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    Foundations Library

    Marketing Laws

    Evidence-based principles on how marketing actually works. From Ehrenberg-Bass to behavioral science, from Binet & Field to attention research.

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    Growth & Market Structure

    Double Jeopardy Law

    Big brands have more buyers and higher repeat rates. Loyalty follows size, not strategy.

    Byron Sharp, Ehrenberg-Bass Institute
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    Creativity & Effectiveness

    The Distinctiveness Law

    Being recognisable matters more than being meaningfully different.

    Ehrenberg-Bass Institute, Byron Sharp +1 more
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    How People Decide

    The Law Of Category Entry Points

    Brands grow by linking to more buying situations.

    Ehrenberg-Bass Institute, Jenni Romaniuk
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    Growth & Market Structure

    The Growth By Penetration Law

    Brands grow mainly by reaching more buyers, not by increasing loyalty.

    Byron Sharp, Ehrenberg-Bass Institute
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    Growth & Market Structure

    Light Buyer Law

    Most sales come from buyers who purchase infrequently, not heavy users.

    Ehrenberg-Bass Institute
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    Growth & Market Structure

    The Law Of Repertoire Buying

    Consumers buy from a set of acceptable brands, not one favorite.

    Ehrenberg-Bass Institute, Dirichlet Model
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    Growth & Market Structure

    The Law Of Profit And Market Share

    Larger brands tend to be more profitable due to scale advantages.

    Ehrenberg-Bass Institute, PIMS studies
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    Availability & Memory

    The Law Of Mental Availability

    Brands grow by being easily thought of in buying situations.

    Byron Sharp, Ehrenberg-Bass Institute
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    Availability & Memory

    The Law Of Physical Availability

    Brands must be easy to buy wherever and whenever people want them.

    Ehrenberg-Bass Institute, Byron Sharp
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    Availability & Memory

    The Law Of Memory Building

    Advertising works by building memory structures, not changing minds.

    Les Binet, Peter Field +1 more
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    Availability & Memory

    Distinctive Assets Law

    Consistent brand cues drive recognition faster than differentiation claims.

    Jenni Romaniuk, Ehrenberg-Bass Institute
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    Availability & Memory

    The Law Of Fluency

    Easy-to-process messages outperform complex, rational arguments.

    Daniel Kahneman, System1 +1 more
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    Creativity & Effectiveness

    The Law Of Emotion Over Reason

    Emotional advertising drives stronger long-term effects than rational ads.

    Les Binet, Peter Field +1 more
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    Creativity & Effectiveness

    The Law Of Fame

    Being noticed matters more than convincing people with arguments.

    Les Binet, Peter Field
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    Creativity & Effectiveness

    The Law Of Alienation Paranoia

    Marketers overestimate how many people they'll offend by being distinctive.

    Les Binet
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    Creativity & Effectiveness

    The Law Of Being Ignored

    Neutral, safe advertising underperforms more than bold work.

    IPA Databank, System1
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    Long-Term vs Short-Term

    The Law Of The Long And Short

    Brand building and activation do different jobs and require different strategies.

    Les Binet, Peter Field
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    Long-Term vs Short-Term

    The 60/40 Law

    Long-term brand investment typically outperforms short-term activation alone.

    Les Binet, Peter Field +1 more
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    Long-Term vs Short-Term

    The Law Of Short-Term ROI

    Short-term metrics undervalue long-term brand effects.

    Les Binet, Peter Field +1 more
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    Long-Term vs Short-Term

    The Law Of Brand Compounding

    Long-term brand investment creates compounding returns over time.

    IPA Databank
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    How People Decide

    The Law Of Effort Minimisation

    People choose the easiest acceptable option, not the best one.

    Daniel Kahneman, Byron Sharp
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    How People Decide

    The Autopilot Law

    Most brand choices are made without conscious deliberation.

    Daniel Kahneman, Ehrenberg-Bass Institute
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    How People Decide

    The Low Attention Law

    Most advertising is processed passively, if at all.

    System1, Ehrenberg-Bass Institute
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    How People Decide

    The Left-Brain Law

    Over-rational advertising underperforms emotionally rich work.

    Orlando Wood, Orlando Wood
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    Media & Investment

    The Law Of Excess Share Of Voice

    Brands with higher share of voice than market share tend to grow.

    Les Binet, Peter Field +1 more
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    Media & Investment

    The Law Of Reach Over Precision

    Broad reach usually outperforms hyper-targeting for growth.

    Les Binet, Peter Field +1 more
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    Behavioral Science

    The Social Proof Law

    People copy the behavior of others, especially in uncertainty.

    Richard Shotton, Robert Cialdini
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    Behavioral Science

    The Pratfall Law

    Admitting a weakness increases credibility and likability.

    Richard Shotton
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    Behavioral Science

    The Generation Law

    People remember better what they've actively completed themselves.

    Richard Shotton
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    Behavioral Science

    The Peak-End Law

    People judge experiences by their peak moment and ending, not the average.

    Daniel Kahneman, Richard Shotton
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    Behavioral Science

    The Law Of Costly Signaling

    Expensive advertising signals quality and commitment to customers.

    Rory Sutherland
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    Behavioral Science

    The Context Law

    Context changes perceived value more than the product itself.

    Rory Sutherland
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    Behavioral Science

    The Reciprocity Law

    People feel obligated to return favors and gifts.

    Robert Cialdini
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    Behavioral Science

    The Scarcity Law

    Limited availability increases perceived value.

    Robert Cialdini
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    Behavioral Science

    The Anchoring Law

    The first number you see influences all subsequent judgments.

    Daniel Kahneman, Richard Shotton
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    Attention Science

    The Active Vs Passive Attention Law

    Not all attention is equal; active attention builds memory.

    Karen Nelson-Field
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    Attention Science

    The Attention Threshold Law

    There's a minimum attention level required for advertising to have an effect.

    Karen Nelson-Field, Lumen Research
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    Attention Science

    The Law Of Platform Attention

    Different platforms generate vastly different attention quality.

    Karen Nelson-Field
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    Attention Science

    The Pixels Vs Seconds Law

    Larger ad size requires less time to build memory.

    Lumen Research
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    Pricing & Value

    The Price-Quality Law

    Higher price signals higher quality in consumers' minds.

    Richard Shotton, Behavioral Economics Research
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    Pricing & Value

    The Decoy Law

    A third option changes preferences between the original two.

    Dan Ariely
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    Pricing & Value

    The Law Of Loss Aversion

    Losses hurt twice as much as equivalent gains feel good.

    Daniel Kahneman, Amos Tversky
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    Pricing & Value

    The Pain Of Paying Law

    Payment method affects perceived value and spending behavior.

    Drazen Prelec, George Loewenstein
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    Pricing & Value

    The Law Of Psychological Pricing

    $9.99 vs $10.00 works, but not for the reasons you think.

    Various Research
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    Evidence vs Myths

    The Law Of Overclaimed Differentiation

    Most brands are less unique than they believe.

    Ehrenberg-Bass Institute
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    Evidence vs Myths

    The Law Of Over-Optimization

    Excessive testing leads to average, forgettable work.

    IPA Databank, Les Binet
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    Evidence vs Myths

    The Loyalty Program Law

    They mostly reward existing behavior without changing it.

    Ehrenberg-Bass Institute
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    Evidence vs Myths

    The Brand Purpose Law

    Purpose matters more internally than in buying decisions.

    Kantar, Ehrenberg-Bass Institute
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    Evidence vs Myths

    The Messaging Law

    A slogan is not a strategy.

    Mark Ritson, IPA
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    B2B Principles

    The 95/5 Law

    95% of B2B buyers are not in-market at any given moment.

    Ehrenberg-Bass Institute, LinkedIn B2B Institute
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    B2B Principles

    The Law Of B2B Buyers

    B2B decisions are as emotional as B2C.

    LinkedIn B2B Institute
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    B2B Principles

    The Long & Short Of B2B Law

    60/40 rule applies in B2B (adjusted to ~46/54).

    Les Binet, Peter Field
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    B2B Principles

    The Law Of B2B Category Entry Points

    B2B brands need mental availability too.

    Jenni Romaniuk
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    Evidence vs Myths

    The Law Of Digital Attribution

    Digital attribution overvalues the last click.

    Various Research
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    Evidence vs Myths

    The Incrementality Law

    Most conversions would happen even without the ad.

    Various Research
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    Long-Term vs Short-Term

    The Recession ESOV Law

    ESOV effect is stronger when competitors cut budgets.

    Peter Field
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    Growth & Market Structure

    Natural Monopoly Law

    Larger brands have a higher proportion of light category buyers.

    Byron Sharp, Ehrenberg-Bass Institute
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    How People Decide

    The Law Of Usage Over Attitude

    Personal experience shapes brand perceptions more than advertising claims.

    Byron Sharp, Ehrenberg-Bass Institute
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    Growth & Market Structure

    The Pareto Law Myth (80/20 Rule)

    A refined version of the Light Buyer Law: a small percentage of customers contribute a disproportionate amount to sales, but most sales still come from light buyers.

    Byron Sharp, Ehrenberg-Bass Institute
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    Long-Term vs Short-Term

    The Law Of Compound Creativity

    Creative consistency leads to higher ad quality, stronger brands, and greater profits.

    System1, IPA
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    Long-Term vs Short-Term

    The Creative Wear-In Law

    Long-term use of creative increases distinctiveness and effectiveness; most ads are pulled before reaching peak fluency.

    System1, IPA
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