Monday, January 12, 2026

Insinuate Insults into Influencing

Lots of people must consider the Carolina Hurricanes to be a bunch of jerks. You see, the popular t-shirts read “BUNCH OF JERKS” above the professional ice hockey team’s logo.
     The twist is that those t-shirts and other merchandise bearing the message were marketed by the team itself following the on-air insult from prominent ice hockey commentator Don Cherry. Sales of the merchandise yielded revenue of $875,000, according to the Carolina Hurricanes Chief Marketing Officer.
     Researchers at University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, The University of Hong Kong, and Duke University analyzed this effect of a brand turning a profit by reappropriating insults hurled at it. The technique works, the study data indicate, when the usage projects brand confidence and a sense of humor. Consumers find both those attractive in persuasion appeals.
     However, success requires that the insult be perceived by those consumers as unjustified—so not jeopardizing the brand’s claim of confidence; petty—allowing the brand to harmlessly joke about it; and not issued by a vulnerable person—so the reappropriation is not interpreted as bullying.
     When these conditions are met, reappropriating the insult tends to work out better than ignoring the insult, denying the insult, or apologizing to the insulter.
     Perceiving an insult as unjustified and petty may require understanding the broader context. Another example cited by the researchers of insult reappropriation is the posting in a Penzeys Spices store window of a sign reading, “‘Terrible overpriced product’ D. Trump.” The backstory here is that the quoted insult by presidential candidate Donald Trump followed a September 2024 visit by Vice President Kamala Harris to a Pittsburgh outlet of the business owned by Bill Penzey, a vocal critic of Mr. Trump.
     As to the insulter not being viewed by consumers as a vulnerable person, holding political office isn’t always enough. It matters whether what’s being ridiculed is a characteristic of the politician which is in the politician’s control. In one study, French consumers were asked their intention to share a parody which ridiculed a characteristic of French President Emmanuel Macron. The controllable characteristic presented to some of the study participants was Mr. Macron’s arrogance. The uncontrollable trait presented to the other participants was Mr. Macron being married to an older woman. Mr. Macron had been widely derided for both characteristics.
     Participants were more willing to share the parody when the theme was the controllable trait. Mocking an uncontrollable trait aroused discomfort.

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Certify the Value of Certainty in Persuasion 
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Monday, January 5, 2026

Control Conspiratorial Thinking

Youth is by far the single most influential sociodemographic predictor of conspiracy beliefs.
     This conclusion from a pair of University of Ottawa researchers is based on their meta-analysis of 110 prior studies which measured the statistical relationship between a person’s age and their degree of conspiratorial thinking and then the researchers’ own analysis of this relationship among people living in Australia, Brazil, Canada, Germany, South Africa, and the U.S. This collection of countries represents a range of political and cultural traditions.
     For their inquiries, the researchers defined conspiratorial thinking as efforts to explain causes of important events by placing blame on secret plots orchestrated by powerful actors. This general tendency has driven beliefs such as that climate change is a hoax and that a group of Satan-worshipping elites are running a child sex ring. There are instances when belief in a conspiracy is justified, but when it is not, the corrosive impact of conspiratorial thinking on our political and cultural dialogues begs questions about who succumbs.
     So why does age seem so central to conspiratorial thinking? The study data support three answers in comparing younger to older adults: 
  • Young adults are more likely to express their political preferences via social protest, and social protest movements incorporate belief systems which cultivate conspiracies. These include accusations of injustice and suspicion of compromise. 
  • Young adults are more likely to have low self-esteem, and adhering to conspiracy beliefs provides feelings of worth and power. 
  • Young adults are less likely to believe their interests are supported by political office holders. This is because the office holders are often substantially older than the young adults. One result is distrust of political institutions.
     In reporting their conclusions, the University of Ottawa researchers highlight the limitations of their inquiry. This is a study of correlations, so although we’ve reason to believe that as people age, they become less likely to engage in conspiratorial thinking, we can’t definitively say aging, in itself, causes the decrease. In addition, the studies were cross-sectional, not longitudinal: People of different ages at one point in time were assessed rather than tracking the same people over the years to see what happens to their conspiratorial thinking.
     The questions of causation still beg for answers. Age counts, but the cause is probably a combination of factors. For now, in correcting dangers of conspiratorial thinking, let’s pay particular attention to young adults.

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Pattern Choices for Frightened Shoppers 
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Monday, December 29, 2025

Recognize the Pervasive Impact of Emotions

What consumer task would we expect to involve less emotion than would making financial decisions? And for what job task would a worker depending on emotion be more likely to hurt than would screening loan applications? It is of note, then, that researchers at SP Jain School of Global Management, The University of Western Australia, University of Budapest, University of Southern Queensland, and Griffith University show evidence that loan officers’ decision making is influenced by emotions.
     In one study, all participants held an MBA in Finance and Accounting and had worked for at least two years in a business setting. They seemed qualified to evaluate loan applications.
     Each participant was given applications and asked to indicate how willing they’d be to approve the loan. The application’s financial information included the number of loans the firm had taken out in the past, how many of these loans were paid back on time, the judged ability of the firm’s cash flow to cover payments on the potential loan, and the value of the proposed loan collateral. These indicators were considered sufficient for the participants to rationally evaluate each application.
     Wait, there was more: In the top right corner of each loan application was a small image which contained no financial information, but had been shown in prior studies to portray a single emotion such as joy, fear, or anger.
     Analyses of the data collected from all this showed that loan applications including an emotionally positive image were more likely to be approved. Further, this effect was stronger for the male than for the female participants. The researchers attribute this gender difference to findings from past studies that men depend more than do women on visual information in decision making.
     A companion study, with a different set of people, measured each participant’s emotional reactions as they viewed the loan application. The reaction was measured by the participant’s self-report and also via galvanic skin response, which is a physiological indicator of emotion.
     Here, the men had higher loan approval likelihood for applications with positively-valenced imagery than did the women. For applications with negatively-valenced imagery, there was no significant gender difference.
     Together, the studies indicate that emotional reactions influence decisions in realms where non-emotional analyses might be expected. It also seems that images which trigger emotion can accentuate this effect, especially in men.
     Recognize the significant role of emotions in persuasion and use imagery for effectiveness.

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Appeal to the Heart 
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Monday, December 22, 2025

Flex for Best with Limited-Time Offers

Limited-time offers are intended to motivate shoppers to act now. They can assist retailers by moving up the receipt of revenue, clearing out inventory more quickly, and fostering impulse buying. They can help the shoppers by dissolving indecision, easing inaction regret, saving them money, and adding excitement.
     However, researchers at McGill University, Konkuk University, and University of Texas at Austin show how setting overly rigid time constraints, using store layouts which impede navigation, or complicating purchase returns will lessen the effectiveness of limited-time offers and might even reverse the positive effects. The more restrictions, the more severe the damage. All this was seen in the consumers’ evaluations of item value and in their purchase intent. Items used in the scenarios included chocolates, headphones, cameras, printers, backpacks, and spa services. The scenarios included store sales and a fundraising offer.
     Based on their results, the researchers’ explanation is consumer reactance for this negative effect on limited-time offers of further constraining flexibility. Reactance is a phenomenon which kicks in when people sense that their freedom of choice is threatened. Consumers feel they’d be foolish to pass up the opportunity to save money, but don’t like the accompanying feeling that they’re being pressured to behave according to dictates from the seller.
     The researchers recommend that retailers implement limited-time offers in ways which preserve the shopper’s flexibility. Additionally, the researchers make a case for including in the offer pitch a statement which highlights future remorse if the offer is missed. The action imperative of a simple “Buy now or regret it later” counteracted negative results of reactance.
     With limited time as well as other restrictions on offers, the order in which you present the components matters. Lead with the bad news, say researchers from Baylor University, New York University, and University of Pittsburgh. “For today only, when you buy three items, 25% discount on the usual price.”
     The bad-good order provides the shopper a greater sense of control in the face of hurdles. People generally prefer to deliver good news before bad news. But people like to receive bad news first and finish off with the good news.
     Related to this, the discount offer maintains higher salience using the bad news-good news sequence because of its logical if/then flow (If I qualify for the offer, then I get…). The cause-and-effect preference is seen more generally in how consumers most fluently process information from sellers.

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Restrict Discount Offers to After Restrictions 
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Monday, December 15, 2025

Fill with Fullness Food Marketing to Low-SES

An enduring public-policy challenge has been how to increase the attractiveness of healthy foods to low socioeconomic-status consumers. Why is it that even when the affordability and availability of those foods in low SES communities are enhanced, their purchase and use do not increase proportionately?
     A set of studies at Imperial College London and FGV EBAPE indicates the full answer includes fillingness—the ability of a food to make one feel full. Healthy meals are frequently perceived as failing to completely ease hunger, and poor people suffer from insecurity about reliable supplies of food.
     The implication of this finding is for marketers to increase the association of healthy foods with fillingness. The researchers admit that doing this will be challenging. In their studies, use of tag lines such as “the healthy cookie that fills the stomach for real” and “the cookie that satisfies hunger for a long time” did not increase that cookie’s attractiveness among low SES consumers. However, showing a picture of a healthy item as part of a fuller meal with additional vegetables did increase the subsequent preference for a healthy over an unhealthy item.
     Results from this set of studies remind us how a consumer’s socioeconomic status influences their decision making. In some cases, the behaviors are what we’d expect: Poor adults are more likely to stockpile items, when possible, since they fear deprivation. The long-term poor often give price discounts extra attention.
     In other cases, low childhood socioeconomic status exaggerates trends seen in other adults: For instance, when the security of a consumer of any age is threatened, their consumption habits move toward the repetitive. But this is especially true if the adult consumer was raised poor.
     In still other cases, the results may seem surprising: Individuals who grew up in resource-scarce families are less interested as adults in health care insurance than are individuals who grew up with ample money. The researchers’ explanation is that people raised poor are accustomed to living with risk.
     Studies at University of Central Arkansas, Auckland University of Technology, Peking University, and Florida International University add to this list a propensity for the sunk cost fallacy, which refers to staying the course even when the course is unpromising. Here, the researchers’ explanation is that, on average, people with a history of low socioeconomic status consider loss of prior investments to be more wasteful than do their counterparts raised wealthy.

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Float Former Poor Up Over a Sunk Cost Fallacy 
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Monday, December 8, 2025

Index Political Independents as Uninterested

For a long time now, American politicians have been debating about the extent of cheating in elections. The compelling evidence is that actual voting fraud is rare. But a trio of researchers from Kent State University and University of Michigan start by reporting how with regard to oversight of voting procedures by politicians, the U.S. has performed poorly on measures of integrity. Tactics like placing voting machines in ways which manipulate turnout occur too often.
     The researchers explored the relationships between partisan affiliation and tolerance, or even support, for subversion of democracy via suppression of political competition. The studies accomplished this by presenting to people the same descriptions of unambiguous deliberate attempts to manipulate elections, but with some people the perpetrators were described as Democrats and with others as Republicans.
     Not surprisingly, the study results indicated that people are more tolerant of election manipulation when it’s carried out by their own party than by the opposing party. And, as expected, citizens are more likely to cry foul when the tactic harms their party than when it helps their party.
     The researchers do report their own surprise at the study participants’ tepid response overall to the descriptions of flagrant violations of fairness and the law. The finding I consider most intriguing concerns the responses from study participants who identified themselves as political independents: They were less likely than both the Democrats and Republicans to object to a violation. Independents were better than partisans at being impartial, but worse at calling out infractions.
     Perhaps this indicates that political independents are not so much disinterested—in the sense of impartial—as they are uninterested—in the sense of detached from matters of politics. This has implications for how politicians should allocate funding for persuasive communications. Independents could be less responsive than partisans.
     The study results are consistent with studies showing that voters who support a particular candidate for elective office consider the results of a political poll as less believable when that preferred candidate does less well in the poll. The researchers at Witten/Herdecke University, University of Zurich, and University of Mannheim posit this phenomenon as harmful to society, since in a healthy democracy, voters should be keeping their beliefs correct and current.
     The research findings indicate that this motivated reasoning problem is eased when more poll results from a broader range of sources are provided over the course of a campaign.

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Pile Plenty of Political Polls on People 
Image at top of post based on photo by Lewis Fagg from Unsplash