Ever opened your shopping app for just 2 minutes and 40 minutes later, you’re staring at a cart full of stuff you didn’t even know you needed? Or window shopping at a place with no intention of buying any stuff but by looking at the fancy Mannequins and the decorative green, blue, yellow lights attracted you and called you like ‘look at me once’ and forced you to come and visit the store at least.
Same.
You think you’re making decisions. But behind the scenes, your brain’s being nudged, nudged again, and then gently pushed off the buying cliff by design.
Welcome to the world of marketing psychology where every colour, price tag, countdown timer, and Only 2 left! label is playing a carefully orchestrated game with your brain.
It’s not manipulation. Okay, sometimes. But it’s science.
In this section, we decode the tiny psychological tricks brands use to win your attention, trust, loyalty and yes, wallet.
From cognitive biases to dopamine hits, from authority influencers to colour-coded persuasion, we’re breaking down all the mind games and naming names.
Because once you see the playbook, you can’t unsee it. Let’s get into the brain hacks that make you click, scroll, shop, repeat.
You were just ‘window shopping.’Then you saw ‘Was Rs. 2,999, now Rs. 799’ and your brain screamed, ‘Bargain alert!’Congrats, you just got Anchored. Happens to the best of us (and all of us).
What’s Going On Here?
Your brain: Rs. 2,999? OMG, Rs. 799 is a steal!”
Reality: You just got tricked by a number.
You’ve Been Anchored If:
✔️ You saw the discount before you saw the product
✔️ You called Rs. 799 a win (for something you didn’t even want)
✔️ You added to cart and whispered, ‘How could I not?’
✔️ You told yourself, ‘It was basically free’
Where You’ve Seen It (But Didn’t Realize It)
Nykaa’s Was Rs. 2,999, now Rs. 799 deal that made you think, Whoa, steal!
Zomato Gold showing pricey monthly first, then annual so the second looks smart
Myntra’s big 70% OFF tags that make you feel like a pro shopper
Amazon’s Compare at Rs. X price tags make you think you’re getting a deal, but really, your brain is just comparing the price to that high number you saw first.




