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Cytech training provider Spokes People to deliver workshops at National Cycling Show 2023, opening this Saturday 17th June

14 Jun 2023

Lee & Darren from Spokes People, one of Cytech’s UK training providers, are attending the National Cycling Show this weekend and will be delivering various workshops and sessions for... Read more…

Nominations open for British Business Awards 2023

9 May 2023

Nominations have opened for the 2023 British Business Awards.
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Cycle Show 2023 opens tomorrow in London - come and visit the Cytech stand over the weekend

20 Apr 2023

Cytech will be exhibiting at the show on all days on stand G670
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Cytech to deliver seminars at Cycle Show 2023, opening this Friday 21st April

17 Apr 2023

Cytech are attending the Cycle Show and will be demonstrating key practices in bike maintenance that are useful for both the trade and public.
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Just over a week to go until The Cycle Show 2023, celebrating 20 years

12 Apr 2023

Cytech, the internationally recognised training and accreditation scheme for bicycle technicians, will be joined by training providers Activate Cycle Academy and Spokes People when the... Read more…

Check how your High Street has changed since 2020

4 Jan 2023

BBC analysis has shown that beauty salons and tattoo parlours have prospered on high streets while the number of banks and department stores has fallen. Places to eat and drink have also... Read more…

£32.9 million to create a national network of walking and cycling experts

3 Jan 2023

Millions are being encouraged to walk and cycle more this year to get fit and save money, with an additional £32.9 million of government funding to accelerate walking and cycling schemes... Read more…

Activate Cycle Academy on The One Show to support BBC’s ‘Gift A Bike For Christmas’ campaign

15 Dec 2022

Cytech training provider Activate Cycle Academy made it onto BBC television and radio this week as part of The One Show’s launch of a ‘Gift A Bike For Christmas’ campaign.
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VOLT announces partnership with award-winning insurance firm LAKA

28 Nov 2022

VOLT announces its new insurance collaboration with LAKA, three-time winners of the Best Cycle Insurance Provider category at the Insurance Choice Awards and pioneers of the ‘collective... Read more…

Dave Wilsher ex-ACT Director wins Family Business of the Year

18 Nov 2022

Dave Wilsher ex-ACT Director wins Family Business of the Year at the Kent Invicta Chamber of Commerce awards.
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Small behavioural nudges get more people cycling, finds study

Posted on in Business News, Cycles News, Outdoor News

Simple and small ‘nudges' can have a lasting impact on the UK's cycling habits, a series of behavioural studies released by HSBC UK and British Cycling has found.

To help get more people on a bike, HSBC UK and British Cycling developed a series of studies to identify new and tangible ways to inspire action. Devised with behavioural science experts at Columbia University in New York, the Bike Shed studies are based on real-world testing to look at how best to encourage, motivate and dispel the fears associated with getting on a bike.

"There's a cyclist in all of us, it just needs teasing out - primarily through fun, friends and family"

The studies found that small behavioural nudges can motivate people to cycle again. The research reveals that:

Support from friends or family can have a big impact on keeping to cycling goals. People who were prompted to make a plan and set cycling goals with the support from friends or family went on to do 20 per cent more cycling during the following four weeks, compared to people who were not prompted to make a plan with the social support.

Breaking down mental barriers by helping people to visualise themselves as a cyclist can make a lasting change to people's behaviours. In the study providing people with a virtual reality headset showing them realistic vistas of being out and about on a bike were 39 per cent more likely to get on a bike again afterwards, compared to those who viewed a control video.

When you remind people of the fun they can have cycling, people get back on their bikes. In registration emails sent out to HSBC UK City Ride attendees, messages appealing to a sense of fun or the nostalgia of rediscovering your cyclist were most effective in motivating people to sign up. The average improvement rate was found to be around 15 per cent compared with alternative reasons to attend.

cycling woodsThe results from the Bike Shed studies pave the way to help understand cycling behaviours and get as many people as possible on their bikes. More people cycling will result in a variety of benefits, including improvements to health and to the environment.

Luke Harper, Head of British Cycling Partnership at HSBC UK said: "The goal we have set with British Cycling to get two million people back on their bike is deliberately ambitious. We know that changing people's behaviours is tough - especially when it comes to changing long standing habits. The Bike Shed studies launched today are the first of our partnership and they have shown that even the smallest of changes can make a lasting difference to people's behaviour.

"There's a cyclist in all of us, it just needs teasing out - primarily through fun, friends and family. This the first step we're making with British Cycling to inspire people to get back on their bikes to create a greener, fitter and healthier country, and will shape our thinking on how we encourage people to get back on their bikes."

Julie Harrington, CEO at British Cycling said: "We are all creatures of habit, and this is no different when it comes to riding a bike. Most of us are aware of the many health or environmental benefits that riding a bike brings, but still do not cycle regularly, perhaps because we have concerns about safety or lack confidence when riding on the road. Our partnership with HSBC UK is all about understanding those barriers, breaking them down and getting people back on a bike."

Hale Forster, Behavioural Scientist, Center for Decision Sciences at Columbia University, New York said: "The Bike Shed studies applied behavioural science insights to real life scenarios to generate evidence on what motivates people to cycle. The results from the first year have been promising so far and the findings contribute to a growing body of evidence that small nudges can help us to achieve our own goals. Because they are simple, these behavioural nudges can be applied at a wide scale fairly easily and quickly."

To find out more read the full report here .

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