When I first learned about the Ben Franklin Effect during my psychology reading, it seemed counterintuitive. The idea that someone likes you more after you ask them for a favor—rather than after you do a favor for them—felt backwards. Yet this cognitive phenomenon, rooted in cognitive dissonance theory, has profound implications for how we build relationships, navigate workplace dynamics, and influence others. Whether you’re managing a team, building a business network, or simply trying to strengthen friendships, understanding the Ben Franklin Effect can transform how you approach human connection.
The Ben Franklin Effect is named after founding father Benjamin Franklin himself, who documented a clever technique for winning over a political opponent. Rather than trying harder to impress the man, Franklin asked him for a favor—specifically, to borrow a rare book from his library. After the opponent lent him the book, their relationship dramatically improved. Franklin realized something psychological had shifted: by asking for the favor, he’d given his opponent a reason to perceive him as someone worth helping. The effect has since been validated by modern psychology and represents one of the most useful, ethical tools for building genuine relationships. [2]
Understanding the Psychology Behind the Effect
The Ben Franklin Effect operates through a principle called cognitive dissonance—the uncomfortable mental tension we experience when holding two contradictory beliefs simultaneously (Festinger, 1957). Here’s how it works: If you ask someone for a favor and they comply, they’ve now taken an action (helping you). This creates a potential conflict in their self-perception. If they previously felt neutral or mildly negative toward you, their mind resolves this tension by reinterpreting their feelings: “I helped this person, therefore, I must like them more than I thought.” [3]
Related: cognitive biases guide
This isn’t manipulation in the traditional sense—it’s a genuine rewriting of emotional response based on observable behavior. Research in social psychology has consistently shown that people infer their own attitudes from their actions (Bem, 1972). When someone acts kindly toward you, they unconsciously adopt the belief that they must feel kindly toward you. The Ben Franklin Effect leverages this natural psychological process. [1]
What makes this effect particularly powerful in professional and personal contexts is that it creates authentic liking, not grudging compliance. The person who helps you doesn’t feel coerced; they feel invested in you because their own behavior has convinced them to be. This is why the Ben Franklin Effect produces stronger, more durable relationship improvements than simply doing favors for people.
How the Ben Franklin Effect Differs From Reciprocity
Many people confuse the Ben Franklin Effect with the reciprocity principle, but they operate in opposite directions. The reciprocity principle states that when someone does a favor for you, you feel obligated to return the favor. This is powerful but transactional. You do something nice, they feel obligated, they do something nice back.
The Ben Franklin Effect reverses this: you ask them for help, and So they like you more. It’s not about obligation—it’s about investment. Psychologist Robert Cialdini has documented how reciprocity creates compliance but not always genuine liking (Cialdini, 2009). Conversely, the Ben Franklin Effect creates genuine liking while also subtly encouraging future cooperation.
In my experience working with teachers and colleagues, I’ve noticed that the most respected figures in institutions aren’t always those who do the most favors. They’re often those who are comfortable asking for help—and doing so in a genuine, non-manipulative way. This vulnerability paradoxically increases respect and affection. [4]
Practical Applications in the Workplace
For knowledge workers and professionals, the Ben Franklin Effect offers concrete advantages in networking, team dynamics, and leadership. Here’s how to apply it authentically:
Building Rapport With New Colleagues
When joining a new team or organization, resist the urge to immediately impress people with what you can do. Instead, ask for help. Ask a colleague to explain a process, request feedback on your work, or ask for a recommendation for lunch spots. These small asks activate the Ben Franklin Effect. Your colleagues will feel invested in your success because they’ve already invested effort in helping you. This creates a foundation of genuine goodwill that’s much stronger than admiration alone.
Strengthening Relationships With Difficult People
If you have a colleague or supervisor with whom the relationship feels strained, the Ben Franklin Effect offers a path forward. Rather than working harder to please them, ask them for something—advice, a review of your work, or their perspective on a challenge. Make the ask genuine and specific. Their act of helping will rewire their perception of you, often more effectively than weeks of additional effort on your part.
Leadership and Team Management
Leaders often believe they must maintain an image of competence and self-sufficiency. Yet research shows that leaders who ask team members for advice and input build stronger, more motivated teams. When you ask someone for their expertise, you’re signaling that you value them. The Ben Franklin Effect means they’ll feel more positive about you and more committed to supporting your shared goals. This is why effective leaders aren’t those who have all the answers—they’re those who know how to ask good questions.
The Science-Backed Evidence
The Ben Franklin Effect has been studied extensively in controlled settings. In one classic experiment, researchers had participants perform a task, then asked them to either receive money for participating or to do a favor for the researcher by continuing without compensation. Those who did the favor subsequently rated the researcher more favorably, demonstrating the effect in action (Cialdini, 2009).
More recent research has explored the boundary conditions of the effect. Studies show the Ben Franklin Effect works most reliably when the person being asked feels they have choice in whether to help. If someone feels coerced or obligated, the effect weakens or reverses. This is why authentic asks—where the other person genuinely could refuse—create the strongest positive shift in liking.
The effect is also strongest when the favor requires a moderate amount of effort. A tiny favor that costs almost nothing, or an enormous favor that creates real hardship, produces smaller shifts than a reasonably-sized ask that requires genuine engagement (Festinger, 1957). This is important: if your ask is so trivial it’s insulting, or so large it’s unreasonable, you won’t activate the effect optimally.
How to Use the Ben Franklin Effect Authentically
To harness the Ben Franklin Effect without manipulating others, follow these principles: