persuasion-principles
정보
이 스킬은 로버트 치알디니의 6+1 설득 원칙을 제공하여 마케팅 작업에 심리학을 윤리적으로 적용할 수 있게 합니다. 개발자는 이를 활용해 랜딩 페이지 설계, 카피라이팅, 오퍼 구성, 소셜 프루프 전략 구축에 사용할 수 있습니다. 전환 중심 개발 작업에서 순응 심리학을 구현하기 위한 도구입니다.
빠른 설치
Claude Code
추천npx skills add guia-matthieu/clawfu-skills -a claude-code/plugin add https://github.com/guia-matthieu/clawfu-skillsgit clone https://github.com/guia-matthieu/clawfu-skills.git ~/.claude/skills/persuasion-principlesClaude Code에서 이 명령을 복사하여 붙여넣어 스킬을 설치하세요
문서
Cialdini Persuasion Principles
Master Robert Cialdini's 6 (+1) Principles of Persuasion from "Influence: The Psychology of Persuasion" (1984). Ethically apply the psychology of compliance to marketing.
When to Use This Skill
- Designing landing pages that convert
- Writing sales copy and email sequences
- Creating pricing and offer structures
- Building testimonial and social proof strategies
- Developing referral and loyalty programs
- Reviewing marketing materials for persuasion gaps
- Training teams on ethical influence
Methodology Foundation
Source: Robert Cialdini - "Influence: The Psychology of Persuasion" (1984), "Pre-Suasion" (2016)
Core Concept: Six (later seven) universal principles drive human compliance. These work via "near-automatic response"—people don't consciously evaluate; they react based on mental shortcuts.
Cialdini's Insight: "We all employ them and fall victim to them, to some degree, in our daily interactions. But compliance practitioners have much more than the vague and amateurish understanding of what works than the rest of us have."
Ethical Use: These principles can manipulate or persuade. The difference is intent and honesty. Use them to help people make good decisions, not to trick them into bad ones.
What Claude Does vs What You Decide
| Claude Does | You Decide |
|---|---|
| Structures content frameworks | Final messaging |
| Suggests persuasion techniques | Brand voice |
| Creates draft variations | Version selection |
| Identifies optimization opportunities | Publication timing |
| Analyzes competitor approaches | Strategic direction |
What This Skill Does
- Applies the 6+1 principles - Systematic persuasion enhancement
- Audits marketing materials - Identifies missing influence triggers
- Designs persuasive campaigns - Combines multiple principles for maximum effect
- Builds ethical frameworks - Ensures influence serves the customer
- Defends against manipulation - Recognizes when principles are misused
How to Use
Apply Principles to Marketing
Apply Cialdini's 6 principles to:
Product/Service: [description]
Current marketing: [what you have]
Goal: [desired action]
Audit for Persuasion Gaps
Audit this [landing page/email/ad] for Cialdini principles. What's missing?
[paste content or describe]
Design Persuasive Offer
Create an offer structure using Cialdini's principles:
Product: [description]
Target audience: [who]
Price point: [amount]
Review for Ethical Use
Review this marketing for ethical use of influence:
[paste content]
Is this persuasion or manipulation?
Instructions
When applying Cialdini's principles, work through each systematically:
The 6+1 Principles Framework
## Principle 1: RECIPROCITY
**Definition**: When someone gives us something, we feel obligated to give back.
**Cialdini**: "The rule says that we should try to repay, in kind, what another person has provided us."
**Marketing Applications**:
| Tactic | Example |
|--------|---------|
| Free content | eBooks, guides, tools |
| Free trial | 14-day access to paid features |
| Free sample | Product samples, demos |
| Unexpected gift | Bonus with purchase |
| Personalized help | Free consultation |
| Going first | "I'll share my pricing first" |
**Implementation**:
- Give FIRST, without explicit expectation
- Make the gift valuable and relevant
- Personalize when possible
- The gift should demonstrate your value
**Examples**:
- "Here's a free template that took us 40 hours to create"
- "Before we talk pricing, let me give you this audit"
- "As a thank you for your time, here's exclusive access to..."
**Defense**: Recognize when a "gift" is creating pressure. Ask: Would I want this regardless of obligation?
---
## Principle 2: COMMITMENT & CONSISTENCY
**Definition**: Once we take a position, we pressure ourselves to behave consistently with that commitment.
**Cialdini**: "Once you've got a man's self-image where you want it, he should comply naturally with a whole range of your requests that are consistent with this new view of himself."
**Marketing Applications**:
| Tactic | Example |
|--------|---------|
| Micro-commitments | Quiz before offer |
| Public commitment | "Tweet your goal" |
| Written commitment | Sign-up for challenge |
| Foot-in-the-door | Free → Paid progression |
| Identity labeling | "You're the kind of person who..." |
| Sunk cost framing | "You've already invested..." |
**Implementation**:
- Start with small, easy yeses
- Get public or written commitments
- Remind them of past commitments
- Connect purchase to their stated identity
**Examples**:
- "You said you wanted to grow 10x this year. This tool helps with that."
- "As someone who values quality, you'll appreciate..."
- "Since you've already completed steps 1-3..."
**The IKEA Effect**: People value things more when they've worked on them. Let customers customize, participate, contribute.
**Defense**: Ask: "Would I make this decision without the prior commitment?"
---
## Principle 3: SOCIAL PROOF
**Definition**: We look to others to determine correct behavior, especially in uncertainty.
**Cialdini**: "In the process of examining the reactions of other people to resolve our uncertainty, we are likely to overlook a subtle but important fact. Those people are probably examining the social evidence, too."
**Marketing Applications**:
| Tactic | Example |
|--------|---------|
| Testimonials | Customer quotes with photos |
| Case studies | Detailed success stories |
| Numbers | "10,000 customers" |
| User content | Reviews, ratings, UGC |
| Certifications | "As seen in Forbes" |
| Peer proof | "Popular with CTOs" |
| Real-time activity | "23 people viewing now" |
**Implementation**:
- Show proof from similar people (not just celebrities)
- Use specific numbers, not vague claims
- Highlight "most popular" options
- Show activity (recent purchases, views)
- Segment proof by persona
**Examples**:
- "9 out of 10 dentists recommend..." (specific number)
- "Most popular choice among CTOs" (peer proof)
- "Join 12,347 marketers getting our newsletter" (specific count)
- "⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ 4,823 reviews" (social validation)
**Defense**: Recognize manufactured social proof. Ask: "Is this genuine? Is it from people like me?"
---
## Principle 4: LIKING
**Definition**: We're more likely to say yes to people we like.
**Cialdini on Tupperware parties**: "Who can say no to a good friend?"
**Factors That Increase Liking**:
1. Similarity ("We're alike")
2. Compliments ("You're smart for considering this")
3. Contact & cooperation (working together)
4. Physical attractiveness (applies to design too)
5. Association (linked to things we like)
**Marketing Applications**:
| Tactic | Example |
|--------|---------|
| Similarity | "We're a small team too" |
| Personalization | "As a [role] like you..." |
| Compliments | "You're asking smart questions" |
| Relatability | Founder stories, behind-the-scenes |
| Association | Partner with liked brands |
| Friendliness | Warm copy, emojis, casual tone |
**Implementation**:
- Show the human behind the brand
- Find genuine commonalities
- Be likable without being fake
- Associate with positive things
- Use attractive, clean design
**Examples**:
- "We started in a garage, just like you might be" (similarity)
- "Great question—you're really thinking this through" (compliment)
- "Meet the team: real people, real answers" (relatability)
**Defense**: Separate liking from decision. Ask: "Would I buy this if I didn't like the salesperson?"
---
## Principle 5: AUTHORITY
**Definition**: We defer to experts and follow authority figures.
**Cialdini on authority symbols**: "Titles, uniforms, and credentials" trigger automatic compliance.
**Marketing Applications**:
| Tactic | Example |
|--------|---------|
| Credentials | Degrees, certifications |
| Experience | "25 years in..." |
| Expert endorsement | "Recommended by Dr..." |
| Media features | "As seen in NYT" |
| Books/publications | Author of... |
| Speaking/teaching | "Stanford guest lecturer" |
| Awards | "Winner of..." |
**Implementation**:
- Lead with credentials (speaker bio before talk)
- Show expert endorsements
- Feature media logos
- Demonstrate expertise through content
- Use professional design (looks authoritative)
**Examples**:
- "Dr. Sarah Chen, Harvard Medical School" (credentials)
- "Trusted by NASA, Google, and 500 startups" (association authority)
- "Author of 3 Amazon bestsellers" (demonstrated expertise)
- "10 years advising Fortune 500 CMOs" (experience)
**Warning - The Pilot Effect**: Co-pilots let pilots crash planes rather than contradict authority. Don't abuse this power.
**Defense**: Ask: "Is this authority relevant? Does a celebrity endorsement make a vitamin better?"
---
## Principle 6: SCARCITY
**Definition**: We want what's rare or becoming unavailable.
**Cialdini**: "It is easy enough to feel properly warned against scarcity pressures, but it is substantially more difficult to act on that warning."
**Marketing Applications**:
| Tactic | Example |
|--------|---------|
| Limited quantity | "Only 5 left" |
| Limited time | "Offer ends midnight" |
| Exclusive access | "Invite only" |
| First-mover advantage | "Early adopter pricing" |
| One-time offer | "This price won't repeat" |
| Countdown timers | Visual urgency |
**Types of Scarcity**:
1. **Quantity scarcity**: "Only 100 spots"
2. **Time scarcity**: "Sale ends Friday"
3. **Access scarcity**: "VIP only"
4. **Information scarcity**: "Inside knowledge"
**Implementation**:
- Be honest—fake scarcity destroys trust
- Explain WHY it's limited (capacity, batch, season)
- Show real-time inventory
- Deadline + consequence
**Examples**:
- "Only 2 left in stock" (Amazon's classic)
- "Price increases in 48 hours" (time)
- "Founding member pricing—never offered again" (one-time)
- "We only take 10 clients per quarter" (capacity)
**Defense**: Ask: "Would I want this if there was no deadline? Is the scarcity real?"
---
## Principle 7: UNITY (Added 2016)
**Definition**: We comply more with those we perceive as "one of us"—shared identity.
**Cialdini**: Unity is different from Liking. It's not "I like you" but "You ARE me."
**Identity Markers**:
- Family/kinship
- Geography ("Fellow New Yorker")
- Profession ("As a developer...")
- Beliefs/values ("If you believe in X...")
- Group membership ("Fellow alumni")
**Marketing Applications**:
| Tactic | Example |
|--------|---------|
| Tribal identity | "Built by developers, for developers" |
| Shared values | "For people who care about X" |
| Community membership | "Join 10K founders" |
| Geographic unity | "Made in Brooklyn" |
| Co-creation | "Built with customer input" |
**Implementation**:
- Identify your tribe
- Use "we" language
- Show shared background/values
- Create community identity
- Involve customers in building
**Examples**:
- "We're marketers too—we get it" (professional unity)
- "By Texans, for Texans" (geographic)
- "For those who refuse to accept mediocrity" (values)
- "Join the sustainability movement" (belief)
**Defense**: Ask: "Am I making a good decision, or just going along with my group?"
Combining Principles for Maximum Effect
## The Power of Combination
**Cialdini**: "Each principle works powerfully on its own. Together, the sum is much greater than each individually."
### High-Converting Offer Structure
1. **Reciprocity** - Lead with free value
"Here's a free audit worth $500"
2. **Authority** - Establish credibility
"From the team trusted by Google, Nike, and 10,000 startups"
3. **Social Proof** - Show others succeeding
"Join 50,000 marketers who improved their conversion by 47%"
4. **Liking** - Be relatable
"We struggled with this too—until we built this"
5. **Commitment** - Get small yes first
"Start with our free trial"
6. **Scarcity** - Create urgency
"Early access pricing ends Friday"
7. **Unity** - Tribal identity
"Built for marketers, by marketers"
### Example: SaaS Landing Page
[HERO - Authority + Social Proof]
"Trusted by 10,000+ teams at companies like Slack, Stripe, and Netflix"
[RECIPROCITY]
"Start with our free plan—no credit card required"
[SOCIAL PROOF]
"★★★★★ 4.9/5 from 2,847 reviews on G2"
[AUTHORITY]
"Featured in Forbes, TechCrunch, and Product Hunt #1"
[LIKING]
"Hey, we're a small team of 12 people who love solving this problem"
[COMMITMENT]
"Take the 2-minute quiz to see if we're right for you"
[SCARCITY]
"Get 50% off—offer ends in 3 days"
[UNITY]
"Join the community of growth-focused founders"
Examples
Example 1: Email Sequence Using All Principles
Email 1 (Reciprocity): Subject: "Free template we spent 3 months building" Body: Pure value. No ask. Demonstrates expertise.
Email 2 (Social Proof): Subject: "How [Customer] grew 340% in 6 months" Body: Case study. Specific results. Testimonial.
Email 3 (Authority): Subject: "What we learned advising 500+ companies" Body: Expert insights. Establish credentials.
Email 4 (Commitment): Subject: "Quick question for you" Body: Ask them to reply with their biggest challenge. Gets engagement.
Email 5 (Liking): Subject: "The mistake I made that cost $50K" Body: Vulnerable story. Relatability. Human behind brand.
Email 6 (Scarcity + Unity): Subject: "Last call for founding members" Body: Limited spots. Exclusive pricing. Join the tribe.
Example 2: Pricing Page Redesign
Before (No principles applied):
- Basic | Pro | Enterprise
- Feature list
- "Sign up"
After (Principles applied):
| Element | Principle Applied |
|---|---|
| "Most Popular" badge on Pro | Social Proof |
| "Join 5,000+ teams" | Social Proof |
| "Save 20%" on annual | Commitment (annual = commitment) |
| "Recommended by CMO of HubSpot" | Authority |
| "14-day free trial" | Reciprocity |
| "Limited: Early adopter pricing" | Scarcity |
| "Built for marketers" | Unity |
| Testimonial from similar company | Liking + Social Proof |
Example 3: E-commerce Product Page
| Element | Principle | Implementation |
|---|---|---|
| Reviews section | Social Proof | "4.8★ from 2,341 reviews" |
| Expert badge | Authority | "Dermatologist recommended" |
| Free sample offer | Reciprocity | "Get a free mini with purchase" |
| Countdown timer | Scarcity | "Sale ends in 2h 14m" |
| "Customers like you bought" | Unity + Social Proof | Show peer purchases |
| Brand story | Liking | "Our founder's journey" |
| Previous purchase reminder | Commitment | "Complete your collection" |
Checklists & Templates
Persuasion Audit Checklist
## For Any Marketing Asset, Check:
### Reciprocity
- [ ] Are we giving value before asking?
- [ ] Is the free offer genuinely valuable?
- [ ] Does it demonstrate our expertise?
### Commitment & Consistency
- [ ] Is there a small first step?
- [ ] Can we remind them of past actions?
- [ ] Are we connecting to their stated identity?
### Social Proof
- [ ] Are there testimonials from similar people?
- [ ] Are numbers specific (not "thousands")?
- [ ] Is proof credible and verifiable?
### Liking
- [ ] Is there a human element?
- [ ] Does the brand feel relatable?
- [ ] Is the design attractive?
### Authority
- [ ] Are credentials displayed?
- [ ] Is expertise demonstrated?
- [ ] Are there notable endorsements?
### Scarcity
- [ ] Is there genuine urgency?
- [ ] Is the limitation honest?
- [ ] Is consequence of inaction clear?
### Unity
- [ ] Is tribal identity established?
- [ ] Do customers see themselves in us?
- [ ] Is there community belonging?
Ethical Use Checklist
## Before Using Influence Tactics:
- [ ] Is the product/service genuinely good for this customer?
- [ ] Are all claims truthful?
- [ ] Is scarcity real (not manufactured)?
- [ ] Would I use this tactic on a family member?
- [ ] Am I helping them make a good decision or tricking them?
- [ ] Would I be proud if this tactic were made public?
**Rule**: Persuasion = helping good decisions. Manipulation = forcing bad ones.
Quick Reference Card
| Principle | Trigger | Tactic |
|-----------|---------|--------|
| Reciprocity | "They gave me something" | Give first |
| Commitment | "I already said/did X" | Start small |
| Social Proof | "Others are doing it" | Show numbers |
| Liking | "I like them" | Be human |
| Authority | "Experts say so" | Show credentials |
| Scarcity | "It's running out" | Create limits |
| Unity | "They're like me" | Build tribe |
Skill Boundaries
What This Skill Does Well
- Structuring persuasive content
- Applying copywriting frameworks
- Creating draft variations
- Analyzing competitor approaches
What This Skill Cannot Do
- Guarantee conversion rates
- Replace brand voice development
- Know your specific audience
- Make final approval decisions
References
- Cialdini, Robert. "Influence: The Psychology of Persuasion" (1984)
- Cialdini, Robert. "Pre-Suasion: A Revolutionary Way to Influence" (2016)
- Cialdini, Robert. "Influence: New and Expanded" (2021)
- fs.blog - Influence Psychology of Persuasion summary
Related Skills
- ogilvy-copywriting - Factual, respectful advertising
- schwartz-awareness - Match message to awareness
- landing-page-copy - Apply persuasion to pages
- email-sequences - Persuasive email design
GitHub 저장소
연관 스킬
content-collections
메타이 스킬은 콘텐츠 콜렉션(Content Collections)을 위한 프로덕션 검증된 설정을 제공합니다. 콘텐츠 콜렉션은 Markdown/MDX 파일을 Zod 검증이 포함된 타입 안전한 데이터 콜렉션으로 변환해주는 TypeScript 최우선 도구입니다. 블로그, 문서 사이트 또는 콘텐츠 중심의 Vite + React 애플리케이션을 구축할 때 타입 안전성과 자동 콘텐츠 검증을 보장하기 위해 사용하세요. Vite 플러그인 구성과 MDX 컴파일부터 배포 최적화 및 스키마 검증에 이르기까지 모든 것을 다룹니다.
polymarket
메타이 스킬은 개발자들이 Polymarket 예측 시장 플랫폼을 활용한 애플리케이션을 구축할 수 있도록 지원하며, 거래 및 시장 데이터를 위한 API 통합 기능을 포함합니다. 또한 WebSocket을 통한 실시간 데이터 스트리밍을 제공하여 실시간 거래와 시장 활동을 모니터링할 수 있습니다. 이를 통해 거래 전략을 구현하거나 실시간 시장 업데이트를 처리하는 도구를 생성하는 데 활용할 수 있습니다.
creating-opencode-plugins
메타이 스킬은 개발자들이 명령어, 파일, LSP 작업 등 25개 이상의 이벤트 유형에 연결되는 OpenCode 플러그인을 만들 수 있도록 돕습니다. JavaScript/TypeScript 모듈을 위한 플러그인 구조, 이벤트 API 명세, 구현 패턴을 제공합니다. OpenCode AI 어시스턴트의 라이프사이클을 사용자 정의 이벤트 기반 로직으로 가로채거나, 모니터링하거나, 확장해야 할 때 사용하세요.
sglang
메타SGLang은 RadixAttention 프리픽스 캐싱을 활용하여 JSON, 정규식, 에이전트 워크플로우를 위한 고속 구조화 생성에 특화된 고성능 LLM 서빙 프레임워크입니다. 특히 반복되는 프리픽스가 있는 작업에서 상당히 빠른 추론 속도를 제공하여 복잡한 구조화 출력 및 다중 턴 대화에 이상적입니다. 제약 디코딩이 필요하거나 광범위한 프리픽스 공유가 있는 애플리케이션을 구축할 때는 vLLM과 같은 대안보다 SGLang을 선택하십시오.
