How long will it be until the ‘AI is slavery’ activists enter the zeitgeist? I’d give it 18 months
How long will it be until the ‘AI is slavery’ activists enter the zeitgeist? I’d give it 18 months
Apple need to do monthly reminders on what your Apple password is cause I can never remember it thanks to Face ID
The big picture is nothing without the details
going through countless crypto bear markets really takes the edge off 20%+ dips in the stock market
Kahneman’s 2010 ‘happiness threshold’ was $75K USD. Adjusted for inflation, that’s ~$108K USD today. In AUD? ~$172K. Happiness just got expensive.
first heard this a decade ago when a meat company started commenting under vegan brands. chaos ensued, followed by revenue
a warm welcome for their new franchise overlord
its about to be 70,000 websites
SEO cold outreach specialists
Was digging into brand loyalty studies and fell down a rabbit hole on commitment itself. Turns out, the same brain circuits that make us commit to people—vmPFC, striatum, amygdala—also lock us into brands.
Loyalty isn’t a habit. It’s wiring.
Loyalty isn’t about price. It’s about psychology.
Which of these have you seen in action?
RP & bookmark for later.
9. Loyalty isn’t about locking people in—it’s about making them not want to leave.
✅ Surprise & delight moments
✅ Long-term rewards
✅ Personalised experiences
Make staying feel effortless.
8. Most people won’t switch—unless you force them.
Customers stick to what’s easy, even if better options exist.
✅ Auto-renewals/subscriptions
✅ Default settings that encourage retention
✅ Long-term perks for staying loyal
Reduce effort, increase stickiness.
(Status Quo Bias, 1998)
7. People overvalue what they already have.
Once they feel ownership, they won’t want to lose it.
✅ Preloaded points (Starbucks Rewards)
✅ Free trials > paid
✅ Personalised experiences (Spotify Wrapped)
If they feel like it’s theirs, they’ll justify keeping it.
(Endowment Effect, Kahneman, '91)
6. Freebies aren’t just nice—they create obligation.
Give first, and people feel the need to return the favour.
✅ Free trials & samples
✅ Birthday discounts & thank-you gifts
✅ Free content that builds trust
Give value upfront, and loyalty follows.
(Reciprocity Principle – Cialdini, 1984)
5. Customers don’t buy products—they buy belonging.
Make them feel part of something bigger.
✅ Apple vs. Android (tribal identity)
✅ Luxury brands as status signals
✅ VIP tiers & exclusive access
Loyalty isn’t logical—it’s emotional.
(Social Identity Theory – Tajfel & Turner, 1979)
4. People hate losing more than they love winning.
Make them feel like they have something to lose.
✅ Show progress (“You’re 80% to Gold”)
✅ Create FOMO (“Only 2 left in stock”)
✅ Expiring rewards & limited-time offers
No one wants to walk away from value.
(Loss Aversion, Kahneman & Tversky, 1979)
3. The last impression matters more than the entire experience.
They don’t remember everything—just how it ends.
✅ A bad final moment kills goodwill
✅ Surprise perks stick in memory
✅ A+ customer service > discounts
A great ending locks in loyalty.
(Peak-End Rule – Kahneman & Fredrickson, 1993)
2. People trust what they see often.
You don’t need to convince them—you just need to stay in their world.
✅ Retargeting (remind them you exist)
✅ Frequent touchpoints (email sequences, social)
✅ Subtle placement (logos, partnerships)
Familiarity breeds trust.
(Mere Exposure Effect – Zajonc, 1968)
1. People value things more when they help create them.
Give them control. Let them personalise. Show them their progress.
✅ Nike By You
✅ Duolingo streaks
✅ Spotify Wrapped
The more effort they put in, the harder it is to leave.
(IKEA Effect – Norton, Mochon & Ariely, 2012)
Why do people stay loyal to brands—even when there are better or cheaper options?
It’s not about price. It’s not even about the product.
It’s psychology.
Here are 9 ways brands use human behaviour to lock in loyalty (and how you can, too):
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an empire's only guarantee is collapse
AI for writing is like the escalator. It was meant to speed things up, but most just stand still and let it do all the work.
Every ad is an election. The headline is the candidate, fighting for votes - clicks, views, and sales. Win attention, win the game.
Speed to lead isn’t a metric—it’s survival. Attention spans are shrinking, and so is your window to close.
Data is muddy waters posing as crystal clear spring water. The agenda comes first. I myself have been guilty of it
I haven’t heard of Xioahongshu but I’ll dig into it! That’s a great sound bite btw and I 100% agree - they both have their place but deeply understanding a channel must definitely be prioritised too.
Thanks for sharing Freddy! Indeed it seems like reaching one’s creative destination requires taking the scenic route.
while the internal conflict is happening, guess what's happening on the global stage... an empire's only guarantee is collapse.
corporate civil war tactics 101