Cognitive Biases for Marketing
Apply Kahneman and Thaler's behavioral economics principles to marketing—understand how customers actually make decisions and design experiences that work with human psychology, not against it.
When to Use This Skill
Use this skill when you need to:
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Improve conversion rates by removing friction and applying behavioral nudges
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Design pricing pages that guide customers toward optimal choices
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Write copy that resonates with how people actually process information
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Create urgency and scarcity that feels authentic, not manipulative
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Increase email open rates and click-through rates
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Reduce cart abandonment by understanding decision barriers
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Build loyalty programs that drive repeat behavior
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Design onboarding flows that drive activation
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A/B test strategically based on behavioral hypotheses
This skill is particularly valuable for:
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Conversion rate optimizers seeking science-backed tactics
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Product managers designing user experiences
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Copywriters crafting persuasive messaging
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Pricing strategists structuring offers
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Email marketers improving engagement
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Anyone who wants to understand why customers behave irrationally
Methodology Foundation
Source: Daniel Kahneman (Thinking, Fast and Slow) & Richard Thaler (Nudge, Misbehaving)
Core Principle: Humans don't make decisions like rational economic agents. We use mental shortcuts (heuristics) that lead to predictable biases. Understanding these biases allows you to design marketing that works with human psychology rather than against it.
"If you want to encourage someone to do something, make it easy." — Richard Thaler
What Claude Does vs What You Decide
Claude Does You Decide
Structures content frameworks Final messaging
Suggests persuasion techniques Brand voice
Creates draft variations Version selection
Identifies optimization opportunities Publication timing
Analyzes competitor approaches Strategic direction
What This Skill Does
When invoked, I will guide you through applying cognitive biases to marketing:
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Identify the decision context you're trying to influence
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Diagnose barriers to conversion using behavioral lens
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Select appropriate biases for your specific situation
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Design interventions that ethically leverage psychology
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Create copy, pricing, or UX that applies these principles
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Test hypotheses based on behavioral predictions
How to Use
Provide information about your marketing challenge:
Example prompts:
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"Help me design a pricing page using cognitive biases"
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"Why are people abandoning our checkout? Apply behavioral economics."
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"Write email subject lines using scarcity and urgency principles"
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"How can I use social proof effectively on our landing page?"
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"Design a loyalty program using goal gradient and loss aversion"
Information that helps:
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Your current conversion challenge
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Target customer behavior you want to influence
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Existing marketing assets to optimize
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Constraints (ethical, brand, etc.)
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Metrics you're trying to move
Instructions
The Two Systems Framework
All human decisions flow through two mental systems:
System 1 (Fast) System 2 (Slow)
Automatic Deliberate
Unconscious Conscious
Effortless Effortful
Emotional Rational
Intuitive Analytical
Always on Limited capacity
Key Insight: Most purchase decisions are System 1. Your marketing must appeal to intuition and emotion, not just logic.
Application:
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System 1: Headlines, visuals, social proof, urgency
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System 2: Comparison tables, specifications, ROI calculators
Design for System 1, provide System 2 justification.
The 16 Essential Biases for Marketing
Category 1: Perceived Value
- Loss Aversion Losses feel ~2x more painful than equivalent gains feel good.
Instead of... Try...
"Save $50" "Don't lose $50"
"Get these features" "Don't miss these features"
"Sign up for updates" "Don't miss important updates"
Applications:
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Free trials create ownership, making cancellation feel like loss
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"You're about to lose your spot" beats "Reserve your spot"
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Show what they're missing without your product
- Anchoring Effect First number seen influences all subsequent judgments.
Applications:
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Show original price before discount
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Display premium tier first on pricing page
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Suggest donation amounts starting high
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Compare to higher-priced alternatives
Example:
"Was $299" → "$149" (anchored to $299) vs. "$149" (no anchor, feels expensive)
- Decoy Effect A third inferior option makes target option look better.
Classic Example:
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Small coffee: $2.50
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Large coffee: $5.00 (seems expensive)
Add decoy:
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Small: $2.50
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Medium: $4.00 (decoy)
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Large: $5.00 (now seems like good value)
Pricing Page Application: Design three tiers where middle tier is the target. The "Enterprise" tier makes "Pro" look reasonable.
- Framing Effect Same information, different presentation = different decisions.
Negative Frame Positive Frame
10% fat 90% fat-free
5% failure rate 95% success rate
Costs $10/day Saves you time worth $50/day
Application: Frame benefits as gains, competition as what you avoid.
Category 2: Urgency & Scarcity
- Scarcity Bias Limited availability increases perceived value.
Types of Scarcity:
Type Example
Quantity "Only 3 left in stock"
Time "Offer ends in 24 hours"
Access "Members-only pricing"
Information "Exclusive insider report"
Warning: Fake scarcity destroys trust. Use real constraints.
- Present Bias Immediate rewards trump future rewards.
Applications:
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"Get instant access" over "Subscribe for monthly content"
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"Same-day delivery" as premium option
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Show immediate benefit, not just long-term value
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Buy now, pay later options
Category 3: Social Influence
- Social Proof People follow what others do, especially in uncertainty.
Types of Social Proof:
Type Example Best For
Numbers "50,000+ customers" Scale, trust
Testimonials "Changed my business" Emotional connection
Logos "Trusted by Nike, Google" B2B credibility
Reviews "4.8/5 from 2,000 reviews" Consumer products
Activity "John from NYC just purchased" FOMO, activity
Expert "Recommended by doctors" Authority
Best Practice: Match social proof to your customer's concerns.
- Conformity/Herd Behavior In uncertainty, people follow the crowd.
Applications:
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"Most popular" tags on products
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"Others also bought" recommendations
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"Trending" sections
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"Join X people who switched"
Category 4: Cognitive Ease
- Cognitive Overload Too many options = decision paralysis = no action.
The Jam Study: 24 jam flavors → 3% bought. 6 flavors → 30% bought.
Applications:
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Limit pricing tiers to 3-4
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Reduce form fields to essentials
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One CTA per page/email
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Progressive disclosure of complexity
- Status Quo Bias People prefer not to change, even when change is beneficial.
Applications:
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Make desired behavior the default
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Pre-select beneficial options
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Reduce friction to change
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Frame switching as easy, not disruptive
Example: Opt-out organ donation vs. opt-in shows dramatic difference in participation.
- Goal Gradient Effect People accelerate effort as they near completion.
Applications:
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Progress bars in checkout/onboarding
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"You're 80% complete" messaging
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Loyalty programs with visible progress
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Endowed progress (start partway)
Example: Loyalty card with 2 of 10 stamps pre-filled outperforms blank 8-stamp card.
Category 5: Ownership & Commitment
- Endowment Effect People overvalue what they already possess.
Applications:
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Free trials create psychological ownership
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"Your custom plan" language
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Let customers configure before purchasing
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Physical samples they can keep
- Commitment & Consistency People act consistently with prior commitments.
Applications:
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Start with small asks, escalate
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Public commitments (social sharing)
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"You're the kind of person who..." identity framing
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Foot-in-the-door technique
Category 6: Risk Perception
- Optimism Bias People overestimate positive outcomes for themselves.
Applications:
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Connect product to aspirational outcomes
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Show "people like you" succeeding
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Be cautious with fear appeals (they dismiss personal risk)
- Availability Bias Vivid, recent examples feel more likely.
Applications:
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Use specific, memorable case studies
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Reference recent events in messaging
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Create vivid before/after scenarios
- Information Aversion (Ostrich Effect) People avoid information they fear will be negative.
Applications:
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Frame assessments as opportunity, not judgment
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"Discover your potential" vs. "Find out what's wrong"
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Make negative information actionable
Applying Biases: The EAST Framework
Use the UK Behavioural Insights Team's framework to structure interventions:
Principle Application
Easy Reduce friction, simplify, use defaults
Attractive Make it visually appealing, personalize, use incentives
Social Show what others do, use social commitments
Timely Intervene at decision points, use prompts
Ethical Application
Principles for Ethical Use:
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Transparency: Don't create false urgency or fake social proof
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Alignment: Nudge toward what's genuinely good for customers
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Reversibility: Don't trap people with dark patterns
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Honesty: Real scarcity, real testimonials, real data
Red Lines:
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Fake countdown timers that reset
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Fabricated reviews or social proof
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Hidden costs revealed at checkout
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Manipulative opt-out flows
Examples
Example 1: SaaS Pricing Page Optimization
Current Problem: Visitors view pricing page but don't convert. Most choose Free tier.
Behavioral Diagnosis:
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No anchor (prices feel expensive without reference)
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No decoy (no reason to choose Pro over Basic)
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No social proof (no validation of choice)
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No urgency (no reason to decide now)
Redesigned Pricing Page:
POPULAR ↓
┌─────────────┬─────────────┬─────────────┐ │ BASIC │ PRO │ ENTERPRISE │ │ $29/mo │ $79/mo │ $199/mo │ ├─────────────┼─────────────┼─────────────┤ │ 5 projects │ 25 projects │ Unlimited │ │ 1 user │ 5 users │ Unlimited │ │ Email │ Priority │ Dedicated │ │ │ Integrations│ Custom API │ │ │ Analytics │ SLA │ └─────────────┴─────────────┴─────────────┘ "Trusted by 5,000+ teams"
[Start Free Trial →]
"30-day free trial, no credit card"
Biases Applied:
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Anchoring: Enterprise at $199 makes Pro at $79 feel reasonable
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Decoy: Basic lacks key features, making Pro the obvious choice
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Social proof: "5,000+ teams" validates decision
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Loss aversion: "30-day free trial" creates ownership before purchase
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Cognitive ease: "POPULAR" tag reduces decision effort
Additional Elements:
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Show what you lose on Basic: "Missing: Integrations, Analytics, Priority Support"
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Add urgency: "Annual pricing saves 20%—ends Friday"
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Progress endowment: "You've completed step 1 of 3"
Example 2: E-commerce Cart Abandonment
Current Problem: 70% cart abandonment rate
Behavioral Diagnosis:
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Surprise costs at checkout (loss aversion triggered)
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Too many steps (cognitive overload)
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No urgency (can always come back)
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No social validation (am I making the right choice?)
Interventions:
- Address Loss Aversion:
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Show shipping cost upfront, frame as "Free over $50"
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Add progress bar: "You're $12 away from free shipping"
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Exit-intent popup: "Wait! Your cart will expire in 30 minutes"
- Reduce Cognitive Load:
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Guest checkout option (default visible)
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Reduce form fields to essentials
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Single-page checkout
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Pre-fill addresses where possible
- Add Social Proof:
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"1,234 people bought this today"
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Product reviews visible in cart
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"Customers also loved..." recommendations
- Create Urgency:
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"Only 3 left at this price"
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Cart timer: "Reserved for 15 minutes"
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Stock indicator on cart items
- Commitment Devices:
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"Save for later" (creates commitment to return)
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Wishlist reminder emails
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"You viewed this 3 times" (consistency principle)
Abandoned Cart Email Sequence:
Email 1 (1 hour): "You left something behind" + loss aversion ("Don't miss out") Email 2 (24 hours): Social proof ("Customers love this") + scarcity ("Selling fast") Email 3 (72 hours): Incentive + urgency ("10% off expires tomorrow")
Checklists & Templates
Bias Application Checklist
For any marketing asset, check which biases you're leveraging:
Pricing & Offers:
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Is there an anchor (high reference point)?
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Is there a decoy to guide choice?
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Is scarcity real and visible?
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Is loss framing used appropriately?
Copy & Messaging:
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Does it appeal to System 1 (emotional, intuitive)?
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Is there social proof visible?
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Is the benefit framed positively?
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Is urgency authentic?
User Experience:
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Is the desired action easy/default?
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Is cognitive load minimized?
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Is there progress indication?
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Are there commitment mechanisms?
Conversion Audit Template
PAGE/FLOW: _______________ GOAL: _______________
CURRENT STATE:
- Conversion rate: ____%
- Main drop-off point: _______________
- User feedback: _______________
BEHAVIORAL BARRIERS:
- Cognitive overload (too many options/steps)
- Loss aversion (surprise costs, uncertainty)
- Status quo bias (no compelling reason to act)
- Missing social proof (no validation)
- No urgency (can decide later)
- Other: _______________
INTERVENTIONS TO TEST:
Barrier: _______________ Bias to leverage: _______________ Specific change: _______________ Hypothesis: _______________
Barrier: _______________ Bias to leverage: _______________ Specific change: _______________ Hypothesis: _______________
MEASUREMENT:
- Primary metric: _______________
- Secondary metrics: _______________
- Test duration: _______________
Subject Line Formulas Using Biases
Bias Formula Example
Scarcity "Only X left: [benefit]" "Only 3 spots left: Join the masterclass"
Loss aversion "Don't miss: [opportunity]" "Don't miss: Your discount expires tonight"
Social proof "[Number] people [action]" "5,000 marketers read this newsletter"
Curiosity gap "[Intriguing statement] Here's why" "We almost didn't launch this. Here's why."
Personalization "[Name], your [item] is waiting" "Sarah, your cart is waiting"
Urgency "[Time]: [action required]" "24 hours: Complete your application"
Skill Boundaries
What This Skill Does Well
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Structuring persuasive content
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Applying copywriting frameworks
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Creating draft variations
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Analyzing competitor approaches
What This Skill Cannot Do
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Guarantee conversion rates
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Replace brand voice development
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Know your specific audience
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Make final approval decisions
References
Primary Sources:
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Kahneman, Daniel. (2011). Thinking, Fast and Slow. Farrar, Straus and Giroux.
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Thaler, Richard & Sunstein, Cass. (2008). Nudge. Yale University Press.
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Thaler, Richard. (2015). Misbehaving. W.W. Norton.
Additional Resources:
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Irrational Labs: 16 Critical Cognitive Biases
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The Decision Lab: Nudge Theory Reference Guide
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Behavioral Insights Team (BIT): EAST Framework
Related Skills
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persuasion-cialdini - Cialdini's 6 (now 7) principles of persuasion
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pricing-strategy - Behavioral pricing tactics and structure
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copy-frameworks - AIDA, PAS, and other copy structures
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landing-page-copy - Applying biases to conversion pages
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grand-slam-offers - Creating irresistible value stacks