The technique of social proof has
been widely utilised in advertising for many decades. The example below, of
Elvis’s 9th album cover, released in in 1959, is an instance of the
use of the social proof principle. It attempts to persuade individuals to
purchase the album by playing on the fact that Elvis had (by 1959) sold
approximately 50,000,000 albums worldwide. This makes individuals want to
purchase the album under the assumption that other people’s behaviour is indicative
of the ‘correct’ behaviour; as the album itself states “50,000,000 fans can’t be
wrong”.
The technique of social proof is still
widely used in the modern era. For instance, social proof is heavily integrated
into modern technology. Take this blog for instance, the number of page views
this blog has received is displayed on the right-hand panel. Given the vast
number of views the blog has received, it signals to you, the reader (rightly,
or wrongly), that this blog is a valuable and suitable source of information.
After all over 400,000 people have used it so far, right? Surely the judgement
of 400,000+ individuals couldn’t possibly be wrong? This is the ‘logic’ that
underlies the effectiveness of social proof.
Cialdini, Wosinska, Barrett, Butner and Gornik-Durose (2010)
found evidence of the effectiveness of social proof in gaining participation to
a request. The researchers asked students (from both the USA and Poland) to
imagine that they were approached by a representative of ‘Coca Cola’, then asked
to sample the product, and finally asked to complete a questionnaire about the
product which would take approximately forty minutes.
Participants were required to indicate their likelihood of completing
the request under different conditions of social proof (SP), on a scale from 0
(no intentions to comply with the request) to 8 (very high likelihood of
completing the request).
First participants were asked to indicate the likelihood
that they would complete the survey, having been told that all their classmates in the past had complied with the request
(high intensity SP condition). Then, at a later date, the same people were
asked to indicate the likelihood that they would comply with the request, with
the knowledge that approximately half
of their classmates had agreed to complete the request (moderate intensity SP condition).
Finally, the participants were asked how likely they were to complete the
request with the knowledge that none
of their classmates had completed the request (low intensity SP condition).
The participants (both from the USA and Poland) were
significantly more likely to comply with the request when they were told that
all, or half, of their classmates had complied, compared with when they were
told that none of their classmates had complied previously. These results are
displayed in the graph below. The authors conclude that social proof led participants
to believe that agreeing to the request was the ‘correct’ behaviour in the
situation, compelling them to complete the request themselves, out of a desire
to behave in the ‘correct’ way.
References
Cialdini, R. B., Wosinska,
W., Barrett, D. W., Butner, J., & Gornik-Durose, M. (1999). Compliance with
a request in two cultures: The differential influence of social proof and
commitment/consistency on collectivists and individualists. Personality
and Social Psychology Bulletin, 25, 1242-1253.
Kelman, H. C. (1958).
Compliance, identification, and internalization: Three processes of attitude
change. Journal of Conflict Resolution, 2, 51-60.
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