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A nudge is invisible influence. It's changing someone's behavior by changing their environment. No force. No bribery. No lies. Just smart design that makes the better choice easier. Here's the wild part: most people never notice it's happening.
32,598 görüntüleme • 11 ay önce •via X (Twitter)
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In 2008, Jeff Bezos & Elon Musk took part in the same lecture. They left with ONE concept that would change how they make decisions forever. Once you see it, you can't unsee it. Here's the concept: 🧵 (hint: we've been making decisions all wrong)

Edge Foundation Master Class, Sonoma Valley. July 2008. The room was packed with tech's biggest names - CEOs from Twitter, Microsoft, Facebook. Then Richard Thaler walked on stage and presented a discovery that changed everything:

Picture your cafeteria. You walk in and the first thing you see is a salad bar. To get burgers and fries, you have to walk around it. That cinnamon roll with 1,000 calories suddenly makes the banana look better. The layout nudged you toward healthier choices without forcing anything.

It gets deeper. When you sign up for a website, there's usually a checkbox for email updates. If it's pre-checked, 90% of people get the emails. If it's unchecked, only 20% opt in. Same choice. Different default. Massive difference in outcome.

Your brain has a quirk called "status quo bias." You stick with whatever's already selected. Companies know this. That's why software trials auto-renew. That's why newsletter subscriptions are pre-checked. They're exploiting your mental shortcuts.

Amazon figured this out before anyone else. They created the "1-Click" button. One click bypasses your rational brain's chance to reconsider. Result? Customers who enabled 1-Click spent 28.5% more. Bezos turned human psychology into billions.

But Elon took it further. When Tesla launched, Musk created scarcity. "Limited production." "Waiting lists only." People lined up to pay $1,000 deposits for cars that didn't exist yet. 400,000 people. $400 million in free loans to Tesla.

Here's where it gets crazy. You encounter nudges 100+ times per day. Your utility bill comparing you to neighbors? Nudge. The office printer defaulting to double-sided? Nudge. The "Only 3 left in stock" warning? Nudge.

The principle is simple but powerful: People don't make rational decisions. They make convenient decisions. So whoever controls the convenience controls the outcome. That's why Thaler won the Nobel Prize.

Big tech uses this everywhere. Default privacy settings favor the company. "Accept all cookies" buttons are bright and obvious. "Reject" is buried in small text. They're not lying to you. They're just making their choice easier.

But here's the dark side. • Airlines show you a $99 flight, then add $50 in fees at checkout. • Dating apps make "premium" the default selection. • Social media defaults your posts to "public." The line between nudging and manipulation is thin.

How do you protect yourself? Question every default. Ask: "Is this setting best for me or best for them?" When you see urgency, pause. Most scarcity is artificial. Most urgency is manufactured.

The bigger lesson? Every environment influences behavior. Your office layout affects productivity. Your product placement affects sales. Understanding how to use this the right way gives you incredible power. And for business owners, this insight is more valuable than ever...

If you design your content carefully, you can have a big influence. I've seen this firsthand from my personal brand. After creating content daily for 18 months, I realized something: Creating quality content is the future.

That's why every entrepreneur should have a strong content system to capitalize on this. When done right, it's the easiest and most scalable way to gain customers, have an impact, and build authority.

If you're a founder looking to start your brand: I'll help you build your premium brand on X and get more clients through content that converts. So far, my threads have gained 400M+ impressions. Interested? Book a call below (serious founders only):

Thanks for reading. What are your thoughts on this? Let me know below. & If you enjoyed this thread... Follow me @AndrejDrats for more branding-related content like this. Repost the first tweet to help more people see it.


