Bias Bingo
Spot cognitive biases in real customer scenarios — first to a line wins.
Learning Objective
Players can identify common cognitive biases — anchoring, loss aversion, social proof, the peak-end rule, and more — as they surface in real customer interactions, building the habit of recognising bias in the moment rather than in hindsight.
How to Play
Setup
Print or share a 5×5 bingo card for each player. Each square names one cognitive bias (e.g. Anchoring, Loss Aversion, Social Proof, Endowment Effect, Peak-End Rule). Prepare 20–25 short scenario cards — one or two sentences each — describing a real customer situation that contains a bias. Shuffle the deck face-down in the centre of the table.
Rules
- The facilitator draws a scenario card and reads it aloud.
- Players have 30 seconds to decide which bias is at work and mark the matching square on their card.
- After time is up, the facilitator reveals the intended bias and invites one player to explain why in one sentence. Brief disagreements are welcome — they're the learning.
- First player to mark a complete horizontal, vertical, or diagonal line calls Bingo and wins the round.
- Play continues until the deck is exhausted or time runs out.
Debrief
Gather the group for ten minutes. Ask three questions in order:
- Which bias surprised you most — and where have you seen it in your own customer journey?
- Where does your organisation accidentally trigger these biases against the customer's interest?
- Pick one bias from your card. What would you change in a touchpoint this week to work with it rather than against the customer?
The debrief is where recognition becomes intention. Don't skip it.
CX Principle Reinforced
Behavioral economics in service design. Customers don't evaluate experiences rationally — they filter every interaction through cognitive shortcuts. Kahneman's dual-process model (System 1 / System 2) explains why: most decisions are fast, automatic, and bias-prone. Teams that can name a bias on sight are far more likely to design against it — or, where ethical, design with it to reduce friction and improve outcomes. Bias Bingo builds that muscle through repetition and mild competitive pressure, which itself exploits the generation effect: knowledge produced actively sticks harder than knowledge received passively.
Format
- Format: In-person or virtual (shared screen + digital cards)
- Players: 3–20
- Duration: 30–45 minutes
- Level: Easy — no prior behavioral economics knowledge required
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