Shortcuts may have a price tag
Your audience’s brain is constantly scanning for the fastest route to meaning. And from this point, heuristics help them skip unnecessary steps. For example, you may already know about heuristics or shortcuts such as anchoring (where people rely heavily on the first piece of information they encounter), or availability (the easier something is to recall, the more likely it is believed to be true).
I’ve been reflecting on lesser-known heuristics lately, especially as AI tools are starting to impact a lot of business processes and content, essentially offering shortcuts to shortcuts. For example, a lesser-known heuristic is the effort heuristic, according to which things that seem to require more effort to produce are judged as having higher value or quality. As AI promises to create more in faster and cheaper ways, we must be careful because the value we associate with that output will be perceived as lower. The shortcut that saves time may cost people their credibility.
In the future, I suspect that successful people will be those who make their effort visible through craftsmanship, detail, or transparency, so that their audience’s brain can still sense the value behind it.