Why does the first number we see change our guess?
Store shows: "Was $100, NOW $60!" You think: "Great deal!" But what if the shirt was never worth $100? That first number (the anchor) pulls your thinking toward it. Even random numbers can anchor your brain!
ANCHORING = relying too heavily on the FIRST piece of information (the "anchor") when making decisions.
Like a ship's anchor holding it in place, the first number you see holds your estimates near it - even if it's totally random or wrong!
Researchers spun a wheel (random numbers 1-100), THEN asked: "What % of African countries are in the UN?"
When wheel showed 10, average guess: 25%.
When wheel showed 65, average guess: 45%.
A RANDOM WHEEL changed expert estimates! That's how powerful anchoring is!
• Stores: "Was $200" (makes $120 seem cheap!)
• Negotiations: First offer sets the range
• Real estate: Listing price anchors bids
• Salary: "What did you make before?" anchors new offer
• Restaurants: Expensive items make others seem reasonable
Don't let the first number control you! Research BEFORE you see prices.
In negotiations, make the first offer yourself (set YOUR anchor!).
Ask: "What would I think this is worth if I hadn't seen that number?" Ignore the anchor!
Anchoring makes the first number we see disproportionately influence our estimates and decisions!
How it works:
1. You encounter initial value (the anchor)
2. Your brain uses it as reference point
3. You adjust from that anchor
4. BUT: You don't adjust ENOUGH!
5. Final estimate stays too close to anchor
Shocking fact: Works even with RANDOM or IRRELEVANT numbers! Even experts fall for it!
Why it happens:
• Brain uses shortcuts (heuristics)
• First info creates mental framework
• Insufficient adjustment from starting point
• We don't realize it's happening
Real manipulation:
• "Regular price" inflated to make sale look good
• First salary offer sets negotiation range
• Expensive menu items make others seem cheap
Defense strategies:
• Research value BEFORE seeing prices
• Set your own anchor (make first offer)
• Deliberately ignore initial number
• Ask "What's this worth independently?"
🤔 Which thinking lens(es) did you use?
Select all the lenses you used:
🌱 A Small Everyday Story
"Look! Was $100, now $60!"
"Great deal!"
"But is it WORTH $60?"
"Well... compared to $100..."
"Forget the $100. What's it worth?"
"Maybe... $30?"
The anchor had done its job.
See more guidance →
🧠 Thinking habits this builds:
- Ignoring arbitrary starting points
- Evaluating things independently
- Recognizing pricing manipulation
- Setting your own anchors strategically
🌿 Behaviors you may notice (and reinforce):
- Researching value before shopping
- Asking "What's this really worth?"
- Noticing "was/now" pricing tactics
- Making first offers in negotiations
How to reinforce: "You ignored the 'original price' and figured out what it's actually worth! That's beating anchoring bias."
🔄 When ideas are still forming:
Children might not see how random numbers affect thinking. The wheel experiment is powerful - even KNOWING it's random, people are still affected!
Helpful response: "Even when we KNOW a number is random, our brain still uses it as a starting point. That's why we have to consciously ignore it!"
🔬 If you want to go deeper:
- Try the experiment! Does a random number change your estimate?
- How do stores use anchoring to make sales look better?
- Why should YOU make the first offer in a negotiation?
Key concepts (for adults): Anchoring bias, adjustment heuristic, pricing psychology, negotiation tactics.