Note: This skill is independent analysis and commentary, not a reproduction of the original text. It synthesizes the book's core ideas with modern startup practice, surfaces where frameworks are outdated or incomplete, and integrates perspectives from adjacent disciplines. For the full argument and context, read the original book.
Influence
"Click-whirr. The triggers fire and we react automatically." - Robert Cialdini
When to Use
- Crafting persuasion (marketing, sales copy, negotiation)
- Defending against manipulation (recognizing when you're being clicked)
- Designing systems that need cooperation
- Diagnosing why some campaigns work and others don't
Critical Caveats (Read First)
This skill is about a 1984 book with significant replication issues. Several specific cited numbers are wrong or contested. Treat the principles as TACTICAL RECOGNITION FRAMEWORKS, not precise math.
Known Replication Concerns
| Issue | Status |
|---|
| Kitty Genovese "38 witnesses" myth | Factually false. Manning, Levine & Collins (2007, American Psychologist) debunked. Most "witnesses" couldn't see/hear, several DID call police. Cialdini repeats the false narrative; this skill DOES NOT use Genovese as evidence. We rely only on the lab studies (Latane & Darley) which DO replicate. |
| Bargh-style priming | Largely failed to replicate |
| Ego depletion | Failed multiple replications |
| Milgram 65% | From ONE of 24 conditions. Range was 0-92%. Burger 2009 partial replication ~70% (capped at 150V). Perry 2012 archival critique disputes Milgram's reporting. |
| Romeo-Juliet effect | Contested by Sinclair (2014) |
| Halo-effect numbers | Generally shrunken on replication |
| "Because" experiment | Effect collapses for higher-cost requests |
| DITF backfire condition | If first request is too extreme, you appear unreasonable and lose the second |
| Hofling 95% | Original 1966 number. Modern replications find 16-30% (nurses now have explicit refusal training). |
| Bystander effect in clear emergencies | Fischer et al. 2011 meta-analysis: groups DO help more when threat is clear. Reverses original finding. |
WEIRD Bias
Most experiments used Western, Educated, Industrialized, Rich, Democratic college students. "Universal across cultures" overclaims. East Asian collectivist cultures often show different social proof and authority dynamics.
Bottom Line
The 6+1 principles are real and useful as a tactical recognition framework. Specific effect sizes are unreliable. Treat as "these are the levers" - not "this is the precise math."
The Core Insight: Click-Whirr
Animals (and humans) often act on fixed action patterns triggered by single features. One trigger feature → automatic compliance, even when situation doesn't warrant it.
"The future will see an increased use of decisional shortcuts. As the pace of modern life accelerates and information mounts, we'll be forced to use them more, not less."
The 6+1 principles are humanity's most powerful heuristics - which makes them the most powerful persuasion levers.
The Seven Principles
| # | Principle | Core Rule |
|---|
| 1 | Reciprocation | When someone gives, we feel obligated to return |
| 2 | Commitment & Consistency | Once committed, we behave consistently |
| 3 | Social Proof | We determine what's correct by what others think is correct |
| 4 | Liking | We comply with people we like |
| 5 | Authority | We comply with authority figures, often without question |
| 6 | Scarcity | Opportunities seem more valuable when limited |
| 7 | Unity (added 2016) | We comply more with people we share IDENTITY with |
Plus the bonus: Contrast (sequential items - second seems more different than it is).
Detailed experiments and mechanics for each principle: see principles.md.
The Inner-Choice Insight (Critical)
For Commitment & Consistency, four conditions strengthen a commitment:
| Condition | Why It Works |
|---|
| Active | Doing > saying. Writing > thinking |
| Public | Witnesses lock you in |
| Effortful | More effort, more value |
| Uncoerced | Must feel CHOSEN freely |
Cialdini elevates "uncoerced inner choice" as more important than the other three combined. Bribes/threats don't create real commitment; only freely-chosen action does. This is why coercive tactics (high-pressure sales, induced obedience) produce compliance but not durable commitment.
Pre-Suasion (2016)
"What we present FIRST changes how the audience experiences what comes NEXT."
The persuasive moment isn't only when you make the ask. It's the moments BEFORE, when you set up the listener's mental state.
- "Are you adventurous?" before pitching a new product → adventurous people accept more
- Anchoring high before asking small ($50K mentioned before $5K request)
- Background music in stores (French wine sales up when French music plays)
Detailed Pre-Suasion examples: see pre-suasion.md.
How Principles Combine (Real Power)
The principles compound. Effective persuasion uses MULTIPLE principles together.
Tupperware Party = ALL 6:
- Hostess gives free gifts (Reciprocity)
- Public commitment to buy (Commitment)
- "Susan loves this product!" (Social Proof + Liking)
- Hostess is your friend (Liking)
- Consultant has credentials (Authority)
- "Limited time at the party" (Scarcity)
Cult Recruitment = stacked principles:
- Love bombing = Liking + Reciprocity
- Public testimonials = Commitment + Social Proof
- "We're chosen" = Scarcity (special)
- Leader as authority = Authority
Decision Trees
Am I being manipulated?
Do I feel an unusual urgency to comply?
├─ YES → Likely Reciprocity, Commitment, or Scarcity
│ Stop. Apply the diagnostic question for that principle.
└─ NO → Do I feel oddly drawn to this person/product?
├─ YES → Likely Liking or Authority
│ Separate the dealer from the deal.
└─ NO → Probably legitimate
Which principle should I use in marketing?
What problem are you solving?
├─ "Why should they trust us?" → Authority + Social Proof
├─ "Why should they buy now?" → Scarcity (genuine, not manufactured)
├─ "Why should they pay premium?" → Liking + Authority
├─ "Why should they refer others?" → Reciprocity + Commitment
├─ "Why should they choose us over X?" → Social Proof from SIMILAR customers
└─ "Why should they not churn?" → Commitment + Consistency
Single-Person Bystander Defense (Critical Technique)
When in distress in a crowd, single out one person:
"YOU in the blue shirt - call 911."
This is one of the most important techniques in the book. Generic appeals to a crowd produce diffusion of responsibility (Latane & Darley lab studies). Direct appeal to a specific individual short-circuits the diffusion.
Critical Numbers (With Caveats)
| Number | Rule | Caveat |
|---|
| 6+1 | Universal principles | Unity added in 2016 |
| 65% | Milgram compliance | From 1 of 24 conditions; range 0-92% |
| 94% | "Because" + meaningless reason | Effect collapses for higher-cost requests |
| 76% | Drive Carefully billboard agreement | After agreeing to small 3-inch sign first. Petition-only condition was ~50%. |
| 6x | Sales increase with scarcity + exclusivity (Knishinsky) | Verified in source |
| 35% | DAV response with free address labels (vs 18%) | Verified |
| 92% | Bickman parking-meter compliance in security uniform | Verified in source |
| 42% | Bickman parking-meter compliance in street clothes | Verified in source. (NOT 19% - that figure is unverified.) |
| 3.5x | Suit jaywalker followers vs sloppy clothes | Verified |
| 4 | Conditions strengthening commitment | Inner choice / uncoerced is more important than other three combined |
Common Mistakes
- Confusing volume with quality of social proof - "10,000 customers" matters less than "10,000 customers SIMILAR to you"
- Faking the principles - Manufactured scarcity, paid reviews, fake authority - all eventually backfire
- Using one principle when multiple stack - Masters always combine 3+
- Forgetting reciprocity expects symmetry - Small gift triggers small reciprocity, not huge purchase
- Asking for commitment too big, too fast - Foot-in-the-door wins; door-in-the-face is a separate tactic with backfire risk
- Using authority you don't have - "We're the leaders" without proof = pushback
- Scarcity without specificity - "Limited time!" forever = no scarcity
- Liking without similarity - Generic friendliness < perceived similarity
- Forgetting the click-whirr is automatic - Don't over-explain; the trigger does the work
- Using these on smart, alert prospects - These work on shortcuts. Educated buyers know the moves and will reactance against obvious stacking.
Worked Example: Stacked Principles in Cold Outreach
A short B2B SaaS cold email that layers four principles in six sentences, then an anti-example showing the same message stripped of all of them.
The email:
Subject: quick resource on [their pain point]
Hi [Name], I put together a two-page breakdown of how teams like [similar company] cut their onboarding time by 40% - sending it to you no strings attached.
← Reciprocity: leads with concrete value before any ask
I noticed [their company] recently expanded the engineering team; that usually means onboarding overhead spikes.
← Liking (similarity/relevance): shows you've done homework, signals shared context
We've helped six companies in [their space] go from three-week ramp to under one week - the case studies are in the doc.
← Social Proof: peers in same industry, specific outcome
I'm [Name], co-founder of [Product] - we've been building onboarding tooling for four years and published the original research behind the 40% figure.
← Authority: real credential, not just a title
Would a 20-minute call this week make sense?
← Commitment & Consistency (small ask): low-cost first step keeps the foot-in-the-door sequence alive
Either way, the doc is yours.
Why it works: Every sentence does a job. The gift opens the loop (Reciprocity), relevance signals similarity (Liking), peers close the uncertainty gap (Social Proof), credentials justify trust (Authority), and the ask is deliberately small (Commitment entry point). No principle is faked - the doc is real, the case studies are real, the credentials are real.
Anti-example (no principles):
Subject: Increase your team's productivity
Hi [Name], I'm reaching out because I think our product could be a great fit for your company. We have a lot of happy customers and a proven track record. We offer a demo at your convenience. Let me know if you're interested in learning more about our solution.
The anti-example triggers nothing. There is no gift, no proof from similar companies, no credentials, no small commitment step, and no demonstrated knowledge of their situation. It reads like every other cold email in the inbox and gets deleted.
When NOT to Use This Skill (Ethically)
Honest application is fine:
- Genuine reciprocity (real value first)
- Real social proof from real customers
- True authority (verifiable expertise)
- Genuine scarcity ("I really do have only 3 spots")
Manipulation is not:
- Fake scarcity ("limited time" forever)
- Manufactured social proof (paid reviews, AI-generated testimonials)
- False authority (fake credentials, actor-in-lab-coat)
- Coerced commitment (high-pressure tactics)
"When practitioners use these principles to deceive, they're mining a deep social trust that makes us all worse off."
The book is partly a defense manual against bad-faith use.
Modern Application (2026)
| Where Strong | Where Buyers Resist More |
|---|
| Sales conversations | Sophisticated B2B buyers (know all 6) |
| Marketing copy | Software developers (resistant to obvious manipulation) |
| Negotiation (reciprocity of concessions) | Repeated tactics lose power (100th "limited time" fades) |
| Online retail (review systems) | Trust-erosion era (decades of fake reviews) |
| Social media (likes, FOMO) | AI-generated reviews breaking social proof reliability |
Defense Audit (When Buying)
If 2+ are yes → step back, sleep on it, decide tomorrow.
Self-Audit (Marketing/Sales)
The Big Idea
These 6+1 principles are humanity's most powerful psychological shortcuts. They evolved because they USUALLY serve us well - we'd be paralyzed without them. The same shortcuts can be weaponized.
The framework gives you:
- Awareness - Recognize when you're being clicked
- Defense - Stop the automatic response
- Application - Use the principles ethically
- Diagnosis - Understand WHY some campaigns work
The principles are amoral - they describe how influence WORKS, not how it SHOULD work. The ethical question is yours.
"Anywhere we do not have time, energy, or motivation to think carefully and analytically, we'll resort to shortcuts."
In a world drowning in information, shortcuts will only matter more.
Supporting Files
- principles.md - Full 6+1 principles with experiments, sub-factors, manipulative tactics, defenses
- pre-suasion.md - The 2016 update: framing, anchoring, priming questions, environmental cues
- replication-notes.md - Specific failed/contested studies in detail (Bickman correction, Hofling modern replications, Milgram variations, Genovese debunked, Romeo-Juliet, Bargh, ego depletion, Drive Carefully condition disambiguation)
- integration.md - How principles interact with Mom Test, SPIN Selling, $100M Offers, $100M Leads, Obviously Awesome, Crossing the Chasm, Blue Ocean Strategy, Monetizing Innovation; honest conflicts