The Brainy Business | Understanding the Psychology of Why People Buy | Behavioral Economics

524. Relativity in Action: Why Your Brain Needs Comparisons to Decide

22 snips
Aug 19, 2025
Explore how our brains rely on comparisons to determine value and make decisions. Discover why we might drive across town to save a few dollars on gas, yet hesitate to do the same for more expensive items. Learn about strategic pricing tactics like decoys that can influence consumer behavior. Delve into real-life examples, including subscription choices, and find out how to create compelling offers that enhance perceived value. This insightful discussion reveals the powerful effects of relativity on purchasing decisions.
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INSIGHT

Frequency Skews Perceived Value

  • People treat frequent, small decisions differently from rare, large ones due to relativity.
  • A 1% loan rate change feels trivial compared to habitual savings like cheap gas, despite larger annual gains.
ANECDOTE

Silver Medal Regret Beats Bronze Joy

  • Olympic silver medalists often appear less happy than bronze medalists because they narrowly missed gold.
  • Relative comparison to 'almost winning' drives stronger negative emotion than the objective rank.
ADVICE

Use High Anchors To Make Prices Look Good

  • Use prominent higher-priced items to reset anchors and make other prices feel like deals.
  • Place an intentionally expensive item where customers will see it first to shift perceived value.
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