You were influenced today. Probably several times, and probably without noticing. The supermarket layout, the “only 2 left” on a product page, the review that nudged you, the free sample that made you feel you owed something. Influence techniques are everywhere, working quietly. Here are six of the most common, so you can spot them when they are used on you, and use them honestly when you sell.
1. Reciprocity
Someone gives you something small, and you feel a pull to give back. The free sample, the unexpected upgrade, the genuinely useful free guide. It works because the sense of obligation is deeply wired in us. Honest use: give real value first, then make your ask. The gift has to be real, or the obligation never forms.
2. Scarcity
We want what we might not be able to have. “Limited stock,” “ends Friday,” “only for the first 50.” Scarcity raises perceived value and pushes the decision forward. Honest use: only when the limit is real. A fake countdown that resets is the fastest way to destroy trust the moment someone notices.
3. Social proof
When unsure, we copy others. The crowded restaurant, the bestseller label, the review count. We assume that if many people chose it, it is probably safe. Honest use: real reviews, real numbers, from people like the buyer. Faking it is both a trust-killer and, for reviews, illegal in many places.
4. Authority
We defer to credible experts and signals of expertise. The white coat, the credential, the data, the years of experience. Honest use: show the real expertise and evidence you actually have. Borrowed authority (a real endorsement, a recognizable client) counts too.
5. Commitment and consistency
Once we take a small step or say a small yes, we act to stay consistent with it. The free trial that becomes a subscription, the small first purchase that leads to a bigger one. Honest use: invite a small, genuine first step, then build on it. Do not trap people into a consistency they did not really choose.
6. Anchoring
The first number we see frames everything after it. The crossed-out “original” price, the premium option that makes the middle one look reasonable. Our brains judge value relative to the anchor, not in absolute terms. Honest use: a true reference point (“an agency would charge three times this”) helps the buyer judge fairly. A fake “original price” that was never real is deception.
The pattern, and the line
Notice the same theme runs through all six: each works because of how the human brain is wired, and each can be used to serve the customer or to trick them. The technique is neutral. The honesty is not. Used with true claims, these build trust and help people make good decisions faster. Used with false ones, they get a sale and lose a customer, and sometimes break the law.
KK’s position is the same everywhere: learn all six, recognize them when they are aimed at you, and use them only with the truth on your side.
Takeaway: These six are working on you constantly. Learn to spot them, and when you use them in your own marketing, keep every claim true. Honest influence compounds. Manipulation collapses.

