State of effortless attending is called flow; in other words a state of effortless concentration so deep that people lose their sense of time, of themselves, of their problems, they say. I think it looks like modern-day video game playing or playing chess. 

    The busy and depleted system 2 (pages 42 - 45)

People are more likely to yield to temptation when they are simultaneously challenged with mentally effortful tasks and a temptation. When System 2 is busy System 1 controls your behaviour and it is more likely that a busy person will engage in eating something sweet; that busy person is more likely to act hedonistic in that situation. The same applies to people who drink alcohol or are sleepless. Controlling behaviour and thoughts are one of the tasks of System 2. People were given successive tasks, mind depleting tasks; first shown emotional movie and asked to hide their emotions, and then they were asked to perform a physical activity; they performed poorly in the latter. Ego-depletion. Another example is that people were offered sweet foods and healthy ones, they were asked to eat healthy ones; later, they were asked to do the cognitive activity; they fared poorly. When we are tired and hungry we are more likely to fail the activities we were given. The judges approved the parole at higher rates just after the meal breaks. 

    The lazy system 2 (pages 45 - 48)

How closely does system 2 monitor the suggestions of System 1? The bat and ball problem; together cost 1.10 $, the bat is 1 $ more expensive than the ball. How much is the ball? Most people would say 10 cents and that's incorrect. That answer was provided by system 1, and it required a little check by system 2. When we believe that the conclusion is true, we also believe in the supporting arguments; we don't check if they are true or not. 

    Intelligence, control, rationality (pages 48 - 51)

If people were ranked by their self-control and by their cognitive aptitude, would individuals have similar positions in the two rankings? Walter Mischel carries out an experiment; a child was offered a cookie that he can eat anytime or wait for 15 minutes and eat 2 cookies afterwards. Half of the children couldn't resist the temptation and the other half focused their attention away from the cookies. Later on, in their lives there was a huge gap between them; the ones who managed to wait performed better in intellectual tests; they were less likely to use drugs, etc. System 1 is impulsive and intuitive; system 2 is capable of reasoning, and it is cautious, but at least for some people it is also lazy. 

What makes some people more susceptible than others to biases of judgment? 

    The associative machine (pages 52 - 60)

Associative activation. Bananas vomit. The brain triggers many associated ideas as a result of system 1. Associatively coherent. (continue from page 53)

Not only do our brains react to sth negative, but also our bodies show a reaction, too. David Hume says, in his "An enquiry concerning human understanding," there are 3 principles of association: resemblance, contiguity in time and place, and causality. Psychologists say ideas are linked to one another, like nodes in a vast network. We are thinking constantly; and only a few of them is conscious, while most are unconscious. We know less about even ourselves. 

    The marvels of priming (pages 54 - 56)

The priming effect is what comes to our mind first when we are exposed to those things or associated stuff more often than others. Psychologist John Bargh made an experiment at NYU; he asked students to construct sentences from given words. Later on, they were asked to walk the hallway; the group which chose elderly words walked slowly. Florida effect; first show words associated with old age but never show the word "old" itself, and then make participants do some mechanical activity, like walking. Participants said that they weren't affected by the words; in fact, they claim that they didn't notice the elderly topic; because all these happen subconsciously and later on it affects their mentality and body, as well. It is also known as the ideomotor effect - influencing action by the idea. If that participant dislikes the elderly, then the influence is just the opposite; he will not be slow, instead, he will act fast. Interestingly, this ideometer effect works in reverse, too. For instance, at a German university, students were asked to walk slowly; first machine activity. And then they were offered the words; now they noticed the elderly words more easily. Put a pencil in your mouth, smiling position; it amuses people. Students were asked to rate the humour of cartoons; the ones who were in the "smiling" position were more likely to find the cartoons funnier. In another experiment; half of the participants were asked to nod and the other half was to shake. The people who nodded (gesture for yes) accepted hearing the message and others (shake - a gesture for no) rejected. They weren't aware of it. A habitual connection between an attitude of rejection or acceptance and its common physical expression. Act calm and kind regardless of how you feel. 

    Primes that guide us (pages 56 - 59)

The priming effect influences our choices. Money affects it badly; people who were shown pecuniary things were having a difficult time-solving problems; they were also more selfish, and less helpful for others. Societies may be shaped by the surroundings; money, leader, "big brother is watching," etc. Lady Macbeth effect; wish for cleaning a "stain" in the body after doing some bad. System 2 believes that it is in charge but in fact, not. People are left in disbelief when they are told about the findings of these experiments. Images of flowers and eyes were exchanged in a place where workers asked to leave a tip; in the eye images, they left more tips. System 1 is subconscious; it provides impressions that turn into beliefs in the long run. Our actions and choices are the results of system 1. 

    Cognitive ease (pages 61 - 71)

Cognitive ease, for now, no need for System 2, System 1 will deal with it. 

    Illusions of remembering (pages 62 - 63)

Sense of ease gives the impression of familiarity; the words we have seen previously are easier to read next time. 

    Illusions of truth (pages 63 - 64)

Familiarity creates cognitive ease and it may sometimes create a bias. Repetition may lead something to be disguised as truth. 

    How to write a persuasive message (pages 64 - 66)

If you want people to believe in your message, then reduce cognitive strain, write legibly. Use simple language, avoid complexity. To make it memorable, verse it. People liked rhythmic aphorisms more than when they don't rhyme. System 2 is lazy. We should pay attention to the illusion of truth. Most of the time system 2 adopts the suggestion or impression of system 1. 

    Strain and effort (pages 66 - 67)

Cognitive strain mobilizes system 2 and this may sometimes reject the intuitive answer of system 1. 

    The pleasure of cognitive ease (pages 67 - 69)

Mind at ease puts a smile on the face. Cognitive ease makes people happy, it is associated with good things. Easily pronounced words evoke a favourable attitude; the pictures with easily recognizable contours make people smile; the companies that have easier names to pronounce do better at the beginning in the stock market, though effect it neglected over time. Repetition induces cognitive ease and a comforting feeling of familiarity. There was an experiment conducted; Robert Zajonc calls it the "mere exposure effect;" in UMich and Mich State Uni; a lot of words appeared in the newspapers, and the attendees were asked to rate the words on the scale from "good" to "bad." Students voted the words that appeared a lot as "good" words and vice versa. This effect is not about consciousness; because students who have seen the words did not notice them at all. But still, it created some kind of familiarity. This is about System 1, no need for System 2 here. To survive animals need to be alert always, especially for novelty. If something bad doesn't happen after seeing that novelty, then people associate that with comfort. It is a safety signal for humans, and safety feels good.

    Ease, mood and intuition (pages 69 - 71)

Sarnoff Mednick did RAT (remote association test) and gave participants 3 words and asked them to come up with a word that was associated with all 3 words. It turns out that when the participants' mood was high, so their scores, too, by twofold, at least. And when their mood was bad, their answers were no better than the bling guesses. Mood affects System 1; when we are unhappy we lose our touch with intuition. It also adds to our creativity. However, in a happy mood, people become more intuitive but less vigilant and more prone to logical errors. It is evident that in a good mood, our body thinks that the environment is safe and lets its system go easy. 

    Assessing normality (pages 72 - 75)

There are 2 surprises; active and passive. If our spouse comes home and she starts talking and if her voice is different, or some other thing is different then we get surprised; this is an active and conscious surprise. Another surprise, passive one, is that when we meet our childhood friend after long years, we get surprised. However, if we see him again, later in the airport, we don't get surprised; we are used to him. Our System 1 says it is ok to meet him in strange places. Now it is normal. For instance, a lot of forests are burning in the last few years. In the beginning, it was a total surprise; but now, some people are sadly accustomed to it; now it became (or tries to become) normal. Or the covid situation. Everyone was afraid at the beginning, but after a few months, some people almost don't care about it at all. If they were caring they would've been vaccinated. The situation is also called "norm theory." Moses illusion is that "how many animals of each kind did Moses take into the ark?" It looks normal because Moses is a biblical name; however, Noah took the animals into the ark, not Moses. Our brain says ok because both names are in the biblical context and the question is about religion. 

    Seeing causes and intentions (pages 75 - 78)

We have causality or a sequence of events from birth. They don't depend on pattern reasons, but rather they are products of System 1. 

    A machine for jumping to conclusions. (pages 79 - 88)

System 1 is prone to jumping to conclusions. ABC and 121314, when shown the image, B and 13 look alike, but according to the context "System 1" bets on the best answer; and it is guided by experience and the most recent memory. System 1 rejects the alternatives; it doesn't keep track of them. Conscious doubt is not in the repertoire of System 1; it is in System 2 because it requires mental effort. 

    A bias to believe and confirm (pages 80 - 81)

Psychologist Daniel Gilbert writes in his essay, "how mental systems believe," about a theory of believing and unbelieving; which also goes back to XVII century philosopher Baruch Spinoza. In order to believe something, first, people check if that statement is true or not. Our first attempt is usually on believing because System 1 is gullible; doubt is not in the domain of it; System 2 can doubt. In one part of the experiment, the participants were asked to hold a certain number of digits in their mind; and in that experiment, it was found out that participants couldn't identify false sentences as "unbelievable" because System 2 was busy with remembering the numbers. There is also evidence that people are more likely to believe in empty persuasive messages, such as commercials, when they are tired. 

    Exaggerated emotional coherence (halo effect) (pages 81 - 84)

The tendency to like or dislike everything about a person is known as the halo effect. You meet a person named Joan in a bar, and you liked her; she was good, friendly, etc. And then you were asked if she could contribute to a charity. Even though you know virtually nothing about her generosity, you are more inclined to think that she will donate; because by the association, you are predisposed to believe that Joan is generous. Real evidence is missing; the gap is filled by our emotion attached to the first impression. Consider this;

Alan: intelligent, industrious, impulsive, critical, stubborn, envious

Ben: envious, stubborn, critical, impulsive, industrious, intelligent

Even though the same adjectives of personality were written on both candidates, most people are more prone to like Alan over Ben because of the halo effect of the first impressions. Stubbornness and envy of an intelligent person are more favoured than the intelligence of a stubborn and envious person. The author gives an example of grading from his life; he realised that he was grading student booklets on a homogeneous basis. There were 2 essays, and if the first essay got the top grade then the second one is also more likely to receive a higher grade due to the halo effect. However, the professor changed his style; instead of grading all essays sequentially, he started to grade only the first essays, writing down the grade it received; and then moving onto the second essay. Now, Prof. Kahneman found out that sometimes there was a discrepancy between the two; and he claims that he had a temptation to close the gap between that grade discrepancy. Moreover, it was difficult for him not to yield to that temptation; and his confidence in grading also decreased because this was a novelty for him. In the previous method, System 2 was lazily accepting the biased final grades. In his book, The wisdom of crowds, James Surowiecky writes about group decisions. A group of people were shown a jar containing coins; they were asked to estimate the coins. When they estimated independently, the average of the group was almost correct. Some may think it was low, while others think it was high. However, when they shared their estimate together, the first errors influenced others; thus decreasing the size of the sample and with it the accuracy of the group estimate. This would also be useful in group meetings. What usually happens is that the ones who speak early and assertively affect others. It is best to have everyone write down their propositions before the meeting has begun. 

    What you see is all there is (wysiati) (pages 84 - 88)

When information is scarce, which is a common occurrence, System 1 operates as a machine jumping to conclusions. "Will John be a good leader? He is intelligent and strong..." A common answer is yes. What if the following adjectives were corrupt and cruel? You didn't start by asking "what would I need to know before I formed an opinion about the quality of someone's leadership?" System 1 created a story; intelligent and strong are good adjectives, then he is a good leader. Even if a piece of new information is added on, for instance, "John is corrupt," the first impression will still be biased. The combination of coherence-seeking System 1 and lazy System 2 indicates that System 2 will endorse many intuitive beliefs and impressions of System 1. However careful one is, System 1 is likely to influence the decisions one make. Its input never ceases. Amos did research; there was a case, what is usually expected is that people who listen to only one side can also empathise with the other, as well. However, the results were astonishing; people who listened to only one side favoured that side over the other and they were confident of their judgments. People find out that the consistency of the story matters more than the completeness of it. 

    How judgments happen (pages 89 - 96)

    Basic assessments (pages 90 - 92)

People vote for a candidate's facial look of competence. Winners have a certain number of positive attitudes while losers facial expressions have a negative one - judgment heuristic. 

People were asked about their willingness to pay to save drowning birds, 2 000, 20 000, 200 000; and volunteers stated that they would pay $80, $78 and $88 respectively. In an emotional context, people neglect quantity. 

    Intensity matching (pages 93 - 94)

    Mental shotgun (pages 94 - 96)

    Answering an easier question (pages 97 - 105)

    Substituting questions (pages 97 - 99)

When we cannot answer a difficult question, System 1 finds an easier question, answers it, and then makes us answer that difficult question, even if the answer may not be acceptable. This is called substitution. A heuristic is when a simple procedure helps find an adequate answer to a difficult question, although that answer is often imperfect. 


Monday, March 8, 2021

Intertextuality, week01, 2mar21, tue

This post below doesn't contain anything serious.


Metinlerarasilik, Cansu Ozge Ozmen, 2 mar 21, tue, 5:30pm

Intertextuality, eco-criticism, animal studies, anti-natalism (?) gibi konular var.

Ve 2 tane roman var bunlari uyarlamak icin. Anti-natalism yeni bir alan, pek kabul 

goren yaygin felsefi bir sistem degil. Eco-criticism cok duyarsiniz. Felsefe okuyacagiz

Freedom ve Solar isimli 2 roman var. Kitap da yuklendi simdi. Eco-criticism belki

vizelerden sonra. Freedom ve Solar, anti-natalism ve eco-criticism icin uygun 

incelemeye. Eco-criticism'i bir romana uygulamak istiyorsaniz, insanin yasadigi her

environment icin, anti-natalism ve eco-criticism farkli duyarlilik da inceleyecegiz. 

Duyarli lit critler vasitasiyla yeni alanlar yaratilabilir, gender gibi. Eco-criticism

merkezde doga var. Insan degil. Why would bringing a child into this world be 

unethical? Anti-natal. consent. It is not really fare to gift someone something 

if this birth would come out as sth negative. White elephants are very expensive to

care for, they are albino. You are giving someone a life, but it would become a 

burden as well. Reading is unethical because no-one is born. The idea of consent,

Neden rizasi disinda yaptin cocugu, buna itiraz nedir. Plausible objection ne 

olabilir. Sometimes governments support more children. Ulkenin birth rate'i 2den

fazla olursa uzun vadede artacaktir. Environmentally conscious insanlarda, en fazla

carbon footprint icin 2 cocuktan fazlasi unethical. Simdi consent'den bahsettik. 

I cannot ask that person to give consent, because they don't exist. It is not 

irreversable burden. Once a person is born they have a vested interest in existence. 

This will cause a lot of pain and suffering. This contradiction between having a 

child and using resources for child. You don't know them, and they don't exist. 

Other argument is who can you possibly have a child for? Not the child. For yourself. 

To continue lineage, insurance policy, to feel and experience unconditional love of

a parent. For your state, for your country, sometimes for a political party. To save

marriage, to give birth before your elti does. Most of those reasons are quite selfish.

Tamamen altruistic, unselfish yasayacak olsan bile cocugun cikarlari icin yok. 

Why wouldn't I bring a child into this world? World is a dangerous place. 

Bad genes. Root of anti-natalism is the idea that coming into existence is harm. 

It's just ordinary life itself. Someone who is not born is not existent. He doesn't

experience the pleasure. So, he doesn't exist and experience it. You exist and

you suffer. This suffer needn't be sth like huge tragedy. It can be an itch. They 

don't look very happy. If they become alive they will suffer. Then they also

talk about suffering is not only about emotional pain. Everybody experiences them.

Common suffering. Being born. Death. Better to have loved and lost than never to have

loved at all, Tennyson. Better to have been born and suffered and died than never to 

have been born at all. Haftaya, Schopenhaur ve Zapfe.

The end.  6:50 pm

English writer critics, week01, 2mar21, tue

This post below doesn't constitute anything serious. 

Ingiliz yazar elestirmenleri, Petru Golban, 2 mar 21, tue 7pm
Discussion today. General introductory class. The title of class is XX century
British writer critics. Contemporary British writer critics. Ufukdan alabilirsiniz.
Two texts present in every book. David Lodge "Criticism and Theory." David Lodge
a very important XX century novelist, professor of English in England. Longman
anthology of Modern criticism and theory. Important XX century critics. Major XX
century schools and criticism. Dryden, Sydney, Alexander Pope, Coleridge'den sonra
you will see XX century critics. T. S. Eliot, V. Woolf, Lawrence, David Lodge some of
the most important British writer critics. Foster, G. H. etc. They are writers of 
first half of XX century. Coexisting with these writer-critics. These writer-
critics may belong or not belong to schools of criticism. Writer-critics may belong
to 2 schools of criticism. WWII'dan sonra daha cok. Structuralism is like post-war
period. Between Formalism and Structuralism arasinda. Anglo-American neo-criticism.
Talking about Woolf, Eliot, Foster as writer-critics of first half of XX century. 
Scientific type of literary criticism, represented by Formalism and New Criticism.
New Criticism ile Woolf, Eliot, Foster ile alakasi yok. They are not representative of
Anglo-American criticism. Maybe T.S. Eliot in tradition close to New criticism and
Formalism. Schklovski (?) Formalism. Who are representatives of Anglo-American 
neo criticism. Practical criticism by I. A. Richards. Text-oriented, focusing on 
the work itself. This type of criticism is called Formal approach to literature, 
Formalism, New criticism. Post-war period French structuralism represents the four
major literature. Autonomous, self-sufficient. Purposeless. Formal approach. 
Excludes the text from the context. With social, receiver, society. Considers the
work solely in relation to itself, the text. Patterns, structures, general,
universal is what structuralism focuses, binary opposition. Neo criticism also
focuses on literature but considers meaning. More thematological approach. New
criticism, meaning, significance of words. Formalism, language devices. Devices of
language. Piece of literary work. Stylistic device, looking for what. Trying to 
disclose what? Figures of speech. Literariness. Schklovski (?) art as text. Keyword
ne? Schklovski's contribution. It became a principle of magical realisation. 
Defamiliarisation. Binary opposition. Look at British writer critics, but look
at science of literary critics. A formal approach to literature corresponds to one
of four critical arts. Mimetic, pragmatic, expressive and objective. Formal 
approach to literature. Cultural studies belong to. Feminism, pragmatic theory. 
Reader-oriented theory. Reader-response theory. Strengthen and develop yourself for
further studies. We will see how much we will cover and how. Organised XVIII studies.
For the beginning, today we can remember two of them and others for tomorrow. 
You can see 4 texts on perculus. Woolf and Wells, go to page 110, you will see
essay until page 124. First task for next week. Woolf Modern fiction vs Contemporary
novel by Wells. Both Woolf and Wells speak about their contemporary literature. For
us, we need to identify the ideas and to see if ideas emerge or differentiate. 
Presumably, Woolf and Wells had to different opposite contemporary fiction. Woolf's
Modern fiction refers to Modernist. She doesn't refer to Modernity in historical 
terms as we understand. Which is the end of Modernity. Wells is the representative
of Modernity. Followers of Dickens, Thackeray, Meredith and others. Representative 
of experimentative novel. On novel and fiction writing. This is your first task
for the next week. Another writer of that period is Foster, probably Foster 
Passage to India. He was rather famous, Aspects of novel. More than his novels. 
Forster is also the author of Bildungsroman. Not known at all. Okumak lazim. 
Page 133, chapter called People. Forster, sayfa 33, People. Read it. And
People continued sayfa 47. You will see very interesting typology of characters. 
Famous division of characters of round and flat characters given to us by Forster.
He developed it. We know it. Theorotising this typology. Son, 4. T. S. Eliot. 
Neden T. S. Eliot at the end. After TS Eliot, we will talk about Formalist approach
to literature. Formalism, new criticism. Woolf, Eliot, Forster, British writer-
critics from the first XX century. They aren't included in Russian Formalism and
American New Criticism. However, TS Eliot by some of his critical ideas, can be
included in Formalism and New Criticism by Schklovski. On their contemporary novel, 
Woolf modernist, Wells. 1st homework is read Woolf and Wells, while reading yaz
extract critical ideas. Woolf diyor ki soyle yaz, Wells diyor ki boyle yaz. Not alin.
Wells only one part. Not the whole book. 14 sayfalik bir chapter of the book, Forster
sonra chapter 3 and 4, on people, which means characters in the novel. Flat, round, 
people acting in the novel, kind of actors. To understand, tradition and individual 
talent. To focus on XX century and contemporary literary theory as a science. 
We study XX century, writer-critics. Woolf and TS Eliot, Forster, Wells, DH Lawrence
is a writer-critic. Drabble, zaman yok. David Lodge. Peter Ackroyd, Shakespeare 
biography, etc. XX century. Scientific, objective, methodological, literary theory
and criticism with its own trends and schools. You should remember now, these schools
and trends are divided according to type of approach. Formal approach, approach 
through reading, approach through socio-cultural context. Approach through gender, 
Psychoanalytical approach. Post-structuralism and deconsturction. En genis burada 
hangi, the most complex and diverse with more schools and trends are these:
Formal approach, approach through reading, approach through socio-cultural 
context. Remember, formal approach has 3 schools, hangi, tell us, Russian formalism,
Anglo-American New Criticism, French Structuralism. Approach through reading, 
reader-oriented theories. Reader-response theories. Reception theory. Approach to
socio-cultural context hangi, traditional or vulgar Marxism, sonra traditional 
Historicism. Traditional Historicism becomes New Historicism, which is related to
historiographic metafiction. Cultural materialism, Cultural studies. Postcolonial
theory, Michel Foucault, ecocriticism, posthumanism, race studies. Approach through
gender, feminism. Anglo-American at least closer to Marxism. Feminism closer to 
Derrida. Psychoanalysis approach closer to poststructuralism, they reject themselves
as critics. Deconstructive reading. So formal approach to literature, include these
3. Approach through reading include these. Approach through socio-cultural context
include these. Ayri ayri icinde barindiriyor. Anglo-American school. Cultural 
studies and cultural. Disability studies, queer theory. In some countries it is
forbidden to tell boy or a girl. French Feminism buraya bakiyor. Helene Sisua (?)
was affected by Derrida. Juliet Mitchel and Juliet Christie. Simdi, normally onlar
interrelated. Queer theory in gender studies maybe. Gender can be related to 
Feminism. Sexual minority vs heterosexual majority, Marxist approach in a way. Inter-
sectional. Net oyle bir categorisation yok. Like King Lear gibi. Is it like a 
tragedy? What kind of tragedy? Political action of killing the ruler. Onemli. 
Focus on the writer critics in the XX century. Follow this literary theory and 
criticism. TS Eliot has related to formal approach. David Lodge has relation to 
formal approach but structuralism. These classes very complex and difficult. 
For next week, read 4 texts, criticism. Wells 1 parca, Eliot 2 parca. For British
literature, Tinternaby, Kublai Khan, etc. We have our classes online, I can see
a round. Tarih, Sociology. 
The end. 8:10pm

PS: This is my first post of my MA degree notes at Tekirdag Namik Kemal University, Dept of English language and literature. These series of notes don't contain anything serious. They might be jokes, or draft or whatever except something academic or rather serious.

Wednesday, March 3, 2021

2015 e-commerce report of Turkey

I prepared this e-commerce report in September 2015 for a very stupid company in Europe. They were working for Google adwords and they tried to enter Turkish e-ads market in 2015. They asked me to prepare it and duly I did it spending 2-3 sleepless nights on it. I emailed them, but stupid, foolish company ignored all my work. So, now I am publishing it for public.

Turkey Ecommerce Report

 

19  Sep 2015,  Ankara

T*** B***

 

Turkey Internet Penetration Numbers 2015[1]

36mln internet users, Global rank = 17

Penetration percentage 46 %, Global rank = 97

Advantage: Turkey’s penetration percentage will rise till it saturates, and reaches to roughly 85%. It’s user growth is currently between 3% and 6%.

 

Turkey broadband Internet subscription Numbers[2]

The country ranks 15th with 8.4 mln fixed wired Internet subscribers, and ranks 80th with 10.5 %.

It ranks 20th with 13 mln mobile cellular subscriptions, and ranks 79th with 16.3%

As you can see, it’s percentage will rise till it saturates. The Internet subscription will rise to 33%, and mobile cellular to 61%. It’s a huge advantage.

 

Turkey smartphone penetration[3]

It’s smartphone penetration 29.6%, ranking 40th. I think it will rise to top-20 with more than 50% penetration. The market is unsaturated.

 

Approximately 12 000 e-commerce websites operate in Turkey.[4]

 

Turkish consumers spent 5.4 bln euros on products and services online in 2012. Four in ten Turkish internet users frequently uses a smartphone to access the internet. Based on the results of a survey conducted by the Turkish Statistical Institute, 24.8% of all internet users aged 16-74 in Turkey bought goods and services online. [5]

 

 

 

The chart below shows leading e-retailers and their sales in million euros. [6]

 

 

The chart below shows daily time spent with select media in Turkey from 2011 to 2013 (in hours).[7]

 

The statistic shows the gross domestic product (GDP) per capita in Turkey from 2010 to 2013, with projections up until 2020. [8]

 

 

The statistic shows the gross domestic product (GDP) in Turkey from 2010 to 2014, with projections up until 2020. [9]

 

 

Some conclusions from report [10] of The Turkish Industry and Business Association in 2014:

·        In terms of e-commerce, Turkey can currently be viewed in a stage where e-commerce mostly involves the online sale of products whose specifications, content and qualities are easier to determine with certainty - such as the online sale of books and media products - and where the sale of products whose content and quality need to be observed physically - such as fashion items - is not a common occurence.

·        The Turkish e-commerce sector had a volume of 15,3 TRY in 2012.

·        Additionally, the report points out the presence of an important B2B e-commerce market with a volume of 5.5 billion USD in 2012.

 

Furthermore, the website Webrazzi also has published another report [11] in March 2014 - where the following e-commerce statistics for Turkey take place:

·        E-commerce constitutes 0.8% of retail sales in Turkey, as opposed to 9.6% in the UK, 6.5% in the US, 3.2% in Brazil, and 2.1% in Russia.

·        The number of vertical online stores has grown by 35% in the textiles industry, by 39% in the Automotive industry, by 32% in the hardware store sector, by 27% in the cosmetics sector, and by 16% in the electronics industry in 2012. In the same year, the growth rate of e-commerce in these sectors ranged from 32% (automotive) to 53% (hardware stores).

·        91% of people already buying online view e-commerce as safe, while 84% of those not buying online see e-commerce as risky.

·        In 2013, while 68% of customers in Turkey purchasing items online have preferred using credit cards, 15% have used payments through bank transfer, 12% paid at the door, 3% used mobile payments and 2% paid through mail orders.

·        In 2013, 20% of online credit card payments were made for services, 17% for airlines, 17% electronics, 14% travel, 13% for telecommunications, 3% supermarket and market purchases, 2% for clothes.

·        The sectors with the highest revenue generated from online sales were Services (6,8 billion TRY), electronics (5,9 bn TRY), Airlines (5,7 bn TRY), Travel (5,6 bn TRY), and Telecoms (4,4 bn TRY).

·        Around 78% of online customers using credit card payments preferred single installment payments as opposed to multiple installments.

·        In the first 10 months of 2013, 47% of male internet users and 36% of female users had purchased items online. These figures were 31% of males and 23% of females for individuals aged between 18-24, 54% of males and 40% of females for ages 25-34, 54% of males and 43% of females for ages 35-44, 46% of males and 50% of females for ages 45-54, 38% of males and 21% of females for ages above 55.

 

Below is infographics [12] and report about Ecommerce by Association of e-commerce retailers, ETID[13]:

·        Online retail in Turkey is expected to see an annual growth of 15.8 per cent in constant value terms by 2017, 107 per cent in total, reaching a market value of $6.6 billion, according to global market research company Euromonitor International. On-going technological development, Turkey’s growing population and a sustainable rise in online shopping is expected to continue to support the rapid expansion of Turkey’s e-commerce sector.

·        The research company estimates Internet usage to rise 27.5 per cent between 2012 and 2017, driving e-commerce. The market penetration of smartphones is expected to increase by 124.4 per cent between 2012 and 2017.

·        There are currently around 40 million Internet users in Turkey (53% of the population), which in the European ranking of countries with the highest number of internet users puts Turkey in 5th place, just after Germany, Russia, the UK and France. Half of the population is under 30 years old and actively use social networks (Turkey has close to 33 million Facebook users, ranking six in the world). That, along with an enthusiastic fervour for business enterprise, makes Turkey the ideal country to promote e-commerce. In 2012 total B2C e-sales has reached €5.4 billion, over 50 per cent up against 2011

·        The Turkish youth population is increasingly technologically literate and urbanised, having grown in the Internet age and in cities, unlike their fathers. This trend is exacerbated by Turkey’s growing wealth, allowing more people to by luxury goods, such as smart phones and PCs. With the expansion of Turkey’s GDP per capita by over ten per cent in real terms between 2007 and 2012, the future looks bright for Turkish e-commerce.

 

 

 

Below is the infographics about Market attractiveness of Turkey, considering eCommerce. Some sources[14] used to gather data are Euromonitor, Internation Telecommunication Union, Planet Retail, World Bank, A. T. Kearney analysis and Kleiner Perkins trends:

Below is the table based on A. T. Kearney’s 2013 Global Retail Ecommerce Index Ranking by Online market attractiveness score[15]. Turkey drops from 9th (see above infographics, which is 2012 data) place to 22nd in one year. However, Turkey is just 2 pts lesser than 15th ranked Italy.

Below are the charts [16] about credit, debit cards, POS terminals and ATM numbers and Turkey’s regional ranking:

Below is the infographics[17] about how mobile and banks effect consumer behavior:

The table[18] below shows social penetration based on active users of the largest active social network in each country:

Below is the table that depicts social penetration by country based on a global web index survey of each country’s internet users[19]:

This statistic[20] presents the social network penetration in Turkey as of fourth quarter 2014. The most popular social network was Facebook with a 26 percent penetration rate. Overall, 52 percent of the population were active social media users:

In infographics[21] below, Turkey’s ecommerce users and their spending is depicted:

 

 

The Chart below shows of online & total retail volume by Country in bln TRY[22]:

The Chart below shows of the share of online to total retail by Country[23]:

Below is Top 10 Related Searches in All Categories in Turkey for past 12 months.[24] As you see, sahibinden.com ranks 4th, which good indicator of online transactions. Sahibinden.com is an online C2C classifieds and shopping platform[25]:

Chart below shows Top 10 searches in Advertising & Marketing category in Turkey for past 12 months[26]. The words in brackets are translations of the related words. Fun fact: Turkish people are crazy when it comes to buying mobile phone. To prevent huge import of mobile phones, government introduced high taxes on import ones and supported local companies to produce its local mobile phones.[27]

Graph below indicates Web search Interest over time in Advertising & Marketing category in Turkey for past 12 months.[28]

The chart below displays Rising searches in Advertising & Marketing category in Turkey for past 12 months.[29] Words in brackets are translations or explanations of the queries.

Chart below shows Top 10 related searches in Retail Trade category in Turkey for past 12 months.[30] (fyi[31]: translation)

Graph below is Search Interest over time in Retail Trade category in Turkey for past 12 months.[32]

Table below is Rising search queries in Retail Trade category in Turkey for past 12 months.[33] (fyi: translation)

Below is Top 10 related searches in Shopping category in Turkey for past 12 months.[34] (fyi: translation)

Graph below depicts Search Interest in Shopping category in Turkey for past 12 months.[35]

Table below is Rising searches in Shopping category in Turkey for past 12 months.[36] (fyi: interpretation)

List shows Top 25 websites in Turkey.[37] There are 3 ecommerce platforms among them.

1

Google.com.tr

 

2

Facebook.com

 

3

Google.com

 

4

Youtube.com

 

5

Twitter.com

 

6

Sahibinden.com

Online classifieds & ecommerce platform

7

Milliyet.com.tr

News

8

Eksisozluk.com

Mix of urbandictionary and facebook

9

Onedio.com

Content provider

10

Hurriyet.com.tr

News

11

Haber7.com

News

12

Live.com

 

13

Yandex.com.tr

 

14

Mynet.com

 

15

R10.net

Webmaster forum

16

Ensonhaber.com

News

17

Instagram.com

 

18

Haberturk.com

News

19

Wikipedia.org

 

20

T.co

 

21

Gittigidiyor.com

Ecommerce

22

Blogspot.com.tr

 

23

Sozcu.com.tr

News

24

Yenisafak.com

News

25

N11.com

Ecommerce

Some stats[38] indicate Turkey is strong player in shopping business:

·        Sales in 2013 were around 40% higher than the previous year, with growth rates close to this number expected for the next three years.

·        M-Commerce has a high growth potential in Turkey, with smartphone penetration of almost one-third on the total population in 2013 and increasing every year. In the 18-24 year-old group, the smartphone penetration rate is over 50%. Around a quarter of online shoppers use mobile devices to make purchases over the Internet.

·        Consumer Electronics and Appliances was the largest B2C e-commerce physical product category in Turkey in terms of sales, while apparel has the highest reach of online shoppers, especially female.

·        The largest player on the Turkish B2C e-commerce market was online mass merchant Hepsiburada.com with a high one-digit market share. In 2013, its sales were growing by +50% compared to 2012. Other players, such as store-based and online retailer of electronics, Teknosa, and private shopping club, Markafoni.com, also saw their sales increase significantly, while local online food delivery company, Yemeksepeti, expanded to the Middle East under the Foodonclick brand.

·        The two most visited e-commerce websites were automobile classifieds, the online marketplace, Sahibinden.com, and B2C/C2C auction and marketplace, Gittigidiyor.com. Private shopping clubs, Trendyol.com and Markafoni.com, followed, with three online mass merchants Hepsiburada.com, Limango.com.tr and Morhipo.com ranking behind them.

 

 

 

Why Turkey:

·        56.8 million credit cards and 100.2 million bank cards are being used in Turkey, which carries Turkey to 2nd tier in Europe in the number of credit cards and to 1st tier in bank cards.[39]

·        Online payments by credit cards exceeded TRY 34.6 billion in 2013. [40]

·        6% of online shoppers used their mobile devices for online shopping in 2014, which takes Turkey to 3rd place in use of mobile devices. [41]

·        Turkish e-commerce market grew by 35.5% since 2008 and the market volume reached approximately TRY 14 billion in 2013. If rise is preserved, the market is expected to grow by 15.8% at the end of 2017.[42]

 

Ecommerce models in Turkey:

·        The most commonly used models in the e-commerce market are "B2C" and "C2C" (i.e. Consumer to Consumer).

·        70% of the total domestic internet economy is based on consumption.[43]

·        Markafoni, Morhipo and Trendyol have particularly contributed to the increase of female online shoppers.

·        In 2012, the total disbursements in B2C model e-commerce operations reached TRY 15.3 billion, corresponding to 51% of the total online disbursements.

·        Travelling and plane ticket purchases constitute 25% of total online shopping disbursements. This is followed by insurance, consumer products, telecommunication and direct marketing.[44]

·        Lack of

o   trust in e-commerce;

o   labor force;

o   financial resources;

o   technical infrastructure;

o   know-how

o   and high application expenses

prevent B2B e-commerce from becoming widespread among small and medium sized enterprises.[45]

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Table below shows single card usage in online payment by industries in Turkey.[46]

Pie below shows shares single card online payments by Industries in Turkey, 2013.[47]

Chart below shows Share of Endorsements in online payments by Sectors, Turkey 2013.[48]

Chart below shows Occurrence Frequency of Card payments online, Turkey 2013. [49]

Chart below shows users’ choice of installments in credit card transactions, Turkey 2013.[50]

Table below shows Online Shopping rate of Genders based on their Age ranges, Turkey 2013.[51]

Pie shows Distribution of Online Transactions by Days of the Week, Turkey 2013: [52]

Infographics below show some facts about Turkish shopper:[53]

Infographics below show Most Sought & Sold Categories in Turkey:[54]

Infographic below shows e-comm Market size of Turkey, excluding VAT.[55]

 

Categories of E-commerce Market:[56]

Infographics of e-comm market size, Turkey 2014:[57]

Table below shows top ecommerce sites and their user interaction in Turkey.[58]

 

Thanks for your time.

 

g*** (at) y*** (dot) com



[4] Global and Turkish E-Commerce Market, Türkiye İş Bankası, April 2013.

 

[14] Euromonitor, http://www.internetworldstats.com/ , International telecommunication union http://www.itu.int/en/Pages/default.aspx , Planet Retail, World Bank, World Economic Forum, http://bkm.com.tr/ , http://www.slideshare.net/kleinerperkins/kpcb-internet-trends-2012

 

[16] ECB and BKM Online Strategy & Economic Analysis Unit – (Turkey), Finarket.ru – (Russia), IFC Mobile Money Scobing – Country Report 2011: Brazil, Reserve Bank of India, http://www.gaoresearch.com/POS/pos.php , http://www.census.gov/compendia/statab/2012/tables/12s1187.pdf

 

[17] Evolution of M-Commerce – Fatih Isbecer,  http://www.slideshare.net/themobilike/mobilike-madreport-q3

[18] US Census Bureau, Tencent, Facebook, wearesocial.sg

[19] US Census Bureau, GlobalWebIndex Wave 11, wearesocial.sg

[22] Deloitte Turkey retail sector update 2012, Euromonitor: Turkey’s ecommerce sector boosted by economic growth and young populace 2012, Mashable ecommerce 327 bln 2016 study 2012, ons.gov.uk, Yandex Business Development slide about ecommerce in Jan 2013, thomaswhite.com BRIC spotlight Brazil retail, shop.org Brazil and China emerging online retail powerhouses 2012, business-standard.com Indian retail sector outlook in 2012

[23] Deloitte Turkey retail sector update 2012, Euromonitor: Turkey’s ecommerce sector boosted by economic growth and young populace 2012, Mashable ecommerce 327 bln 2016 study 2012, ons.gov.uk, Yandex Business Development slide about ecommerce in Jan 2013, thomaswhite.com BRIC spotlight Brazil retail, shop.org Brazil and China emerging online retail powerhouses 2012, business-standard.com Indian retail sector outlook in 2012

[39] Digital Bosphorus: The State of Turkish E-Commerce, Sina Afra, 2013.

 

[41] Soner Canko, general director of BKM, Turkish Interbank Card Center

 

[42] Focus of Digital Market: E-Commerce (Dijital Pazarın Odak Noktası: E-Ticaret). Turkish Industry and Business Association (TÜSİAD). Sina Afra, TÜSİAD, June 2014.

 

[43] Türkiye İş Bankası, April 2013.

[46] Soner Canko, general director of BKM, Turkish Interbank Card Center. Webrazzi ecommerce 2014 conference presentation.

[47] Soner Canko, general director of BKM, Turkish Interbank Card Center. Webrazzi ecommerce 2014 conference presentation.

[48] Soner Canko, general director of BKM, Turkish Interbank Card Center. Webrazzi ecommerce 2014 conference presentation.

[49] Soner Canko, general director of BKM, Turkish Interbank Card Center. Webrazzi ecommerce 2014 conference presentation.

[50] Soner Canko, general director of BKM, Turkish Interbank Card Center. Webrazzi ecommerce 2014 conference presentation.

[51] Soner Canko, general director of BKM, Turkish Interbank Card Center. Webrazzi ecommerce 2014 conference presentation.

[52] Soner Canko, general director of BKM, Turkish Interbank Card Center. Webrazzi ecommerce 2014 conference presentation.

[53] 2012, İpsos – KMG Guide to understanding Turkey.

[54] ETID, Association of Ecommerce Retailers of Turkey. Presented at E-World conference in Barcelona, 2012.

[55] TUBİSAD, Association of Informatics Operators of Turkey, 2013 report in partnering with Deloitte, comScore & ETID.

[56] TUBİSAD, Association of Informatics Operators of Turkey, 2013 report in partnering with Deloitte, comScore & ETID.

[57] TUBİSAD, Association of Informatics Operators of Turkey, 2013 report in partnering with Deloitte, comScore & ETID.

[58] IAB Internet computational research Gemius, Jul 2013, connectedvivaki.com