Behavioral economics & viral marketing case studies












Fresh Start Effect Details
Fresh Start Effect means people are more likely to take action toward a goal when they hit a time point that feels like a new beginning - a new week, month, birthday, or milestone. New beginnings make change feel easier.
Think of how people suddenly start diets or gym plans on January 1st, even though it’s just another day. The “new year” frame creates a mental reset that boosts motivation.
In marketing this bias powers campaigns tied to new cycles: season resets, calendar dates, onboarding milestones, or “start over” moments. When something feels like a fresh chapter, people lean in.
Fresh Start Effect Guide
Fresh Start Effect Research
Researchers studied millions of real-life behaviours like gym check-ins from 11,000+ students, Google search data, and activity on a big goal-setting website. They wanted to see how much different “fresh starts” (new week, new month, birthdays, New Year) change people’s motivation.
Here are the exact effects they found:
Fresh Start Effect Examples

1. Casinos - "new shoe shuffle"
Blackjack tables use a shoe shuffle every time the deck runs out - dealers announce it loudly: “New shoe!” Even losing players suddenly feel like they’re starting fresh.

Libraries run amnesty months where all late fees are forgiven. People who avoided the library out of shame suddenly return because the slate is wiped clean. Participation skyrockets because Fresh Start removes embarrassment and guilt.

When a guest complains, many hotels offer a room change, even if the new room is almost identical. The change creates a psychological reset “okay, this stay is starting over. Maybe it will be good now.” This Fresh Start removes negative emotions and prevents refunds or bad reviews.
Life Event Effect Details
Life Event Effect means that people are more likely to switch habits and brands when they have undergone a life event. Changes like moving, having a child, starting a new job, or a breakup make old habits break.
Think of someone who just moved to a new city. They suddenly choose new brands, new routines, and new services , not because the products changed, but because their life context did.
In marketing this bias explains why timing matters so much. Brands that show up during life changes get a rare chance to form new habits.
Life Event Effect Guide
Life Event Effect Research
About 34% of US soldiers used heroin while fighting in Vietnam, and around 20% showed signs of addiction. After a major life change (coming back home) this behavior dropped fast.
In the first year after returning to the US, only about 1% became addicted again, even though 10% tried the drug again after returning.
This shows that when life context changes, behavior can change suddenly, even without treatment.
During research, researchers ran a survey among 2,370 people. They asked two things:
Overall, 21% of people who had a recent life event had switched brands, vs 8% of regular consumers (≈2.6X higher). And in 3 categories, life-event consumers were more than 3X more likely to have switched brands.
People whose age ends in “9” (eg, 29, 39, 49) are more likely to question the meaningfulness of their lives than people at other ages.
In their study, researchers examined the ages of first-time marathon runners and found that 9-enders were overrepresented by ~48% among participants aged 25-64.
Nine-enders were also more represented on an extramarital affairs site (men with ages ending in 9 were ~18% overrepresented).
This explains the whole idea of a midlife crisis.
Life Event Effect Examples

1. Starting new job - LinkedIn Premium, Notion, Slack
A new job resets tools, routines, and identity. LinkedIn usage spikes when people start searching for a new job. LinkedIn Premium converts best when users change job titles. Notion and Slack get adopted because teams rebuild workflows from zero.

When people move, they switch internet, furniture, and home services. Comcast and AT&T aggressively target people right after an address change. IKEA wins because moving breaks old habits, and people are open to new brands.
Humor Effect Details
Humor Effect means we remember things better when they make us laugh. A joke, a funny twist, or a light tone sticks in the mind far longer than something serious and flat.
Stories & humor are the ultimate shortcuts to deeper connections and earning trust of your customers. Humor bypasses skepticism.
Think of seeing a billboard with a clever joke. Even if you glance at it for a second, the line stays with you, while dozens of normal ads disappear instantly.
In marketing this bias shapes brand voices, ads, emails, and social posts. Humor boosts attention, recall, and shareability because it gives the brain a little reward for paying attention.
Humor Effect Guide
Humor Effect Research
This meta-research from 1992 reviews dozens of studies on how humor works in advertising.
Humor grabs attention very well but does not always convince people. About 24% of TV ads used humor, and 94% of advertisers said humor is an effective way to get attention, while 55% of research directors said humor works better than non-humor ads for attention.
Humor consistently lifts attention, but its effect on understanding the message is mixed, with:
Humor also does not guarantee stronger persuasion, although one analysis from 1982 found that 31% of humorous ads performed above average in persuasion tests.
The strongest finding in the entire review comes from the role of liking. A large 1991 study with almost 15,000 interviews showed that liking a commercial predicted which ad would win in sales 87% of the time, and a simple like-or-not-like measure predicted success 93% of the time.
People who liked a commercial a lot were also twice as likely to be persuaded. Humor supports this effect because when people felt an ad was funny or clever, it predicted success 53% of the time, while calling an ad boring predicted failure 73% of the time.
Overall, humor is great for getting attention and increasing liking, and since liking is one of the strongest predictors of sales, humor can indirectly make ads more effective, especially when the humor is connected to the product and used for simple, low-involvement decisions.
Humor Effect Examples
Their first ad used deadpan humor, swearing, and absurd scenes to explain a boring product: razor subscriptions. The humor made the message unforgettable, “Our blades are f***ing great.”.
Result: over 12k orders in 48 hours and a company later sold for $1B.

After the 2008 shoe-throwing incident became global meme material, Alex Tew created a funny browser game called Sock and Awe in just 3 hours.
The humor made it instantly shareable. By day 3, it had been played 1.4M times, and by day 6, the site reached 9M visitors.
The game was sold within days, and the team later used the traffic to collect 120k emails, helping them launch their next project (PopJam).
Old Spice used surreal, rapid-fire humor that completely broke deodorant-ad conventions. The absurd style made the brand memorable to both men and women, turning a dying product line into a cultural hit. Sales jumped 125% year-over-year after the campaign.
Sunk Cost Effect Details
Sunk Cost Effect means we keep investing time, money, or energy into something just because we’ve already put a lot into it, even when quitting would be smarter. The past effort traps us.
Think of staying in a bad project just because you spent months on it, even though it doesn't earn any money. Or you're stuck in a bad relationship even though you don't love the other person anymore. The time you already invested pulls you in, not the actual value.
In marketing this effect keeps customers subscribed, committed, or loyal to things they’ve already paid for or spent effort on. The more they’ve put in, the harder it feels to walk away.
Sunk Cost Effect Guide
Sunk Cost Effect Research
In a 1985 study by Arkes and Blumer, people got theatre tickets at different prices:
54 people who paid more for a theater season pass ended up going to more shows over 6 months, just to use their pricey ticket. The cheaper the ticket, the less likely people were to use it.
Sunk Cost Effect Examples

1. Starbucks rewards
Starbucks gives you points that expire. When you have something like 70/100, you don’t want that effort to go to waste. So you buy another coffee or two just to “finish the set.” The more points you’ve collected, the stronger the pull.

People spend thousands on the Peloton bike. After that, they feel they must keep the monthly subscription active, or else that big investment feels wasted. The high upfront cost keeps them inside the system much longer.