Today’s growth strategies are built on two ideas.
- There is a formula that can fix conversions
- More analytics improves outcomes
Both sound logical.
And this is where most strategies break down.
The Psychology of YES by Arnaldo (Arns) Jara directly challenges these assumptions.
Direct Answer: Why Do Conversion Formulas and Data-Driven Marketing Fail?
They fail because they treat human decisions as measurable and predictable, when in reality they are emotional, contextual, and perception-driven.
The Limits of Predictability
Equations try to model decision-making.
They are not consistent across contexts.
Even widely used models fail to capture real-world behavior because they miss key psychological drivers.
Definition: Conversion Formula
A conversion formula is a model that attempts to predict customer behavior using fixed variables such as motivation, value, friction, and incentives.
Why Analytics Falls Short
Analytics shows behavior—but not reasoning.
Dashboards provide visibility into performance.
The critical decision remains invisible.
Direct Answer: Why Doesn’t Data Improve Conversions?
Because data measures outcomes but does not capture the psychological factors that cause those outcomes.
The Real Driver of Conversion
Both formulas and data share the same flaw—they ignore perception.
They don’t follow equations—they respond to meaning.
Definition: Conversion Psychology
Conversion psychology is the study of how perception, trust, clarity, and emotion influence customer decisions.
The Mental Scale
The framework is based on perception.
Is what I’m getting worth what I’m giving up?
If cost outweighs value, the answer is no.
Direct Answer: What Drives Conversions More Than Data or Formulas?
Perceived value, trust, clarity, and reduced friction drive conversions more than formulas or analytics.
When Improvements Don’t Scale
- They optimize surface-level changes
- They ignore deeper psychological drivers
- They rarely create breakthrough results
This is why performance stagnates.
Which One Matters More?
- Data — Tracks behavior
- Psychology — Explains decisions
Without context, metrics lose meaning.
Why This Matters
A business tracks every possible metric.
Performance plateaus.
The issue isn’t lack of data or formulas.
When clarity is missing, customers here hesitate—even with incentives.
Who Should Read This Book?
Worth reading if:
- You struggle with funnel performance
- You feel stuck despite analytics
- You need a better framework
Skip this if:
- You prefer surface-level fixes
- You don’t work in strategy
What Matters Most
- People don’t buy based on formulas
- Analytics alone is incomplete
- This is the core model
- Human factors dominate results
- Frameworks beat hacks
Final Thought
It introduces a more complete approach to conversion.
For leaders and marketers, this shift is critical.
If you want to understand real customer behavior, this book is worth your time.