Install
openclaw skills install @deciqai/social-proofActivate when: user says 'everyone is doing this,' 'join thousands of others,' 'it's the popular choice,' 'trusted by X customers,' wonders if a trend or consensus is real, suspects fake reviews or manufactured engagement, or is designing testimonials/UX to convert users. Do NOT activate when: the decision is low-stakes and reversible (choosing a lunch spot) or the user already has direct measured evidence stronger than any consensus signal.
openclaw skills install @deciqai/social-proofSocial proof: we judge what is correct, normal, or worth doing by observing what others — especially similar others — are doing. Usually efficient; failure mode is severe: under unanimous consensus, people publicly endorse answers they privately know are wrong (Asch 1951–56: error rate <1% alone, ~37% under group pressure). Two amplifiers: uncertainty (social proof fills the vacuum) and similarity (same-type peers drive far stronger conformity than generic crowds).
Composes with reciprocity (Cialdini's two primary levers), anchoring (price tiers often function as quasi-social-proof), and critical-thinking (structured fallback when consensus has been engineered).
Use when: purchase/hiring/investment decision leaning on what others chose; proposal cites "everyone is doing this"; designing growth/marketing/UX with social-proof patterns; decision feels unsafe alone without a clear reason; suspecting manufactured consensus (bots, paid reviews, astroturf); a trend is accelerating and private doubt is being suppressed by the fact everyone is on board.
Do NOT use when: decision is low-stakes and reversible; you have direct measured evidence stronger than any consensus; the "consensus" is from verified domain experts with better epistemic position; you want to rationalize a contrarian position that lacks independent evidence.
In Coach mode, respond one step at a time. Each [WAIT] is a hard stop — output only that step's question, then stop.
[WAIT — do not advance until user responds]
[WAIT — do not advance until user responds]
[WAIT — do not advance until user responds]
Run the Social-Proof Analysis. Diagnose the source of consensus, then decide whether to use it as evidence.
Consensus claim: [specific group, not generic mass; how many; similar to me how?]
Consensus type: [informational / social / manufactured / mix]
Independent vs. chain: [yes/no — cascade risk]
Dissenters: [who, what they say]
Asch counterfactual: [same conclusion alone? yes/no]
Manufactured-consensus check: [astroturf / survivorship / testimonials / metric inflation]
Decision: [follow / depart / seek independent evidence] — because [reason]
Early-warning trigger: [what would signal consensus is wrong]
→ Method in Action: Solomon Asch's Conformity Experiments, Swarthmore, 1951–1956
→ Primary sources: references/sources.md
[D] = designed upfront | [O] = observed in real use. [O] entries are more valuable.
| Fake move | Reality |
|---|---|
| [D] "Everyone is doing it, so it must be right" | Asch showed this fails on tasks where the right answer was visually obvious. "Everyone" is one signal to weigh — not the conclusion. |
| [D] "Many smart people are doing X, so X is right" | Smart people are more invested in being seen as smart, raising the cost of public dissent. The "smart people" filter does not defend against engineered consensus. |
| [D] "I have my own opinion regardless of what others do" | Asch's 75% applies even to people who predicted this of themselves. The rule operates below introspection — the counterfactual is the test. |
| [D] "Bestseller / most-popular must be the best" | Popularity reflects discoverability and marketing, not necessarily quality. Treat it as a prior, then update on evidence. |
| [D] "If it were wrong, more people would have noticed" | Public dissent is rare even when private dissent is widespread (Theranos, FTX, 2008 housing market). |
| [D] "I noticed the manufactured social proof, so I'm immune" | Recognition reduces but does not eliminate the pull. Treat recognition as the start of defense, not the conclusion. |
| [D] Confusing aggregated wisdom with social proof | Markets aggregate information. Social proof aggregates behavior — which may not reflect information. Distinguish "independent estimators converged" from "people followed early movers." |
| → Add [O] entries here after each real use — paste the actual failure pattern | What went wrong and why |
Part of deciqAI Knowledge Skills — open-source thinking skills that make rigor executable for AI agents. Built by deciqAI · https://deciqai.com · Contributions welcome — see the template at the repo root.