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Psychologist · born 1945

Robert Cialdini

Robert Cialdini (born 1945) is the psychologist who turned persuasion into a science. His classic Influence distilled years of undercover research into seven universal principles that make people say yes — reciprocity, commitment, social proof, authority, liking, scarcity, and unity — and it remains the single most-cited book on the subject.

This is the complete, plain-English guide: his books in order, where to start, the seven principles explained, famous quotes, and the misreadings to avoid.

Fast facts

Born
April 27, 1945 · USA
Nationality
American
Role
Emeritus professor, Arizona State University
Known for
Influence (1984); the 7 principles
Major books
Influence + Pre-Suasion (+ co-authored)
Best first book
Influence (New & Expanded ed.)
Follow-up
Pre-Suasion (2016)
Nickname
The 'Godfather of Influence'

Where to start with Robert Cialdini

Start with Influence — specifically the New & Expanded edition, which adds the seventh principle (Unity). It’s the foundational text and the source of nearly everything written on persuasion since. Then read Pre-Suasion for the science of the moment before the message.

  1. 1

    Influence: The Psychology of Persuasion

    Find it on Amazon· affiliate

    The foundation — read the New & Expanded edition (with the 7th principle, Unity). Everything in the field traces back to this.

  2. 2

    The natural sequel: the science of the moment before the message. Read it once Influence has given you the principles.

  3. 3

    Optional applied companions — short, tactical, research-backed. Good for dipping in when you want quick wins.

Every book, in order

His books in publication order. Where we host a chapter-by-chapter summary, there’s a link to read it free.

  1. 1984

    1. Influence: The Psychology of Persuasion

    Gentlebest first read

    The classic that founded the field. Six (now seven) universal principles that make people say yes — built on years of going undercover in sales, fundraising, and advertising. The expanded edition adds the seventh principle, Unity.

    Read the free summary →Find it on Amazon· affiliate

  2. 2008

    2. Yes! 50 Scientifically Proven Ways to Be Persuasive

    Gentle

    Co-written with Noah Goldstein and Steve Martin. Fifty short, practical, research-backed persuasion tactics — a more applied, bite-sized companion to Influence.

    Find it on Amazon· affiliate

  3. 2014

    3. The Small Big

    Gentle

    Also with Goldstein and Martin. Small changes that produce outsized effects on persuasion — the science of tiny tweaks. A sequel-of-sorts to Yes!

    Find it on Amazon· affiliate

  4. 2016

    4. Pre-Suasion

    Moderate

    His major follow-up to Influence. Persuasion isn't just what you say — it's the moment before you say it. How to direct attention so people are receptive to your message before they ever hear it.

    Read the free summary →Find it on Amazon· affiliate

The seven principles, explained simply

The universal levers of persuasion at the heart of his work — plus the pre-suasion idea that frames them.

Reciprocity

We feel obligated to return favors. Give first — a sample, a concession, genuine help — and people feel a pull to give back. The most powerful of the principles, and the easiest to trigger.

Commitment & consistency

Once we commit to something — especially out loud or in writing — we feel pressure to act consistently with it. Small initial commitments make larger, aligned ones far more likely.

Social proof

When unsure, we look to what others (especially similar others) are doing. 'Most people choose X' is one of the strongest nudges there is — which is why testimonials and 'bestseller' labels work.

Authority

We defer to credible experts and symbols of authority (titles, uniforms, credentials). Signaling genuine, relevant expertise — even admitting a small weakness first — sharply increases persuasion.

Liking

We say yes to people we like — and we like those who are similar to us, who compliment us, and who cooperate with us toward shared goals. Rapport isn't fluff; it's a lever.

Scarcity

We want more of what is rare or dwindling, and we fear loss more than we value gain. Genuine scarcity and exclusivity raise desire (fake scarcity is the unethical abuse of this principle).

Unity (the 7th principle)

Added in the 2021 edition: shared identity — 'one of us.' Persuasion is strongest when it comes from inside a group the person belongs to (family, region, team), not just someone they happen to like.

Pre-suasion

From Pre-Suasion: what you do BEFORE delivering a message — directing attention to a 'privileged moment' or idea — can make people receptive before they hear the message itself. Timing and framing the run-up matter as much as the pitch.

Famous quotes — and what they actually mean

A well-known principle of human behavior says that when we ask someone to do us a favor we will be more successful if we provide a reason.
Influence (1984)

The setup for his famous account of the 'because' copier study — people comply far more when given any reason, even an empty one. A window into our automatic, shortcut-driven minds.

The best persuaders become the best through pre-suasion: the process of arranging for recipients to be receptive to a message before they encounter it.
Pre-Suasion (2016)

His big second idea — the groundwork laid before the pitch often decides the pitch's success.

We are forever tools of those who know how to use these weapons of influence — unless we learn to recognize and resist them.
Robert Cialdini — the defensive theme running through Influence

Cialdini's ethical core: he teaches the principles so you can defend yourself from manipulators, not only to wield them.

Common misreadings to avoid

The myth: Influence is a how-to manual for manipulating people.

What is true: Cialdini explicitly frames it as a defense as much as a toolkit — much of the book is about spotting and resisting 'exploiters' who weaponize these principles, and he warns that abusing them (e.g. fake scarcity, fake social proof) backfires and is unethical.

The myth: There are six principles of influence.

What is true: There were six in the original; the New & Expanded edition (2021) adds a seventh — Unity (shared identity). If a summary lists only six, it's based on the older edition.

The myth: These are clever 'tricks' that work on gullible people.

What is true: They're deeply wired mental shortcuts that affect virtually everyone, including experts. They exist because they're usually useful heuristics — which is exactly why they can be exploited, and why recognizing them matters.

Frequently asked questions

In what order should I read Robert Cialdini's books?

Start with Influence: The Psychology of Persuasion (the New & Expanded edition with the 7th principle), then Pre-Suasion. The co-authored Yes! and The Small Big are optional, tactical companions you can read anytime.

What is the best Robert Cialdini book to start with?

Influence — it's the foundational classic and the source of the principles everyone else cites. Read it first; Pre-Suasion makes the most sense as a follow-up.

What are Cialdini's principles of influence?

Seven: Reciprocity, Commitment & Consistency, Social Proof, Authority, Liking, Scarcity, and Unity (added in the 2021 edition). Pre-Suasion adds an eighth idea — the importance of what you do before the message itself.

How many books has Robert Cialdini written?

His major books are Influence: The Psychology of Persuasion (1984, expanded 2021) and Pre-Suasion (2016), plus the co-authored applied books Yes! (2008) and The Small Big (2014).

Who is Robert Cialdini?

Robert Cialdini (born 1945) is an American psychologist, emeritus professor at Arizona State University, and the most-cited authority on the science of persuasion — often called the 'Godfather of Influence' for his foundational book Influence.

Keep reading on Read Stacks

Researched and written by the Read Stacks editorial team. Last verified June 30, 2026. Facts on Cialdini’s life and works follow the public record; quotations name their source work.