◎ Research
marketing-psychology
Apply psychological principles to marketing and persuasion. Covers cognitive biases, influence triggers, behavioral economics
persuasionpsychologycognitive biasinfluencebehavioral economicsconversion psychology.
Marketing Psychology Principles
Apply research-backed psychological principles to improve marketing effectiveness.
Key Principles
1. Social Proof
- People follow others' behavior
- Application: Testimonials, user counts, case studies
- Example: "Join 10,000+ teams using [Product]"
2. Scarcity
- Limited availability increases perceived value
- Application: Limited seats, time-based offers
- Caveat: Must be genuine, not manufactured
3. Anchoring
- First number sets the reference point
- Application: Show higher price first, then discount
- Example: Pricing page order (highest tier first)
4. Loss Aversion
- People fear loss more than they value gains
- Application: "Don't miss out" vs. "Get access"
- Example: Free trial messaging
5. Authority
- Trust credible experts and institutions
- Application: Certifications, expert endorsements, press logos
6. Reciprocity
- People return favors
- Application: Free tools, valuable content before asking
7. Commitment & Consistency
- People stick with past decisions
- Application: Small commitments first (email signup → trial → purchase)
8. Liking
- People buy from those they like
- Application: Brand personality, storytelling, human voice
Process
- Identify conversion goal
- Map psychological principles that apply
- Test implementation
- Measure impact
Output
Provide specific recommendations:
markdown
**Principle:** [Name]
**Current:** [What's there now]
**Recommendation:** [How to apply principle]
**Expected Impact:** [Hypothesis]Quality Bar
- Evidence-based (cite research where possible)
- Ethical application (no dark patterns)
- A/B tested when possible
- Aligned with brand voice
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