Naturally, the YouTube Premium ad came for me. It popped right when Joe Rogan asked Jordan Peterson a tricky question. Obviously, time expanded right then, and I couldn’t bear waiting. So I took my phone out of my pocket to skip the ad. Yet, instead of pressing the button, I froze. My observant eye caught a subtle marketing trick. The message box didn’t say “skip ad,” it said “skip trial.” It’s not a random choice of words. YouTube marketers were leveraging a specific psychological trait which is loss aversion. According to psychological studies, our minds are more sensitive to losses than to gains. It is especially the case for objects and possessions — say, a month of free trial, for example. Roughly speaking, losses hurt about twice as much as gains make us feel good. If we wanted to measure the difference using an imaginary emotion-meter, it’d mean that finding $10 brings 100 positive emotional points while losing the same $10 strikes 200 negative emotional points. YouTube subtly used loss aversion as a marketing tool. Marketers didn’t ask me if I preferred to skip the ad, but to skip the trial. The former translates into merely ignoring a commercial, while the latter meant that I was giving up on something. When I saw the message box, I hesitated. “Does this mean that I’ll never get this offer again?” I thought. “Frankly, I hate being interrupted by ads — I should probably consider subscribing. Besides, my battery will thank me for it.” All it took was one word to seduce my attention and make me consider subscribing But what can the rest of us learn from this? We’re not YouTube. We don’t have the same resources nor the same reach. Nevertheless, we could still leverage loss aversion in our marketing. To illustrate, here are three varied examples that can nourish your creativity.
If you are a content creator
“Don’t want to miss the latest articles/videos? Sign up here” You can also use this technique to deter subscriptions. Instead of looking for ways to hide the Unsubscribe button, aim for something like: “If you want to leave the adventure, click here.” As you may have noticed, loss-aversion isn’t limited to items. It can include experiences — so long as that the experience is concrete. “You can’t truly relax if all of your passwords aren’t safely kept in a single spot.” If you happen to make an exclusive offer for your mailing list, you can pick words that stress your marketing efforts, such as these: “You won’t find this promotion on our website.” I didn’t go for “you won’t find this promotion elsewhere” because exaggeration can hurt your credibility. Therefore, the more specific and honest you are, the better. “It wouldn’t be easy to find a candidate who’s available immediately, like myself.” Or “Another company can’t bring you the same connections we have across the supply chain.” Keeping the comparison with YouTube, your goal is to shift your counterpart’s reflection towards a concrete loss and not towards merely skipping a suggestion. Just like a drawing made with hundreds of tiny brushstrokes, marketing is an art crafted through the concatenation of small details. Choosing the right words is a part of the latter.