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How it works:

Developed by the charity Hubbub, it’s a simple bin that encourages people to dispose of their waste correctly.

It works by posing a simple two-option question – pineapple on pizza or not? Travel to the future or the past? Best superpower – flying or invisibility? – then people ‘vote’ by putting their waste into the side for their answer.

Why it works:

Feelings

people like to express themselves, so by tapping into mildly emotive issues – the kind people have an opinion on but won’t lose friends over – gives people a way to have their say

Incentives

the bins give people an incentive not to just drop their waste and, well, waste their vote. It’s a great example of how even the smallest of incentives can be a powerful motivator

Social

by providing a visual indicator of just how many people have correctly disposed of their waste, other smokers get a subtle hint that they probably should too.

Environment

by putting the bins where they’re needed they provide a simple way for people to make the right choice at the right time.

Friction

similarly, making sure there is a bin – and one that really stands out rather than fades away into the background – there’s less friction to take the right action

Wider impacts to consider:

Change never happens in isolation. To protect against unintended consequences from a system-wide perspective, they probably had to considered things like:

  • What will people do if they disagree with the question?
  • What if people don’t have an opinion?
  • Could it incentivise people to smoke more, in order to vote more?

Why we love it:

It’s such a simple idea but, as we saw, for such a low-cost solution it ticks so many behavioural-science boxes.

And with Hubbub’s own research showing that the Ballot Bin is:

"proven to reduce cigarette butt litter by up to 73%” and has saved “an estimated 15 million cigarette butts from being littered a year" It’s no surprise they’ve scaled to more than 5,000 Ballot Bins in 43 countries.

Plus they’re expanding the idea to full litter bins with solar-powered flip-dot counters, which have already been seen to “reduce litter around interventions by 75% on average”.
Pretty impressive!
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