// description
Six universal principles that govern how humans are persuaded: Reciprocity (we return favours), Commitment and Consistency (we act in line with past commitments), Social Proof (we follow what others do), Authority (we defer to expertise), Liking (we're influenced by people we like), Scarcity (we value what's rare or diminishing). A seventh — Unity — was added in 2016.
// history
Robert Cialdini, a social psychologist at Arizona State University, spent three years working undercover in sales, advertising, and fundraising organisations to study influence in the wild. His 1984 book "Influence: The Psychology of Persuasion" became one of the most cited works in social psychology and is required reading in marketing programmes worldwide. His follow-up "Pre-Suasion" (2016) expanded on how context shapes receptivity before persuasion begins.
// example
A creator's product page applying all six: Reciprocity (free sample chapter or free tool). Social Proof (testimonials, student count, results screenshots). Authority (your credentials, track record, press mentions). Liking (your personal story, authentic tone). Scarcity (enrolment closes Friday, only 50 spots). Commitment (free workshop before paid offer — small yeses lead to bigger ones). Unity (we're both in this community, we understand each other).
// katharyne's take
Understanding Cialdini's principles makes you both a better marketer and a more sceptical consumer. I use them ethically and consciously — especially reciprocity (my free content genuinely serves people first) and social proof (real results, real students). What I don't do: fake scarcity, manufactured urgency, manufactured authority. The principles are powerful precisely because they're wired into human psychology — which means misusing them erodes trust fast when people notice.
// creative uses
- Use Reciprocity on your Etsy shop by offering a free printable sampler as a digital download — link it in your shop announcement and listing descriptions. Buyers who download the freebie are far more likely to return and purchase.
- Build Social Proof into your KDP listings by screenshotting genuine reader reviews and using them as the first image in your listing image stack on Etsy or in your Gumroad product description.
- Apply Commitment in your course funnel: offer a free 3-day email challenge before the paid course. Each email asks for a small action (reply with your answer, complete one exercise). Those small commitments prime the buying decision.
// quick actions
- Audit your current sales page against all six principles. Which ones are missing? Authority is the most commonly absent for new creators — add one sentence about your specific experience or results before your next launch.
- Create one genuinely useful free resource this week and link it from your top three Etsy listings as a "bonus PDF" — this is Reciprocity in action and it builds your email list simultaneously.
- Ask three past customers if they'd write a two-sentence testimonial about a specific result they got. Add those to your Gumroad or Teachable product page above the fold. Real specificity beats generic praise every time.
// prompt ideas
Audit my sales page for [product] against all six of Cialdini's principles. Here is the page copy: [paste it]. For each principle — Reciprocity, Commitment, Social Proof, Authority, Liking, Scarcity — tell me whether it's present, absent, or weak. Then rewrite the two weakest sections using the relevant principle more effectively, without resorting to fake urgency or manipulative tactics.
Help me build an ethical email launch sequence for [product] that uses Cialdini's principles across five emails. Map each email to a different principle and make sure the sequence builds genuine trust — no fake countdown timers, no manufactured scarcity. The product is [describe it] and the audience is [describe them].
I want to add Social Proof and Authority signals to my Etsy shop and Gumroad product pages. My credentials and results are: [describe your relevant experience, sales history, or student outcomes]. Help me write three versions of an "about the creator" blurb — one for my Etsy shop bio, one for a Gumroad product description, one for a course sales page — each calibrated to the right length and tone for that platform.