137: Loss Aversion: Why "Don't Lose" Beats "Get" in Ad Creative

Framework Sunday: The Nobel Prize-winning principle that explains why fear outperforms aspiration.

Loss Aversion: Why "Don't Lose" Beats "Get" in Ad Creative

Framework Sunday: The Nobel Prize-winning principle that explains why fear outperforms aspiration.

Hey everyone, Chase here from CreativeOS.

Let’s go over a principle that dictates much of how we sell and you yes I know you will THINK you are an expert at it but I can guarantee you are not. This comes from the world of behavioral economics and this new look at it will change how you write hooks.

Here's the setup: two ads for the same product.

Ad A: "Get 20% more conversions with our landing page tool."

Ad B: "Stop losing 20% of your conversions to a broken landing page."

Same offer. Same math. Completely different psychological impact.

Ad B will almost always outperform. Here's why.

What you'll learn:

  • The psychology behind loss aversion (and the research that proved it)

  • Why framing the same benefit as "avoiding a loss" beats "gaining a win"

  • How to rewrite your hooks using loss framing without being manipulative

The Research: Kahneman & Tversky's Prospect Theory

In 1979, psychologists Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tversky published a paper that would eventually win Kahneman a Nobel Prize.

Their finding: Losses hurt approximately twice as much as equivalent gains feel good.

If you find $100, you feel good. If you lose $100, you feel terrible — disproportionately terrible. The pain of loss is roughly 2x the pleasure of gain.

This is loss aversion. And it's not a marketing theory — it's how human brains are wired.

We evolved to prioritize threats over opportunities. Missing a meal was more dangerous than finding extra food. Avoiding the predator mattered more than catching the prey.

That wiring still runs our decision-making today.

What This Means for Creative

Most ads are written as gain frames:

  • "Get faster results"

  • "Build a better body"

  • "Grow your revenue"

These work. But they're fighting against a stronger force.

Loss frames work with human psychology instead of against it:

  • "Stop leaving results on the table"

  • "Don't let another year go by without the body you want"

  • "How much revenue are you losing to [problem]?"

Same benefit. Different frame. Stronger response.

The Formula: Reframe Gain as Avoided Loss

Take any benefit statement and flip it.

Gain Frame

Loss Frame

Get more sleep

Stop losing sleep to [problem]

Save money on groceries

Don't waste money on groceries that go bad

Build muscle faster

Stop leaving gains in the gym

Increase conversion rate

Stop losing customers at checkout

The loss frame asks: what is the customer currently losing that your product stops?

That's a more urgent question than "what will they gain?"

Gains are nice to have. Losses are problems — and problems demand solutions.

Come to CREATIVE PLAYBOOK: Retention

Come learn how retention creative is built and what moves the needle this Tuesday - 3/17 @ 11am PST.

Our guests are: Phil Rivers & Thomas Lalas - two titans of retention marketing in e-commerce.

This is your opportunity to work with them and learn what actually moves the needle on your retention focused creative.

Loss Aversion in the Wild

Look at high-performing ads and you'll see loss framing everywhere:

"Don't miss out" — Loss of opportunity.

"Limited time only" — Loss of availability.

"Your competitors are already using this" — Loss of competitive position.

"Stop wasting money on [old solution]" — Loss of money.

"How much longer are you going to struggle with [problem]?" — Loss of time.

Even urgency and scarcity tactics work because of loss aversion. You're not excited about the deal — you're afraid of losing access to it.

When to Use Loss Framing

Loss frames work best when:

1. The audience is problem-aware. They already know something's wrong. Loss framing amplifies that pain.

2. The stakes feel real. "Losing customers" hits harder than "losing email open rates." Frame the loss in terms that matter.

3. You can be specific. "Stop losing 23% of your revenue to cart abandonment" beats "Stop losing money." Numbers make losses concrete.

When to use gain frames instead:

  • Aspirational products where the audience doesn't feel pain (luxury, lifestyle)

  • Audiences who've never considered the problem (unaware — you need to build awareness first)

  • Brand campaigns where optimism matters more than urgency

The Line Between Persuasion and Manipulation

Loss framing works. That comes with responsibility.

The ethical line: Are you naming a real loss, or manufacturing fear?

If your audience genuinely loses time, money, or results from not using your product — naming that loss is helpful. You're clarifying the stakes.

If you're inventing fear to pressure a purchase — that's manipulation. It erodes trust long-term.

Good loss framing makes people think: "You're right, I am losing that."

Bad loss framing makes people feel manipulated: "They're just trying to scare me."

The difference is honesty.

What We Learned

  1. Losses feel 2x stronger than gains. This is wired into human psychology. Your creative should account for it.

  2. Reframe benefits as avoided losses. Take any "get X" statement and flip it to "stop losing X." Test both.

  3. Specificity amplifies loss framing. "Stop losing 20% of your conversions" hits harder than "stop losing conversions." Make the loss concrete.

How to Apply This Week

  1. Take your top 3 performing hooks. Rewrite each one as a loss frame. ("Get X" becomes "Stop losing X.")

  2. A/B test gain vs. loss framing. Same product, same audience, different frame. Measure the difference.

  3. Audit your urgency tactics. Are they named losses (loss of access, loss of price) or just fake countdown timers? Real stakes outperform manufactured ones.

Keep Creating,

Chase Mohseni

P.S. Callouts:

  • Sign up for our events calendar so you can get access to all the experts we work with helping you build your creative intelligence in real time.

  • try CreativeOS free and get 25% off your first month with the newsie exclusive - use code: CREATIVEDISCIPLINE at checkout.

  • Link I loved this week - a write up on advertiser fatigue by Barry Hott.