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Hampton Founders

@hamptonfounders · 33.2K subscribers · 92 videos · 1 analyzed

candid conversations to sharpen how you operate and lead.

Share Influence Report

Communication Profile (across 1 videos)

Stated Purpose

candid conversations to sharpen how you operate and lead.

Operative Pattern

Across 1 videos, this channel demonstrates moderate persuasion intensity, primarily through Social Proof. Recurring themes suggest consistent operative goals beyond stated content.

Avg Intensity

Moderate 40%

Avg Transparency

Transparent 80%

Top Technique

Social proof

Presenting the popularity or consensus of an opinion as evidence that it's correct. When you see many others have endorsed something, it feels safer to follow. This shortcut can be manufactured — fake reviews, inflated counts, and cherry-picked polls all simulate consensus.

Cialdini's Social Proof principle (1984); Asch conformity experiments (1951)

Persuasion Dimensions

Call to Action
50%
Engagement Mechanics
40%
Emotional Appeal
30%
Story Shaping
20%
Implicit Claims
20%
Group Characterization
10%
Uses AI to group individual video agendas into recurring patterns
Viewer Guidance (3 tips)

Evaluate the ask

Calls to action follow emotional buildup. Consider whether the ask would feel as urgent without the preceding framing.

Notice retention tactics

Content structure prioritizes keeping you watching over informing you. Ask if the format serves understanding or attention.

Watch for emotional framing

This content frequently uses emotional appeal. Notice when feelings are being prioritized over evidence.

Technique Fingerprint (from knowledge graph)

Urgency framing

AI detected as: Exclusivity-as-compliance

Creating artificial time pressure to force a decision before you can think it through. 'Only 3 left!' 'Act now!' The technique works because genuine scarcity is a real signal, so the urgency feels rational even when it's manufactured.

Cialdini's Scarcity principle (1984); dark patterns research (Mathur et al., 2019)

Urgency framing

Creating artificial time pressure to force a decision before you can think it through. 'Only 3 left!' 'Act now!' The technique works because genuine scarcity is a real signal, so the urgency feels rational even when it's manufactured.

Cialdini's Scarcity principle (1984); dark patterns research (Mathur et al., 2019)

Social proof

Presenting the popularity or consensus of an opinion as evidence that it's correct. When you see many others have endorsed something, it feels safer to follow. This shortcut can be manufactured — fake reviews, inflated counts, and cherry-picked polls all simulate consensus.

Cialdini's Social Proof principle (1984); Asch conformity experiments (1951)

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