Behavioral Psychology in Job Function-Specific Email Campaigns
Posted: Tue May 20, 2025 5:20 am
Beyond personalization, understanding human psychology helps product teams craft emails that trigger engagement at the subconscious level. Let’s break down some key psychological principles:
1. The Zeigarnik Effect: Leveraging Unfinished Business
People tend to remember unfinished tasks more than completed ones. Email campaigns can use this effect by introducing incomplete narratives or open loops that compel users to act.
Example:
A product manager gets an email highlighting a feature update, but the full walkthrough is available upon clicking a CTA—encouraging them to engage.
A sales executive receives statistics about industry lbank database trends but needs to register for a webinar to get the full report.
This method ensures users stay mentally invested until they take action.
2. The Principle of Scarcity: Creating Urgency
Emails designed for job-specific audiences can use scarcity and exclusivity to boost engagement.
Example:
An email to executives emphasizes a limited-time premium offer for decision-makers.
Developers receive exclusive beta access with a countdown timer, leveraging urgency.
People are far more likely to act when they fear missing out.
1. The Zeigarnik Effect: Leveraging Unfinished Business
People tend to remember unfinished tasks more than completed ones. Email campaigns can use this effect by introducing incomplete narratives or open loops that compel users to act.
Example:
A product manager gets an email highlighting a feature update, but the full walkthrough is available upon clicking a CTA—encouraging them to engage.
A sales executive receives statistics about industry lbank database trends but needs to register for a webinar to get the full report.
This method ensures users stay mentally invested until they take action.
2. The Principle of Scarcity: Creating Urgency
Emails designed for job-specific audiences can use scarcity and exclusivity to boost engagement.
Example:
An email to executives emphasizes a limited-time premium offer for decision-makers.
Developers receive exclusive beta access with a countdown timer, leveraging urgency.
People are far more likely to act when they fear missing out.