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blackroad-advertising-playbook/paper/blackroad-product-marketing-strategy.md
blackboxprogramming 682b68b7af Add psychology-driven ad landing pages and fix author name
- Hub page (ads/index.html): priming ticker, hero stats, product cards,
  compliance badges, social proof, Cialdini strip, ego-defensive CTA
- RoadAuth page: fear appeal + authority, 4 AI agents, comparison table,
  architecture stats, foot-in-the-door pricing
- Lucidia page: self-schema + emotional appeal, chat demo, three modes
  (companion/orchestrator/living world), memory architecture, sovereign
  infrastructure, CLI preview, 108 models showcase
- Quantum page: circuit visualization, algorithm cards with equations,
  research section with β_BR constant, use cases
- Fix author name from "Alexa Mundson" to "Alexa Amundson" in all papers

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-03-09 01:31:48 -05:00

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# BlackRoad OS Product Marketing Strategy: Applying the Psychology of Advertising to a $500B Opportunity
**Alexa Amundson**
BlackRoad OS, Inc.
---
## Abstract
This paper applies the BlackRoad Advertising Playbook — a psychology-driven strategic framework synthesized from JOUR 4251 (Psychology of Advertising) — to the three flagship products of BlackRoad OS, Inc.: RoadAuth (Enterprise IAM), Lucidia (AI Consciousness Platform), and the Quantum Framework. For each product, we diagnose the target consumer's cognitive profile, design messaging for each stage of processing, architect memory persistence strategies, engineer attitude formation and change, integrate compliance principles throughout the marketing funnel, and optimize for modern multi-screen media environments. The result is a unified go-to-market psychology that positions BlackRoad OS not as a vendor, but as a category creator — "the operating system for governed AI."
---
## 1. Introduction: The BlackRoad Positioning Challenge
BlackRoad OS, Inc. occupies a unique market position. Founded November 16, 2025, the company operates across three product lines with a combined Total Addressable Market of $498.4B to $1.1T by 2030. The core positioning — "the operating system for governed AI" — is a category-creation play. There are no direct competitors offering built-in compliance, deterministic AI, cryptographic identity, and multi-AI orchestration in a single platform.
Category creation is the most ambitious and psychologically demanding form of market entry. Unlike competitive positioning (where you differentiate against known alternatives), category creation requires the advertiser to:
1. **Form entirely new attitudes** rather than change existing ones
2. **Build new knowledge structures** (categories, schemas) in the prospect's mind
3. **Overcome the pioneering disadvantage** of unfamiliarity while capturing the pioneering advantage of category definition
4. **Educate** before persuading — consumers cannot evaluate what they cannot categorize
This paper addresses each challenge through the lens of advertising psychology.
### 1.1 Current Traction
The company has validated early demand: 47 LOIs from Fortune 500 companies ($8.2M total ACV), 12 paid POCs, 3 design partners, 850 developer signups, and $564K ARR run rate. The task now is to scale this traction through psychologically optimized marketing across all three product lines.
---
## 2. RoadAuth: Enterprise IAM Platform
**TAM:** $53.9B | **Replaces:** Auth0, Okta, AWS Cognito | **Pricing:** $5K$100K/month
### 2.1 Consumer Diagnosis
**Target buyer:** CISO, VP of Engineering, or CTO at regulated enterprises (financial services, healthcare, government).
**Involvement level:** Extremely high. IAM decisions are career-defining for security leaders. A breach traced to an authentication failure ends careers. This means **central route processing** dominates — buyers will systematically evaluate arguments, scrutinize evidence, and engage in extensive elaborative reasoning.
**Purchasing goal:** Primarily **utilitarian** (practical security need) with a strong **ego-defensive** component (protecting one's professional reputation by choosing a defensible vendor).
**Attitude function:** **Knowledge** (simplifying a complex compliance landscape) and **ego-defensive** (protecting against blame in the event of a breach).
**Existing attitudes:** Prospects hold strong existing attitudes toward incumbents (Okta, Auth0). These attitudes have high accessibility (well-known brands), moderate-to-high certainty, and significant knowledge. Attitude change, not formation, is the primary task.
### 2.2 Processing Design
**Preattentive level:** In enterprise contexts, preattentive exposure occurs through industry publications, conference signage, LinkedIn feeds, and analyst report sidebars. Design for:
- High perceptual fluency: Clean, professional design language. No startup clutter.
- Semantic priming: Repeated exposure to the phrase "governed AI" and "built-in compliance" across touchpoints, building implicit associations before conscious evaluation begins.
**Focal attention:** The primary attention driver is **motivation** — these buyers are actively seeking solutions. Secondary drivers:
- **Novelty:** "4 AI security agents built into your IAM" — this is genuinely new and triggers extended processing.
- **Salience:** Lead with the cost differential: "$24K$18M/year in savings vs. competitors." Dollar figures break through clutter in enterprise contexts.
**Comprehension:** Enterprise buyers are sophisticated — avoid comprehension manipulation tactics. Instead, deploy **clarity as competitive advantage**:
- Direct comparisons: "RoadAuth vs. Auth0: Feature-by-feature breakdown"
- Concrete savings calculators
- Architecture diagrams that demonstrate technical superiority
**Elaboration:** Match the buyer's self-schema. The CISO's self-schema is "I protect this organization." The message must activate this: "RoadAuth doesn't bolt on security — it IS security. Built-in compliance from day one means you're never explaining a gap to the board."
Metacognition is critical here: enterprise buyers constantly ask "am I falling for vendor marketing?" Counter this by providing self-validation tools — independent benchmarks, peer testimonials from equivalent roles, and transparent architecture documentation.
### 2.3 Memory Architecture
**Consideration set entry:** RoadAuth must enter the enterprise IAM consideration set alongside Okta, Auth0, and AWS Cognito. Strategy:
- Priming through analyst relations (Gartner, Forrester). Being mentioned in a Magic Quadrant or Wave report is the most powerful priming mechanism in enterprise software.
- Supraliminal priming through content marketing: whitepapers, case studies, and conference talks that repeatedly associate "BlackRoad" with "governed IAM."
**Knowledge structure formation:** Create a new category node — "Governed IAM" — and position RoadAuth as the prototype. Per the pioneering advantage research, the first brand to define a category becomes the standard against which competitors are measured.
**Retrieval cues:** Bridge ad exposure to evaluation moment:
- "Governed IAM" as a persistent tagline creates a retrieval cue whenever the buyer encounters compliance discussions
- Consistent visual identity (brand colors, typography) across all touchpoints
### 2.4 Attitude Engineering
**Strategy: Attitude change via central route processing.**
The buyer holds existing positive attitudes toward incumbents. To change these:
1. **Introduce ambivalence:** Two-sided messaging that acknowledges incumbent strengths while highlighting their architectural limitation — compliance is bolted on, not built in. Ambivalent buyers elaborate more, and elaboration through the central route produces durable attitude change.
2. **Leverage the knowledge function:** Position RoadAuth as the framework that simplifies compliance complexity. "One platform. SOC 2, HIPAA, FedRAMP. Built in."
3. **Activate ego-defensive function:** "When the board asks how the breach happened, you want to show them an architecture with compliance built into every layer — not a patchwork of add-ons."
### 2.5 Compliance Principles (Cialdini)
| Funnel Stage | Principle | Tactic |
|-------------|-----------|--------|
| Awareness | **Authority** | Analyst endorsements, CISO advisory board, SOC 2/HIPAA certifications prominently displayed |
| Consideration | **Social proof** | "47 Fortune 500 LOIs" — the most powerful social proof in enterprise |
| Evaluation | **Reciprocity** | Free security audit tool, free compliance gap analysis, open-source components |
| Decision | **Scarcity** | "3 design partner slots remaining" / Limited early-adopter pricing |
| Expansion | **Commitment/Consistency** | Start with free tier → Professional → Enterprise. Each step is consistent with prior commitment |
### 2.6 Messaging Framework
**Headline (peripheral cue):** "The IAM platform that was built for compliance — not bolted onto it."
**Subhead (central argument):** "4 AI security agents. SCIM 2.0. SOC 2, HIPAA, and FedRAMP ready out of the box. Save $24K$18M/year vs. Auth0 and Okta."
**Proof points:** 13,796 lines of enterprise-grade code. JWT + Paseto tokens. WebAuthn biometrics. LDAP/SAML/OAuth2.
**CTA:** "Run a free compliance gap analysis" (reciprocity + low commitment entry point)
---
## 3. Lucidia: AI Consciousness Platform
**TAM:** $437.5B | **Pricing:** $49$199/month (consumer/pro), Custom (enterprise)
Lucidia is the most psychologically complex product to market because it spans multiple segments: consumer AI companion, enterprise AI orchestration, and gaming/metaverse. Each segment requires a different psychological approach.
### 3.1 Consumer Segment: Personal AI Companion
**Consumer diagnosis:**
- **Involvement:** Moderate. Emotional decision, not career-critical.
- **Processing route:** **Peripheral** for initial adoption, **central** for retention and upgrade.
- **Purchasing goal:** **Hedonic** (pleasure, companionship) and **identity-building** (becoming someone who has a personal AI).
- **Attitude function:** **Value-expressive** (reflects tech-forward identity) and **adjustment** (practical AI assistance).
**Processing design:**
*Preattentive:* Lucidia's brand must build hedonic fluency — visual warmth, approachability, and a sense of intimacy. The name itself is an asset: "Lucidia" connotes lucidity, clarity, light. Design all visual touchpoints to reinforce this semantic association.
*Focal attention:* Lead with **vividness** — emotionally engaging demonstrations of Lucidia remembering a conversation from months ago, anticipating a user's need, or expressing empathy. The emotional resonance of an AI that truly remembers you is inherently vivid.
*Comprehension:* The key comprehension challenge is differentiation from ChatGPT, Siri, and Replika. Strategy: **juxtaposition** that creates implicit comparison. "Other AIs answer questions. Lucidia remembers you." This is technically a juxtaposition (implying causal relationship between memory and value) but it's also genuinely true.
*Elaboration:* Activate the identity-building self-schema: "Your AI should know you. Not just your name — your goals, your patterns, your growth."
**Attitude formation (not change):**
Most consumers have no existing attitude toward "AI consciousness platforms" — this is pure attitude formation territory. Deploy:
- **Mere exposure:** Lucidia should appear everywhere the target consumer already is — tech podcasts, YouTube pre-rolls, social media integrations. Build familiarity before asking for evaluation.
- **Classical conditioning:** Pair Lucidia with positive emotional stimuli — warm lighting, genuine human connection, moments of delight. The positive affect transfers to the brand.
- **Social proof:** "1,000+ agents accessible via chat" — demonstrate ecosystem depth.
**Compliance principles:**
- **Liking:** Lucidia IS the product and the spokesperson. Make the AI itself likeable — warm, witty, genuinely helpful. Every interaction is a liking reinforcement loop.
- **Reciprocity:** Free tier that genuinely delivers value. Users who receive value feel obligated to upgrade.
- **Commitment:** Start with a simple ask ("Tell Lucidia about yourself"). Each disclosure deepens commitment and makes switching costly (consistency principle).
### 3.2 Enterprise Segment: Multi-AI Orchestration
**Consumer diagnosis:**
- **Involvement:** Very high. AI orchestration is a strategic infrastructure decision.
- **Processing route:** Central.
- **Purchasing goal:** Utilitarian (operational efficiency) and identity-building (being the leader who brought AI orchestration to the org).
- **Attitude function:** Knowledge (making sense of the chaotic AI landscape) and adjustment (practical ROI).
**Processing design:**
*Focal attention:* Lead with **novelty**. "First platform to orchestrate Claude, GPT, Gemini, and your own models in a single governed pipeline." This is genuinely novel and triggers extended processing.
*Elaboration:* The enterprise buyer's self-schema is "I make smart infrastructure decisions." Activate this: "Your competitors are locked into single-vendor AI. You're orchestrating all of them."
**Attitude engineering:**
This is a category-creation challenge identical to RoadAuth. Build the "Multi-AI Orchestration" category with Lucidia as the prototype. Use the pioneering advantage to define the evaluation criteria — whoever defines the category defines what "good" looks like.
**Key message:** "One platform. Every model. Full governance. Lucidia doesn't replace your AI — it makes all your AI work together."
### 3.3 Gaming/Metaverse Segment
**Consumer diagnosis:**
- **Involvement:** Moderate-high for gamers (identity-tied)
- **Processing route:** Peripheral for discovery, central for commitment
- **Purchasing goal:** Pure **hedonic**
- **Attitude function:** **Adjustment** (maximize fun) and **value-expressive** (gaming identity)
**Key insight:** Gaming audiences are the most resistant to traditional advertising. The product must market itself through gameplay experience. Strategy:
- **Mere exposure** through streamers and content creators
- **Social proof** through player counts and community metrics
- **Novelty** as the core hook: "AI agents as first-class citizens in an open world" — this is new
---
## 4. Quantum Framework
**TAM:** $714B | **17 repositories, 4,000+ lines of quantum code**
### 4.1 Consumer Diagnosis
The Quantum Framework targets two distinct audiences:
**Research/academic audience:**
- Involvement: Extremely high (career-oriented)
- Processing: Central route exclusively
- Goal: Knowledge-building and identity (being at the frontier)
- Function: Knowledge and value-expressive
**Enterprise quantum-curious audience:**
- Involvement: Moderate (exploratory)
- Processing: Peripheral initially, central upon engagement
- Goal: Identity-building ("we're investing in quantum")
- Function: Value-expressive and ego-defensive (not being left behind)
### 4.2 Processing Design
*Focal attention:* The primary driver is **novelty** — quantum computing is inherently novel for most enterprise audiences. For researchers, the driver is **motivation** (active problem-solving).
*Comprehension:* The biggest challenge. Quantum computing is poorly understood. Strategy:
- **Visual circuit designer** (circuits.blackroad.io) as comprehension tool — making the abstract concrete
- **Simulator** (simulator.blackroad.io) as experiential learning
- Avoid jargon in enterprise messaging; embrace it in research messaging
*Elaboration:* For the enterprise buyer: "Your competitors are exploring quantum. Are you?" — activates ego-defensive function and drives elaboration through threat.
### 4.3 Attitude Formation
Quantum is pure attitude formation — almost no one has existing attitudes toward "BlackRoad Quantum." Deploy:
- **Authority:** The β_BR constant, 1,012 verified equations, Millennium Prize Problem work. These are extreme authority signals for the research community.
- **Heuristics:** For enterprise buyers, the country-of-origin heuristic equivalent is "built by people doing real quantum research, not a marketing slide deck."
### 4.4 Key Messages
**Research:** "4 quantum platforms. Real qudit computing. VQE, QAOA, Grover's, QFT. Open access."
**Enterprise:** "Quantum readiness isn't five years away. circuits.blackroad.io — design, simulate, and run quantum circuits today."
---
## 5. Unified Brand Strategy: The BlackRoad OS Platform
### 5.1 The Category Creation Imperative
All three products share a single strategic challenge: category creation. The master category is "Governed AI Operating System." This must become a recognized category in the buyer's knowledge structure (long-term memory network) with BlackRoad OS as the prototype node.
**Category creation through advertising psychology:**
1. **Define the category explicitly.** Don't let the market categorize you. "BlackRoad OS is the operating system for governed AI" — this is the category definition. Repeat it until it becomes a schema.
2. **Exploit the pioneering advantage.** As the first mover, BlackRoad defines evaluation criteria. All future competitors will be compared TO BlackRoad, not vice versa.
3. **Build associative networks.** In long-term memory, "governed AI" should link to → BlackRoad OS → which links to → RoadAuth, Lucidia, Quantum → which links to → compliance, security, orchestration, innovation.
4. **Use repetition with variation.** The core message ("governed AI") stays constant. The expression varies across products, channels, and contexts.
### 5.2 The Dual-Audience Challenge
BlackRoad serves two psychologically different audiences simultaneously:
**Developers (850 signups):**
- Low-involvement initial adoption (free tier)
- Peripheral processing → show don't tell
- Open-source credibility (2,847 GitHub stars)
- Social proof through community metrics
- Attitude formation through direct experience (self-perception theory: "I use BlackRoad, so it must be good")
**Enterprise buyers (47 LOIs):**
- High-involvement strategic decision
- Central processing → strong arguments, evidence, ROI
- Authority signals (compliance certs, analyst coverage)
- Commitment escalation (free audit → POC → production)
- Ego-defensive messaging ("don't be the one who didn't see AI governance coming")
The messaging must not conflate these audiences. Developer marketing is bottom-up (product-led growth via peripheral processing and mere exposure). Enterprise marketing is top-down (sales-led via central processing and authority).
### 5.3 Pricing Psychology
BlackRoad's pricing structure maps perfectly to compliance principles:
**Free tier → $499/month → $5K$100K/month**
This is a textbook **foot-in-the-door** sequence (commitment and consistency). Each tier increase is consistent with the prior commitment. The free tier creates reciprocity. The professional tier creates lock-in through data and workflow dependencies. The enterprise tier is the natural extension of an established relationship.
**Anchoring:** The $100K/month enterprise tier serves as an anchor that makes $499/month feel trivially inexpensive. Always present pricing from highest to lowest.
**Scarcity:** "3 design partner slots remaining" and "Early adopter pricing available through Q2" create genuine scarcity that triggers reactance (desire for what's being restricted).
### 5.4 The $8.2M Pipeline: Converting LOIs
47 Fortune 500 LOIs represent $8.2M in potential ACV. Each LOI is a **public commitment** — the most powerful form of commitment in Cialdini's framework. Strategy:
1. **Consistency:** Remind LOI signers of their commitment. "You identified AI governance as a priority in Q4. Here's what we've built since then."
2. **Social proof:** "42 of your peers in the Fortune 500 have already committed." (As the number grows, the proof strengthens.)
3. **Authority:** Present analyst validation, compliance certifications, and design partner results.
4. **Reciprocity:** Deliver genuine value during the POC phase. Over-deliver. The obligation to convert scales with the value received.
5. **Scarcity:** "Enterprise onboarding capacity is limited to 5 new customers per quarter." (Genuine capacity constraints become scarcity signals.)
---
## 6. Multi-Screen and Modern Media Strategy
### 6.1 Developer Marketing (Divided Attention Environment)
Developers are the ultimate multitaskers — coding while reading docs while watching YouTube while monitoring Slack. Design for divided attention:
- **Short-form content:** 30-second demo GIFs, single-concept tweets, one-paragraph changelogs
- **Repetition across screens:** Same core message on GitHub README, Twitter, Dev.to, Hacker News, YouTube
- **Congruency:** Advertising within developer-native environments (GitHub Sponsors, Stack Overflow, VS Code marketplace)
- **Related multiscreening:** Tutorial video + live coding environment (same topic, two screens, reinforcing)
### 6.2 Enterprise Marketing (Focused Attention Environment)
Enterprise buyers engage in focused, high-involvement evaluation. Optimize for central route processing:
- **Long-form content:** Whitepapers, architecture documents, ROI analyses, case studies
- **Webinars and conferences:** Sustained attention environments that allow for deep elaboration
- **Personalization:** Account-based marketing tailored to the prospect's industry vertical, compliance requirements, and existing tech stack
- **Synced advertising:** Conference presence → LinkedIn follow-up → personalized email → analyst report reference → sales call. Each touchpoint reinforces the prior.
### 6.3 Content Strategy by Processing Stage
| Stage | Developer Content | Enterprise Content |
|-------|------------------|-------------------|
| Preattentive | GitHub presence, social media impressions | Industry publication ads, analyst mentions |
| Focal Attention | "Star" hook on GitHub, eye-catching demo | Cost savings headline, compliance gap |
| Comprehension | Clear docs, quickstart guides | Architecture diagrams, comparison tables |
| Elaboration | Deep-dive blog posts, contribution opportunities | Whitepapers, ROI calculators, peer testimonials |
---
## 7. Diversity and Representation Strategy
BlackRoad targets regulated industries across financial services, healthcare, government, and education. These sectors serve diverse populations and increasingly require vendors to demonstrate inclusive practices.
**Strategic imperatives:**
1. **Marketing representation:** All visual marketing materials should reflect the diversity of the industries served — not as tokenism, but as authentic representation of the decision-makers and end-users in these sectors.
2. **Accessibility as product feature:** Compliance-first positioning extends naturally to accessibility compliance (ADA, WCAG). Position this as a feature, not an afterthought.
3. **Global market preparation:** The $600M ARR 2030 target requires international expansion. Marketing must be culturally adaptive from the start.
4. **Developer community:** The open-source community (2,847 stars, 850 signups) is global. Community marketing, documentation, and support should reflect this.
---
## 8. Packaging: The Digital Shelf
In SaaS, "packaging" is the pricing page, the onboarding flow, and the product UI itself. These are the silent salespeople.
### 8.1 Pricing Page Design
Apply packaging psychology:
- **Visual hierarchy:** Enterprise tier first (top/left), anchoring all other prices
- **Color coding:** Highlight the Professional tier as the recommended option (contrast principle)
- **Feature comparison:** Organize by value, not by feature count
- **Social proof on the page:** "Used by 47 Fortune 500 companies" adjacent to pricing
### 8.2 Onboarding as Packaging
The first-run experience IS the package. For each product:
- **RoadAuth:** First screen should demonstrate the compliance audit completing — immediate proof of the core value proposition
- **Lucidia:** First interaction should be Lucidia remembering something about the user from signup — demonstrating memory as the differentiator
- **Quantum:** First experience should be running a circuit on the visual designer — making the abstract tangible
Each of these creates a **mere exposure****positive affect****attitude formation** chain. The product packages itself through experience.
---
## 9. The 5-Year Advertising Psychology Roadmap
### Year 1 (2026): Category Definition — $15M ARR Target
**Primary objective:** Establish "Governed AI" as a recognized category.
**Psychology focus:** Attitude formation, pioneering advantage, authority building.
**Tactics:**
- Analyst relations (Gartner/Forrester mentions)
- 10 case studies from design partners and early POCs
- Category-defining thought leadership (CISO conference keynotes)
- Developer community growth through reciprocity (free tools, open source)
- Convert 47 LOIs through commitment/consistency + scarcity
### Year 2 (2027): Market Expansion — $45M ARR Target
**Primary objective:** Expand consideration set inclusion across all three verticals.
**Psychology focus:** Social proof amplification, attitude change in incumbent-loyal buyers.
**Tactics:**
- Customer count as social proof ("250 enterprises trust BlackRoad")
- Two-sided messaging to introduce ambivalence toward incumbents
- Vertical-specific messaging (financial services, healthcare, government)
- Channel partner enablement (authority by association with Big 4)
### Year 3 (2028): Category Leadership — $120M ARR Target
**Primary objective:** Become the prototype brand for governed AI.
**Psychology focus:** Memory persistence, consideration set dominance, implicit attitude formation.
**Tactics:**
- Brand advertising (awareness, not just demand gen)
- Priming at scale through media partnerships
- Competitive displacement campaigns leveraging central route processing
- International expansion with culturally adapted messaging
### Years 4-5 (2029-2030): Market Dominance — $300M-$600M ARR
**Primary objective:** Category ownership. "Governed AI = BlackRoad."
**Psychology focus:** Schema reinforcement, retrieval cue saturation, defensive positioning.
**Tactics:**
- Defensive advertising against new entrants (leverage pioneering advantage)
- Platform ecosystem marketing (network effects as social proof)
- Brand extensions across new verticals (assimilation to parent brand)
- IPO narrative construction (authority at maximum)
---
## 10. Conclusion
BlackRoad OS occupies a rare position in technology markets: a genuine category creation opportunity across three product lines with a combined TAM exceeding $500B. The advertising psychology framework reveals that this opportunity demands a fundamentally different approach than competitive displacement.
Category creation requires:
- **Attitude formation** rather than attitude change (except when displacing incumbents in IAM)
- **New knowledge structures** built through deliberate schema construction
- **Pioneering advantage** captured through early category definition
- **Dual processing** strategies that serve both developer (peripheral) and enterprise (central) audiences simultaneously
The six compliance principles provide the tactical toolkit:
- **Reciprocity** through free tiers and open source
- **Commitment** through foot-in-the-door pricing escalation
- **Social proof** through LOI counts, customer numbers, and community metrics
- **Authority** through analyst relations and compliance certifications
- **Liking** through product experience and community warmth
- **Scarcity** through genuine capacity constraints and time-limited pricing
The BlackRoad Advertising Playbook is not a marketing plan — it is a psychological architecture for building a category-defining company. Every touchpoint, from preattentive GitHub impressions to elaborative whitepaper engagement, from implicit brand priming to explicit compliance proof points, serves a specific function in the consumer's cognitive processing chain.
The most effective advertising makes the consumer feel like they discovered the product themselves. For BlackRoad OS, the strategy is to build the mental infrastructure — the categories, the schemas, the associative networks, the attitudes — so that when the regulated enterprise asks "how do we govern our AI?", the answer that surfaces from memory is already there: BlackRoad.
---
## References
Chaiken, S. (1980). Heuristic versus systematic information processing and the use of source versus message cues in persuasion. *Journal of Personality and Social Psychology*, 39(5), 752-766.
Cialdini, R. B. (2001). *Influence: Science and practice* (4th ed.). Allyn & Bacon.
Eagly, A. H., & Chaiken, S. (1993). *The psychology of attitudes*. Harcourt Brace Jovanovich.
Fennis, B. M., & Stroebe, W. (2016). *The psychology of advertising* (2nd ed.). Routledge.
Kahneman, D., & Tversky, A. (1979). Prospect theory: An analysis of decision under risk. *Econometrica*, 47(2), 263-292.
Petty, R. E., & Cacioppo, J. T. (1986). *Communication and persuasion: Central and peripheral routes to attitude change*. Springer-Verlag.
Segijn, C. M., Voorveld, H. A. M., & Smit, E. G. (2017). How related multiscreening could positively affect advertising outcomes. *Journal of Advertising*, 46(4), 455-472.
---
*BlackRoad OS, Inc. — The operating system for governed AI.*
*Built by science. Scaled by psychology.*