YouTube is the world’s 2nd-most visited website in the world, right after Google. It is the second most popular social media platform. Suffice it to say, you should start caring about your YouTube content.
Have you ever bought a bookshelf or a table from IKEA or other furniture stores and assembled it yourself? Do you know the feeling of satisfaction that comes at the end of it? The IKEA Effect is named after that feeling.
The ambiguity bias is the brain's natural distaste for uncertainty or lack of information. If we perceive any gaps in the information provided or it seems like details are missing, then we are less likely to trust that information.
The bandwagon effect states that we choose to do something mainly because we see others doing it. It is a cognitive bias, i.e., a trick our mind unwittingly plays on us.
The anchoring bias is our tendency to focus on or anchor our attention on the first piece of information that we stumble upon. This anchor information becomes the benchmark to judge any other information that we then come across. Cognitive biases are the errors in judgment that our minds make when making sense of the complex world around us.
According to the Statista research department, twitter’s worldwide revenue is over 5 billion US dollars this year, increasing from 3.72 billion dollars last year
Like most people, we also visit a set of websites on a regular basis, often these websites are the most visited websites on the internet. Together the top 3-4 websites get more visits than all the rest combined.