References are the spine beneath the stories: experiments, papers, and data that anchor the claims in observable behavior.
They also reveal a pattern: pre-suasion is not magic, it is repeated evidence that attention and association shape judgment before deliberation begins. Different fields converge on the same point—marketing, social psychology, neuroscience, behavioral economics.
For a practitioner, references do something practical: they separate what is reliable from what is merely plausible. You can trace an effect back to its conditions and see where it breaks.
That matters because influence invites overconfidence. The more a tactic ‘works,’ the more you forget its boundary lines. References put the boundary lines back on the map.