Propaganda
Written in 1928 by Edward Bernays—nephew of Sigmund Freud—this book reveals how mass psychology shapes public opinion. Everything you see in marketing, PR, and politics traces back to these principles.
The Core Reality
Bernays opens with a statement that would get him canceled today: “The conscious and intelligent manipulation of the organized habits and opinions of the masses is an important element in democratic society.”
Translation: Modern democracy doesn’t work through rational individuals making informed choices. It works through organized influence shaping what people think they want.
The Invisible Government: There exists a hidden infrastructure that determines which products succeed, which ideas spread, and which leaders win. Most people think they’re deciding freely. They’re not.
Why Propaganda is Necessary
Bernays argues that modern society is too complex for everyone to make informed decisions about everything. There are thousands of products, hundreds of policy issues, and endless information.
Solution? Specialists who shape opinion for different domains. Fashion designers tell people what to wear. Tech reviewers tell them what to buy. Political consultants tell them how to vote.
The uncomfortable truth: Most people prefer being told what to think. It’s easier than thinking independently.
The Herd Instinct
Humans are pack animals. We look to the group for cues about:
- What’s true (social proof)
- What’s safe (status quo bias)
- What’s valuable (consensus)
Bernays realized: Control what the “herd” believes, and you control individual behavior—without anyone feeling controlled.
The Mechanisms of Propaganda
1. The Third-Party Technique
Don’t sell directly. Use trusted authorities to endorse your message.
Example: Bacon and Eggs
Bernays wanted to sell more bacon for a client. He didn’t run bacon ads. Instead, he surveyed doctors asking: “Is a heavy breakfast better than a light one?”
Most doctors said yes (this was the 1920s). He then publicized: “5,000 doctors recommend hearty breakfast” alongside images of bacon and eggs.
Result? Bacon and eggs became the “healthy” American breakfast. It wasn’t an ad—it was “medical advice.”
Modern version: Influencer marketing, expert endorsements, “studies show…”
2. Creating the News
Don’t wait for media coverage. Create events that BECOME news.
Example: Torches of Freedom
In 1929, women didn’t smoke in public—it was taboo. American Tobacco Company wanted to change this.
Bernays didn’t advertise. He organized a march where fashionable women would light cigarettes as “Torches of Freedom” during New York’s Easter Parade.
He tipped off press. They covered it as news—”Feminist women challenge social norms!”
Result? Smoking became a symbol of female liberation. Sales exploded.
Modern version: Product launches as events, “movements” that happen to sell things, manufactured controversies
3. The Symbol Technique
Attach your product to powerful symbols and emotions.
Bernays had clients selling pianos. People saw them as formal, stuffy, difficult.
Solution? He convinced architects to design homes with “music rooms.” Celebrities were photographed with pianos. Society pages showed pianos at parties.
The piano became a symbol of: sophistication, cultured living, social status.
Modern version: Brands associating with causes, lifestyle marketing, identity-based consumption
The Group Psychology Framework
Bernays identified that people don’t think—they feel, then rationalize.
The Emotion > Rationalization Pattern
Step 1: Trigger an emotion (desire, fear, belonging)
Step 2: Let them rationalize the emotion with logic
Step 3: They believe they made a rational choice
Example: Luxury car purchase
- Real reason: Status, ego, feeling successful
- Stated reason: “Better safety ratings, superior German engineering”
Marketers sell the emotion. Customers buy the rationalization.
The Leader Technique
Identify and influence opinion leaders. Everyone else follows.
Bernays realized: Most people don’t form opinions independently. They adopt opinions from:
- People they admire
- People in their social group
- People who seem authoritative
Strategy: Convince 100 influencers, and you’ve convinced 10,000 followers.
Modern application: Every influencer campaign, thought leadership strategy, celebrity endorsement
The Network Effect: Ideas don’t spread person-to-person equally. They spread through key nodes who amplify to networks. Control the nodes, control the spread.
The Propaganda Business
Fashion as Control
Fashion isn’t about aesthetics—it’s about manufacturing desire and obsolescence.
Bernays worked with fashion industry to synchronize designers, retailers, and media around “new trends.” The goal? Make last year’s clothes feel outdated.
Key insight: People don’t buy clothes because theirs wore out. They buy because their old clothes are “out of style.”
Modern version: Tech upgrade cycles, car model years, home renovation trends
Political Propaganda
Politicians don’t sell policies—they sell personalities and stories.
Bernays advised politicians to:
- Create photo ops that tell stories
- Use simple, memorable slogans
- Associate with trusted symbols (flags, family, dogs)
- Never lead with policy—lead with emotion
Quote: “The public is not made up of citizens choosing between candidates. It’s made up of consumers choosing between brands.”
Corporate Propaganda
Business isn’t about better products—it’s about better stories.
Old model: Make better product → Market it directly
Bernays model: Create environment where your product seems like the obvious choice
Example: Rather than advertise soap, create hygiene education campaigns that make people self-conscious. Now they WANT soap. You didn’t sell—you created the desire.
The Psychology of the Crowd
Bernays built on Le Bon’s crowd psychology and Freud’s unconscious mind research.
Key Principles:
1. Crowds think emotionally, not rationally
Logic persuades individuals. Emotion moves crowds. Always appeal to feeling first.
2. Crowds need leaders
People want someone to follow. Position yourself (or your proxy) as that leader.
3. Crowds want to belong
Nobody wants to be on the outside. Show them that “people like them” already chose you.
4. Crowds are suggestible
Repeated exposure to an idea makes it seem true. Repetition > Logic.
5. Crowds follow trends
Once momentum starts, it becomes self-reinforcing. Early wins are critical.
Modern Applications
In Marketing
Stop selling features. Attach your product to identity, status, or lifestyle.
Apple doesn’t sell computers—they sell “thinking different.” Nike doesn’t sell shoes—they sell “just do it.”
Create movements, not campaigns. Make customers feel part of something bigger.
Tesla doesn’t advertise. They created a movement around sustainable energy. Customers evangelize for free.
Use third-party validation. Get experts, influencers, and users to make your case.
Amazon reviews, TripAdvisor ratings, “recommended by experts”—all Bernays techniques.
In Social Media
Manufacture consensus. Show popular content first. People follow what seems popular.
This is why “trending” sections exist—they tell you what you should care about.
Amplify emotion. Outrage, joy, fear spread faster than nuance.
Algorithms prioritize emotional content because engagement (Bernays’s “emotional trigger”) drives usage.
Create FOMO. Limited time, exclusive access, “everyone else is doing this.”
Every countdown timer, “only 3 left,” and “trending now” is manufactured urgency.
In Personal Brand
Don’t sell yourself directly. Get others to recommend you.
Testimonials, case studies, media features—third-party validation beats self-promotion.
Associate with credible institutions. Speaking at conferences, publishing in respected outlets, affiliating with known brands.
Create your own “news.” Launch something. Publish research. Make data-driven announcements.
Defense Against Propaganda
Bernays believed informed citizens could resist manipulation. Here’s how:
1. Question Your Desires
When you want something, ask: “Did I come up with this desire, or was it planted?”
Most consumer desires are manufactured. Recognizing this breaks the spell.
2. Identify the Source
Who’s funding the study? Who benefits from this message? Follow the incentives.
Most “news” is manufactured by PR firms. Most “studies” are funded by interested parties.
3. Resist Social Proof
“Everyone’s doing it” is not a reason. It’s manipulation.
The herd is usually wrong about most things because the herd thinks emotionally, not rationally.
4. Delay Decisions
Propaganda works through urgency. “Buy now!” “Limited time!” “Don’t miss out!”
Waiting 24 hours breaks the emotional spell. Most impulses don’t survive delay.
The Reality: You’re being influenced constantly. Every ad, news story, product placement, and social post is engineered. The question isn’t whether you’re manipulated—it’s whether you’re aware of it.
The Ethics Question
Bernays believed propaganda was neutral—a tool that could be used for good or evil.
He helped sell war bonds (good), cigarettes to women (bad), public health campaigns (good), and political candidates (debatable).
His argument: In complex societies, some level of organized influence is necessary. The alternative is chaos.
The counter: Who decides what’s “necessary”? Who controls the controllers?
No easy answers. But knowing how the game works helps you decide how to play.
Your Action Framework
If you’re selling:
- Stop trying to convince with logic
- Create emotional associations
- Use third-party validators
- Manufacture social proof
- Make it a movement, not a product
If you’re buying:
- Question manufactured desires
- Identify the hidden influencers
- Delay emotional decisions
- Resist herd mentality
- Follow the incentives
The Ultimate Truth
Propaganda isn’t going away. It’s more sophisticated now than when Bernays wrote this.
Every recommendation algorithm, influencer campaign, and viral trend is propaganda refined through 100 years of practice.
You have two choices:
- Remain unconscious: Be influenced without knowing it
- Become conscious: See the patterns and decide your response
This book is your field guide to manufactured consent. Use it wisely.