The Morning Call (Sunday)

Tales of high-pressure sales chicanery

- By Tim Carter

Most of you have experience­d a high-pressure sales presentati­on at some point, perhaps unaware of the psychologi­cal triggers the salesperso­n was pulling in your head that would transform you into soft putty in their smarmy hands.

The inspiratio­n for this column came from a reader who recently wrote to me via my website, AsktheBuil­der.com: “After many years of going up on my roof to blow out 260 feet of gutters … I’m finally going to take your advice on gutter guards. I had (company name redacted) come out and give me their inclusive pitch which ended with an $18,000 quote. … Very laughable.”

I knew what the reader meant by “inclusive.” A light bulb went off in my head and I decided to reach out to my newsletter subscriber­s to see if they’d share their gutter guard sales pitch stories, as well as the quotes they received. I have a spreadshee­t of this data on my website. Just put “gutter guard costs” in the search field there.

I was astonished at the tsunami of responses. As I suspected, there were tales of woe and borderline thievery. I don’t know what other word to use when a person is charged $90 per linear foot for a product that costs probably less than $2 to make and 100 feet of it can be installed probably in an hour. Yes, you did the math right, $9,000 for 100 feet of gutter guard. The thought of that happening to you is hateful to me .

Very powerful psychology is used to influence your decisions on almost a daily basis. Fear is an important tool of persuasion, shutting down the part of your brain that does critical and clear thinking. This is why panic is can be deadly.

The military, police and many businesses use this psychology to control behavior. In fact, you’ve probably used it yourself without even realizing it. It works because these psychologi­cal triggers are inside every human’s brain.

Let’s discuss another basic trigger, reciprocit­y. You fall victim to this if you accept a gift from someone. Think of those pieces of cheese on a toothpick in the grocery store. In the case of the high-pressure salesperso­n, they offer you a discount on the price of the item. If your eyes light up and you accept the lower price, your brain whispers to you, “OK, now you must give them something back.” All the salesperso­n wants is your signature on the contract.

Authority is a very clever psychologi­cal trigger. You see this in everyday life. It’s why the police wear uniforms and clergy wear special garments. The salesperso­n sitting in your living room might squeeze this trigger in your head when he or she places the call to their manager to authorize another special price or discount. After all, how can you ignore this higher power? If the salesperso­n starts to pull out their phone, be sure to ask them to put it on speakerpho­ne so you can hear what the manager says.

One of the most powerful psychologi­cal ploys used in sales presentati­ons is social proof.

You see this all the time in TV commercial­s, where four or five strangers tell you how the product took away pain, how it cleans so well or how it allowed them to lose weight. After the last one, your brain screams at you, “Well, by gosh, if it’s good enough for them, I need it. Take my money!” Social proof is as intoxicati­ng as that delicious aroma of your favorite food you smell when you come in from the garage. You’re drawn to the kitchen like a lamb being led to slaughter.

The most powerful psychologi­cal trigger of all is scarcity. Only the strongest and battlehard­ened consumers can resist this. Scarcity is used to make POWs sing like canaries. You see scarcity in play each day in your life when you see and ad or read an email that says, “The sale ends in hours.” The business is making the savings scarce. My guess is you’ve bought something you really didn’t need when you saw this message.

The salesperso­n in your home uses scarcity when he or she says the final lowest price is only good until such time as their taillights leave your driveway or some other short period of time. You’re forced to make a decision or else lose thousands of dollars. Scarcity is like an addictive drug to your tiny defenseles­s gray cells.

How can you steel yourself to prevent being taken advantage of? I suggest you get a copy of the easy-to-read book where I discovered all of this powerful magic: “Influence: The Psychology of Persuasion” by Robert Cialdini.

Once you read the numerous case studies in this book, you’ll train your brain to resist the Jedi mind tricks the salespeopl­e are trying to use on you. In fact, you’ll be able to use the same psychology on the salesperso­n to get them to do what you want! Now that’s a big win, if you ask me.

 ?? TIM CARTER ?? How much would you pay for gutter guards like the ones pictured? It may depend on how adept you are at resisting a high-pressure sales pitch.
TIM CARTER How much would you pay for gutter guards like the ones pictured? It may depend on how adept you are at resisting a high-pressure sales pitch.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States