4. Anchoring Effect - Deepstash
4. Anchoring Effect

4. Anchoring Effect

We rely too much on the first piece of information we hear (the "anchor"). For example, hearing a price first affects how you judge other prices, even if it’s unrelated.

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Similar ideas to 4. Anchoring Effect

Anchoring Effect

Anchoring Effect

Anchoring shows how initial values disproportionately influence subsequent judgments. This effect:

  • Persists even when the anchor is completely arbitrary
  • Affects professionals including real estate agents, judges, and car dea...

3. Anchoring Bias:

3. Anchoring Bias:

People give disproportionate weight to the first piece of information they encounter when making decisions. If you're negotiating the price of a used car, and the seller asks for a high price initially, you might end up paying more than you should because the high anchor influenced your perceptio...

Anchoring

We have a tendency to stubbornly hold on to a number once we hear it and gauge all other numbers based on the initial number, even if the information is not that relevant.

For example, if customers are limited to 'four per customer' they are more likely to buy four, even if they did not ...

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