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// framework

Prospect Theory

Daniel Kahneman & Amos Tversky, 1979

People evaluate gains and losses relative to a reference point — and losses feel roughly twice as painful as equivalent gains feel good, making loss framing consistently more powerful than gain framing.

// description

A behavioural economics theory describing how people actually evaluate gains and losses — finding that losses feel roughly twice as painful as equivalent gains feel good (loss aversion), and that people make decisions based on perceived gains and losses relative to a reference point rather than on absolute outcomes.

// history

Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tversky published Prospect Theory in 1979 in Econometrica — a landmark paper that challenged the economic assumption of rational, utility-maximising human behaviour. It became the foundation of behavioural economics and contributed to Kahneman receiving the Nobel Prize in Economics in 2002 (Tversky had died in 1996). Kahneman popularised the ideas for general audiences in "Thinking, Fast and Slow" (2011). Prospect theory underpins pricing strategy, investment decisions, and consumer behaviour research.

// example

Framing a course offer: "Save £50 off the normal price" (gain framing) vs. "Don't miss out — the price goes back to full rate on Friday" (loss framing). Loss framing consistently outperforms gain framing in driving purchase decisions — because losing £50 feels more compelling than saving £50. Also: why a money-back guarantee removes a perceived loss (risk of wasting money) and dramatically increases conversion.

// katharyne's take

Loss aversion explains so much of consumer behaviour — including why money-back guarantees and risk reversals are so powerful in sales copy. People aren't scared of spending money; they're scared of losing it on the wrong thing. A guarantee reframes the transaction: you can't lose. I use loss framing carefully and honestly in my launches — deadline framing is legitimate when there's a real deadline. Fake deadlines are just manipulation with extra steps, and buyers notice.

// creative uses
// quick actions
// prompt ideas
Rewrite my [Etsy listing / course sales page / email launch sequence] using Prospect Theory and loss framing. Here's the current copy: [paste it]. Identify every sentence that is gain-framed and rewrite it as loss-framed where it's honest and natural to do so. Also identify the three biggest perceived risks a buyer faces before purchasing this product and write a risk-reversal statement for each one that I can add to the page.
I'm planning a launch for [product] priced at [£X]. Help me design the pricing and deadline structure using Prospect Theory. Specifically: what reference price should I establish first to make the launch price feel like a loss avoided? How should I frame the deadline (real cart close, bonus expiry, price increase)? And write the subject lines for a 3-email close sequence that uses honest loss framing without manufactured fake urgency.
My [Gumroad/Etsy/KDP] product converts at [X]% and I believe the main barrier is perceived purchase risk, not price or product quality. Using Prospect Theory, help me design a risk reversal strategy: what guarantee language would be most compelling, where exactly on the page should I place it, and how do I frame the guarantee so it removes the fear of loss rather than just listing a return policy?
See also: Cialdini's Six Principles, Nudge Theory, Cost-Benefit Analysis
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