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🧠 Compromise effect.

June 4, 2026
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FROM THE CREW

Happy Thursday.

Here’s a reminder from The Crew: nobody orders the cheapest wine, and nobody orders the priciest one either. The bottle in the middle wins by default.

Why? Keep reading.

Reading time: 5 minutes, 15 seconds

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PSYCHOLOGICAL EFFECT

Compromise Effect

Three coffee sizes on the menu. You wanted small, but medium feels reasonable. Large feels excessive. You pick a medium and feel clever about it.

Congratulations, you’ve just been compromised, By fine marketing.

The Compromise Effect exists, though. And it’s your brain’s tendency to pick the middle option when faced with three choices. Not the cheapest. Not the priciest. The “sensible” one.

Researchers Simonson and Tversky documented this in 1992.

Their studies showed that adding a third, more extreme option significantly increases the share of the middle choice. Even when preferences shouldn’t logically shift.

Why? Because choosing extremes feels risky. The middle option feels like a defensible decision we can justify to ourselves and others.

This bias shows up everywhere:

  • Restaurant wine lists where nobody orders the cheapest bottle.
  • Gym memberships with a “Standard” tier wedged between “Basic” and “Premium.”
  • Streaming services pushing the mid-priced plan with a subtle highlight.

Marketers figured out long ago that humans don’t choose products. Instead, we choose positions on a spectrum.

Which means if you’re only offering two tiers, you might miss out on sales. Here’s how to fix that.

Three ways to leverage Compromise Effect

1) Build a three-tier structure where the middle option is what you want to sell

Plausible Analytics does this cleanly.

Three tiers: Starter ($9/mo, one site), Growth ($14/mo, multiple sites and team sharing), and Business ($39/mo, funnels and Looker Studio export).

Starter feels limiting for any team. Business feels overkill unless you need conversion tracking. Growth becomes the obvious landing spot for most paying customers.

Don’t just slap three prices on a page.

Engineer the extremes so the middle tier becomes the rational choice by elimination. The anchors do the selling.

2) Add a premium tier that nobody buys but everyone notices.

The good old decoy.

Tuft & Needle’s mattress lineup runs the cheapest Original, Mint as the middle ground, and Mint Hybrid as the most expensive premium.

Almost nobody buys the Hybrid. And the company doesn’t really care because its job isn’t to convert. Its job is making the Mint, the brand’s actual bestseller, feel like restrained, smart spending against a $1,995 anchor sitting right next to it.

The decoy tier doesn’t need to convert. It needs to exist. Its only job is making your target option look like the responsible adult in the room.

3) Push buyers toward the middle option with social proof and badges

Hostinger’s shared hosting page slaps a “MOST POPULAR” badge directly on the Business plan ($3.99/mo), sitting between Premium ($2.99/mo) and Cloud Startup ($9.99/mo).

The badge does the psychological heavy lifting.

Buyers stop weighing features and start trusting the herd. The middle tier becomes the safe, social-proof-backed pick.

So the lesson to bring home here is to not just elaborate a three-tier structure that makes buyers lean toward the middle option.

But also leverage badges and social proof labels to shortcut the entire decision…

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CLICKWORTHY

GOOGLE: Finally, we have eyes on Google’s AI traffic. Google is rolling out dedicated Search Generative AI performance reports in Search Console to a subset of sites, tracking impressions and clicks across AI Overviews, AI Mode, and Discover. The guessing days are over.

REDDIT: Reddit’s native Shopify integration is now globally available, featuring automated catalog syncing and codeless pixels. This is huge, especially since new retail research shows campaigns in North America and EMEA are pulling in massive incremental ROAS.

VIDEO MARKETING: AI video can feel too unpredictable for client work, but it’s time to play director. DeepMind’s new Gemini Omni prompt guide shows you how to use plain language to steer camera angles, lighting, and styles. Swapping a butterfly for a bee? Piece of cake.

ICYMI, last time we looked at Base Rate Neglect.

The “Medium Coffee” Crew.

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