How to Use Your Customers’ Confirmation Bias to Your Advantage

by | Content Writing and Copywriting

Who did you vote for in the last presidential election (or if you’re not in the U.S., the top leadership position in your country)?

Bring that person to mind.

Now — do you still believe that this person was the absolute right choice?

Think of all the negative things that have been uncovered about that person since election day.

Still sure you made the right choice?

We pay attention and give weight to the information that supports what we already believe — and ignore anything that contradicts it.

This is human nature — and there’s a term for this specific phenomenon:

Confirmation bias.

Though the concept of confirmation bias has been noted as far back as the Greeks, it was English psychologist Peter Wason who coined the term in the 1960s. And it was Robert Cialdini who brought it into popular consciousness with his book Influence: The Psychology of Persuasion, first published in 1984 and reprinted many times since.

Why am I giving you a psychology lesson today?

Because every single one of your target customers is affected by confirmation bias — and you can use this to connect to them in a more personal way.

Thinking Beyond the Persona

No doubt you’ve done your homework, and you have a neatly drafted buyer persona (or two or ten) on-hand that your marketing team uses like a bible.

That’s a great place to start.

But we need to dig a little deeper to use confirmation bias to our advantage.

Bring to mind one of your best customers. A specific individual that you feel like you know pretty well.

What does this person believe? About themselves, about their market, about the world?

Let’s use the fictitious example of a CFO of a mid-sized financial services company. He believes he is good with numbers.

Or the HR manager of a division of a global enterprise technology company. She believes she’s got a knack for helping people grow their careers.

Or the marketing director of a successful startup that’s on the road to go public. She believes the marketing strategy that her team came up with is going to catapult the company to even greater success next year.

Now, knowing (or taking an educated guess at) what your customer believes about themselves, you can create content that supports that belief.

Why is this a good thing? What kind of impact will it have?

It mirrors back to your customer who they think they are. And when they see themselves on the page, they connect with it personally, directly and emotionally.

You’ve made a connection.

They’re now sitting up and paying attention to what you have to say, because they’re reading about themselves.

Confirmation Bias in Content — in Practice

This technique works especially well for email nurture sequences, I’ve found.

Often when I’m writing for companies that sell complex, higher-ticket solutions, I’ll start off the first 2-3 emails in a nurture sequence by first confirming something the reader likely already believes. If I can back that up with a compelling statistic, even better …

Example:

“Ten years ago, you might have thought moving applications to the cloud was a reckless action.

 

Today, however, you see the value in a hybrid cloud environment — and you know you’re part of an increasing norm.

 

In fact, X% of enterprise companies have hybrid cloud or multi-cloud environments today.”

If I can get the reader nodding along, I know we’re on the right track.

Confirming bias can also work really well for content at the top through the middle of the funnel, where that personal connection is so critical to building the initial relationship.

This is a very, very old blog post of mine (circa 2014, in fact), but it continues to be one of the top performing blog posts on the Horizon Peak site: 5 Tips for Writing Blogs About Technical or Complex Topics. The assumption I made about the reader is that they believed their subject matter is overly complex or technical for the average reader.

That’s not my best work. But it continues to perform better than most other blog posts on that site.

Tell Them What They Already Know

Building relationships with your customers is critical to long-term business growth today — and making a personal connection is the first step to relationship.

Let the reader see themselves on the page.

Every single human being on the planet is affected by confirmation bias. That’s just how we’re wired.

We pay attention to information that supports what we already believe.

So in your content, try telling your target customers something that supports what they already believe — and they’ll pay more attention to what you have to say.

 

Consider how your content is getting created

This is what I believe in:

  1. Content equity. Everyone deserves good, valuable, soulful content. Followers, leads, prospects, customers, employees — everyone.
  2. Discernment. Using AI isn’t bad — as long as it’s used with discernment.

Founders: Keep up the thoughtful content you’re creating. It’s valuable, and it’s so needed. But if your company is generating gobs of customer-facing content with AI, think about why that is, and why you’re okay with it.

Startups: Treating content production as a numbers game means you’re getting lumped in with everyone else. Swimming in the sea of sameness means your customers can’t tell you apart from the competition.

This goes beyond differentiation.

Your solution might be groundbreaking. Your founder might be the next Fortune cover story. But if your content doesn’t stand apart … your company doesn’t stand out.

Human-driven and human-written content (even with an AI assist to make it better) stands out because it serves.

Come talk to me about how your content is getting done. Let’s find opportunities to add humanity to your writing process so the customers you’re trying to reach will sit up and take notice.