Social Proof

Your constantly-updated definition of Social Proof and collection of videos and articles.
Be a conversation starter: Share this page and inspire others!

493 Shares

What is Social Proof?

Social proof (sometimes referred to as “informational social influence”) refers to the tendency of human beings to follow the actions of others when making decisions, placing weight on these actions to assume “the correct decision.” Social proof can be used to deliver credibility to prospective users and promote adoption or acceptance in the design of products and services.

The understanding that people are influenced by other people’s actions is well established and has seen extensive, profitable use in human history. It has led to the incorporation of social proof in the user experience of many websites and applications and in the real world. While the implementation of social proof remains ubiquitous—visible, for example, at the level of seating restaurant patrons by windows—perhaps the most famous examples are the star ratings on Amazon and eBay, and the reviews of products and sellers on these sites. Highly rated and highly recommended products (and sellers) are more likely to be successful than those with poor or no ratings.

Social proof is used for two reasons in user experience design:

  1. To deliver credibility. If other people find a source useful or credible, we are more likely to believe that source may useful or credible for ourselves.

  2. To promote adoption and/or acceptance. Volumes of people subscribing to a Facebook page or Twitter feed can encourage others to do the same. Seeing large numbers of people doing something is a psychological indicator to people that they should do the same thing.

Timeless, the power of social proof is undeniable. However, designers must consider the implications it involves. For example, while an organization’s Facebook page may show 10,000 likes, the power of social proof will only be evident if a high rate of engagement with those who like the page is evident.

Learn More About Social Proof

Make learning as easy as watching Netflix: Learn more about Social Proof by taking the online IxDF Course Mobile UX Design: The Beginner's Guide.

Why? Because design skills make you valuable. In any job. Any industry.

In This Course, You'll

  • Get excited as you design world-class mobile apps and interfaces that make a real difference in people's lives. Mobile UX Design doesn't just offer a skill, it gives you freedom. Freedom to work from anywhere, switch industries, and build a career on your own terms. With mobile-first design in high demand across the world, your skills can take you wherever you want to go. Almost 90% of the world's population owns a smartphone, and more than half of all online traffic comes from mobile devices, so your work has the power to reach billions. Whether you're designing for healthcare, finance, gaming, or education, you'll create intuitive, accessible solutions that make people's lives easier, faster, and better.

  • Make yourself invaluable by learning how to use your human strengths such as empathy, creativity, and problem-solving to build experiences people love and keep coming back to. As AI accelerates how fast we build and iterate, your timeless human-centered skills become even more powerful. You'll direct AI with deep human insight, and ensure outcomes remain meaningful, ethical, and genuinely resonate with people. This is how you stay in demand: Human-centered design skills transform AI from a tool into your new superpower. You'll create experiences that meet people where they are: On the go, at home, or at work. Well-designed mobile UX design leads to happier customers, retention, and revenue. This course will give you the skills to launch successful apps and interfaces that deliver results on the App Store, Google Play, or within your organization. No matter your background, you can master mobile UX design. With clear guidance and real-world examples, you'll apply your skills straight away! 

  • Gain confidence and credibility with optional practical exercises. You'll develop an app feature for mobile, tablet, and desktop, then adapt the design for different contexts like lighting conditions and user movement. You'll get comfortable with human-centered mobile design best practices and the mobile UX design lifecycle. Use our downloadable templates such as the Customer Journey Map and Usable, Satisfying, and Easy (USE) Scorecard to fast-track results and help you excel in any role, in any industry.

It's Easy to Fast-Track Your Career with the World's Best Experts

Master complex skills effortlessly with proven best practices and toolkits directly from the world's top design experts. Meet your experts for this course:

  • Frank Spillers: Service Designer and Founder and CEO of Experience Dynamics.

  • Alan Dix: Author of the bestselling book “Human-Computer Interaction” and Director of the Computational Foundry at Swansea University.

  • Mike Rohde: Experience and Interface Designer, author of the bestselling “The Sketchnote Handbook.”

Get an Industry-Recognized IxDF Course Certificate

Increase your credibility, salary potential and job opportunities by showing credible evidence of your skills.

IxDF Course Certificates set the industry gold standard. Add them to your LinkedIn profile, resumé, and job applications.

Course Certificate Example

Be in distinguished company, alongside industry leaders who train their teams with the IxDF and trust IxDF Course Certificates.

Our clients: IBM, HP, Adobe, GE, Accenture, Allianz, Phillips, Deezer, Capgemin, Mcafee, SAP, Telenor, Cigna, British Parliament, State of New York

All Free IxDF Articles on Social Proof

Read full article
Making Use of the Crowd – Social Proof and the User Experience - Article hero image
Interaction Design Foundation logo

Making Use of the Crowd – Social Proof and the User Experience

Social proof (sometimes referred to as informational social influence) is a psychological concept. It refers to the tendency of human beings to follow the actions of others when making decisions and placing weight on those actions to assume “the correct decision”. It’s a concept that can be used in

Social shares
620
Published
Read Article
Read full article
The Process of Persuasion — How to Make a Casual Browser an Intrigued User - Article hero image
Interaction Design Foundation logo

The Process of Persuasion — How to Make a Casual Browser an Intrigued User

Persuasion is a powerful force that changes the attitudes and behaviors of others. It’s all about influence and manifests itself in many aspects of everyday life. People can persuade themselves, too. Persuasion’s most direct portrayals may show up in such places as courtrooms, political debates, and

Social shares
682
Published
Read Article
Read full article
The Seven Simple Principles of Conversion Centred Design (CCD) and How to Use Them - Article hero image
Interaction Design Foundation logo

The Seven Simple Principles of Conversion Centred Design (CCD) and How to Use Them

Oli Gardner – the Creative Director of Unbounce (a landing page builder for marketers), is an advocate of CCD. He says that deploying CCD makes each page you create on a website a piece of “accountable content”. In that you can measure the impact, purpose and success of each page as that page plays

Social shares
854
Published
Read Article

Making Use of the Crowd – Social Proof and the User Experience

Making Use of the Crowd – Social Proof and the User Experience

Social proof (sometimes referred to as informational social influence) is a psychological concept. It refers to the tendency of human beings to follow the actions of others when making decisions and placing weight on those actions to assume “the correct decision”. It’s a concept that can be used in product design for the Internet and mobile web to help drive user decisions in the direction that a business wants them to go.

Human beings are social creatures. We live in communities, towns and cities. We raise families and have friends. It’s what defines us. It also makes us vulnerable to the influence of other people. Social influence, which is what we refer to when we talk about the impact of other people’s actions on our own, can be very positive (it’s what, for example, makes us less likely to get drunk and start fights in public) but it can also be negative (when it leads to “herd behaviour” or “following the crowd”).

The History of Social Proof

Social proof is not a recent phenomenon. It was identified in 1935 by Muzafer Sherif, a social psychologist credited with developing social judgement theory, in an experiment.

Subjects were seated in a dark room and asked to stare at a pinprick of light a few feet away from them. They were asked to estimate how much the dot was moving. In reality, the light was stationary but the autokinetic effect (an observation that stationary objects appear to move when there is no second point of reference to compare them to) led people to believe it was moving.

A week or so later, the experiment was repeated but this time in groups. People were asked to shout out their estimates of the movement and Muzafer Sherif observed that the group would tend to converge on an estimate – even if these estimates were vastly different to those that they had given in the first part of the experiment. The experiment was then repeated again with the individuals on their own and their estimates tended to remain with the group output rather than with their own original estimate.

In short, social proof demonstrated that we are likely to converge on a course of action when others provide that action for us.

The Introduction of Social Proof in the User Experience

The understanding that people are influenced by other people’s actions has led to the incorporation of social proof in the user experience of many websites and applications and in the real world too.

Author/Copyright holder: Mattes. Copyright terms and licence: Public Domain

Perhaps, the most famous examples are the star ratings on Amazon and eBay and the reviews of products and sellers on these sites. Highly rated and highly recommended products (and sellers) are more likely to be successful than those with poor or no-ratings.

Social proof is used for two reasons in user experience design:

  • To deliver credibility. If other people find a source useful or credible – we are more likely to believe that source may be useful or credible for ourselves. An indication of this belief in other people that is displayed within the site or product – boosts credibility for other users.

  • To promote adoption and/or acceptance. Volumes of people subscribing to a Facebook page or Twitter feed can encourage others to do the same. Large amounts of people doing something is a psychological indicator to people that they should do the same thing.

Implementing Social Proof in Your User Experience

If you intend to implement social-proof in your user experience you can test the efficiency of it using the following:

A/B Testing

Author/Copyright holder: RaHul Rodriguez. Copyright terms and licence: CC BY-SA 2.0

A/B testing can help you determine whether social proof is aiding conversions. You can test user comments, reviews, social sharing, etc. and see which, if any, are the most beneficial.

Usability Testing

If you’re using social proof to try and increase your credibility – you want to conduct some survey questions that enable you to gauge user confidence.

You can also use usability testing to ensure that the volumes of social proof that you’re providing aren’t overwhelming users. Too much information can be worse than none at all. Users are happy to be convinced by social proof but there’s only so much data that they can process easily.

Eyetracking and Usability Testing

Author/Copyright holder: Z22. Copyright terms and licence: CC BY 3.0

You might also want to determine whether users even notice your social proof. After all, position is important and it’s quite possible that your users won’t benefit from social proof if they don’t even notice it’s taking place. Eyetracking software as part of usability testing can help you decide whether users are noticing social proof and whether they’re paying any real amount of attention to it if they do notice it.

Load Time Testing

Social proof, particularly when it comes from social media or other plugins, can slow down the performance of your website or application. You want to keep measuring load times because poor load times can cause abandonment even before the user has had a chance to interact with your content.

Social Proof and the Mobile Web

Social proof is harder to integrate into the mobile user experience. Average user ratings are popular in app stores, for example, to indicate the value of a particular app and some brief summary reviews are also displayed. However, it’s vital to keep an eye on the available screen real estate and be certain that you’re not overwhelming users when it comes to delivering social proof on mobile. Usability testing is a must.

The Takeaway

Social proof can be a powerful tool to help you guide users to make specific decisions online and in mobile apps. However, you have to take care with how it is implemented and test the way it is implemented to get the greatest benefit. The tips above should help you examine the way you integrate social proof in your products.

References

The original study by Sherif: "A study of some social factors in perception". Archives of Psychology 27: 187

See awesome examples of social proof at work in design.

Hero Image: Author/Copyright holder: Jurgen Appelo. Copyright terms and licence: CC BY 2.0

Feel Stuck?
Want Better Job Options?

AI is replacing jobs everywhere, yet design jobs are booming with a projected 45% job growth. With design skills, you can create products and services people love. More love means more impact and greater salary potential.

At IxDF, we help you from your first course to your next job, all in one place.

See How Design Skills Turn Into Job Options
Privacy Settings
By using this site, you accept our Cookie Policy and Terms of Use.
Customize
Accept all

Be the One Who Inspires

People remember who shares great ideas.

Share on:

Academic Credibility — On Autopilot

Don't waste time googling citation formats. Just copy, paste and look legit in seconds.