Robert Cialdini’s first principle of persuasion.
Reciprocity is the deeply human urge to return a favor. Give someone a small gift — a sample, a free guide, a personal greeting — and they feel a quiet pressure to give something back. In marketing, “back” usually means a purchase.
How It Works
A salesperson hands you a sample, a website offers you a free PDF, a charity sends you address labels you didn’t ask for. Each tiny gift creates a small social debt. The cost to the giver is low; the resulting bump in compliance is consistently measurable across decades of research.
Common Examples
| Where You See It | The “Gift” | The Expected Return |
|---|---|---|
| Supermarket sampling | A bite of cheese, a sip of wine | Buying the full package on the spot |
| Costco and warehouse-club sampling | Hot food samples threaded through the store | Extended dwell time and basket size, not just the sampled item |
| Department-store perfume counters | A spritz, a card, a brief consultation | A perfume purchase the buyer didn’t plan to make today |
| Cannabis dispensaries, butcher counters, bakeries | A taste of a new product | Trial converted to a regular line item |
| Charity mailings | Free address labels or stickers | A donation envelope you feel rude binning |
| Online businesses | “Free” e-book, checklist, or webinar | An email signup that becomes a sales funnel |
| Restaurants | Free amuse-bouche or after-dinner mint with the bill | A noticeably larger tip |
| Software | Free tier or extended trial | Conversion to paid once you depend on it |
The Psychology Behind It
The norm of reciprocity is one of the most universal social rules across human cultures, documented in detail by sociologist Alvin Gouldner and used as a central principle in Cialdini’s Influence. The discomfort of “owing” someone is strong enough that we’ll often repay with something worth far more than the original gift.
How to Protect Yourself
- Recognize when a “gift” is part of a sales process — it almost always is.
- Accept the sample without the obligation: a polite “thanks” is a complete repayment.
- For free e-books and lead magnets, use a separate email address you don’t check often.
- Decide what you’d buy before the freebie arrives, not after.
- Notice escalation: small gifts often precede larger asks.
Key Takeaway
A free sample is marketing, not a gift. Receiving doesn’t obligate you to buy.