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How LinkedIn (and Other Products) Play With Our Minds: The Psychology Behind The Nudges

The Science of Attention: A Playbook for Engagement

Vadym Grin
UX Planet
Published in
5 min readFeb 16, 2025

A Hook Illustration

Have you ever received one of those emails from LinkedIn that says “X people viewed your profile this week”? Of course, you have! If you are registered there and your profile is active…

LinkedIn Email Highlighting Number of Profile Views
LinkedIn Email Highlighting Number of Profile Views

At first glance, it seems like an innocuous notification, but peel back the layers, and you’ll find a master class in psychological design. These emails aren’t just updates, they’re carefully crafted nudges designed to get you to log back in.

And of course we’ll break it down!

The Power of Social Proof: “Look at You, Rockstar!”

One of the most obvious psychological principles at play here is social proof. By highlighting the number of people who have viewed your profile, LinkedIn is essentially saying, “Hey, you’re popular! People care about you!”. Which is not true at all, but you want to feel like it is that way.

It taps into our innate need for validation. We want to feel seen, appreciated, and valued. LinkedIn designers know this, and they use it to make a connection between your self-esteem and your activity on their platform.

LinkedIn Email Highlighting Number of Posts Views
LinkedIn Email Highlighting Number of Posts Views

Think of it as a tiny ego boost: if 93 people are looking at your profile, or your post got more than 700 hundreds impressions, you must be doing something right. And you should come back and keep doing it, even if it’s just browsing, liking, or commenting on posts with a template: “Oh, this is so exciting!”.

The Curiosity Gap: “Guess Who?”

Here’s where LinkedIn turns up the psychological heat. They tell you how many people have viewed your profile, but not who those people are and when exactly they looked at your page. Why is that? Because it creates a curiosity gap, a phenomenon explained in…

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Published in UX Planet

UX Planet is a one-stop resource for everything related to user experience.

Written by Vadym Grin

Head of Product Design at Atolls · Writer and Publicist · Berlin, Germany https://eidosdesign.substack.com

Responses (8)

Write a response

Awesome text!

I was thinking if opening a LinkedIn…but I’m reconsidering after your text

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even when you know they ate doing it. it still works.

how often do you check your Medium stats?

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“One of the most obvious psychological principles at play here is social proof. By highlighting the number of people who have viewed your profile, LinkedIn is essentially saying, “Hey, you’re popular! People care about you!”. Which is not true at…

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