
The Brainy Business | Understanding the Psychology of Why People Buy | Behavioral Economics 524. Relativity in Action: Why Your Brain Needs Comparisons to Decide
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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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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.
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.
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.





