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// framework

Nudge Theory

Richard Thaler & Cass Sunstein, 2008

Small changes to how choices are presented — choice architecture — can significantly influence behaviour without restricting freedom or changing incentives.

// description

The idea that small changes to choice architecture — how options are presented — can significantly influence behaviour without restricting freedom of choice or changing incentives. A "nudge" is any aspect of the decision environment that predictably alters people's behaviour in a foreseeable way.

// history

Richard Thaler (Nobel Prize in Economics, 2017) and Cass Sunstein codified nudge theory in "Nudge: Improving Decisions About Health, Wealth, and Happiness" (2008). Their work drew on decades of behavioural economics research showing that humans are predictably irrational. Governments worldwide (including the UK's "Nudge Unit" and the U.S. Social and Behavioral Sciences Team) have applied nudge theory to increase organ donation, pension enrolment, tax compliance, and energy conservation.

// example

On a digital product checkout page: the annual plan is highlighted as "Best Value" and pre-selected (nudge: default effect). A progress bar shows "3 of 4 steps complete" (nudge: completion tendency). The monthly option is shown second, not first (nudge: anchoring — the annual price frames monthly as cheap or expensive depending on order). These architecture choices meaningfully change what people choose without hiding the alternatives.

// katharyne's take

Understanding nudges makes you both a better designer and a more savvy consumer. When I set up product pages, I think about defaults, framing, and sequence — because these choices genuinely affect what buyers do. I try to use nudges in the direction of what's actually best for the buyer (e.g., highlighting the option that gives them the best value), not to manipulate them into a worse choice. There's a meaningful ethical line between helpful architecture and dark patterns.

// creative uses
// quick actions
// prompt ideas
Audit my [Etsy listing / Gumroad product page / Stan Store] for nudge theory principles. Here is the current page copy and structure: [paste or describe your page]. Identify every place where choice architecture could be improved — defaults, anchoring, sequencing, social proof, completion nudges — and give me specific rewrites or changes for each one. Flag any dark patterns I should avoid.
Design the pricing architecture for my [digital product / course / membership] using nudge theory. I have [describe your tiers or options]. Recommend how to sequence, label, and visually differentiate the tiers so the option that's best value for buyers is also the one most people naturally choose — without hiding the alternatives. Write the actual tier names and labels I should use.
Rewrite my email welcome sequence with nudge theory in mind. Here are my current [number] emails: [describe or paste them]. Add completion-tendency framing, reduce friction at key action steps, use social proof at the right moments, and restructure the default call-to-action in each email so the easiest path leads to [your desired outcome — e.g. "buying the intro product" or "joining the community"]. Keep the tone the same — just improve the architecture.
See also: Cialdini's Six Principles, Fogg Behavior Model, Hook Model
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