Of course sometimes people can use our willingness to follow noisy clues to fool us.
Right, over time this tactic can become cliche in a given context? I hope I’m not the only one who rolls his eyes when a saleman claims that a certain product model is in short supply. Then again, I just missed a chance to buy a car at the price I wanted by ignoring such a claim and waiting. Or did I (miss a genuine rather than fake chance)?
See infomercials. All the effective ones say “but for a limited time only...” and “call while supplies last!” and “we can only guarantee this offer for the next 24 hours...” even though it’s the exact same infomercial that has been on at the exact same time every night for a month. I’ve also never seen one of these products that wasn’t “on sale” at some sort of “reduced” price.
They also usually include freebies “worth” hundreds of dollars with an item they are selling for less than $20. I’ve always wondered that anybody could be stupid enough to think that an item actually worth $100 would be included in a million $20 orders.
Of course sometimes people can use our willingness to follow noisy clues to fool us.
Right, over time this tactic can become cliche in a given context? I hope I’m not the only one who rolls his eyes when a saleman claims that a certain product model is in short supply. Then again, I just missed a chance to buy a car at the price I wanted by ignoring such a claim and waiting. Or did I (miss a genuine rather than fake chance)?
See infomercials. All the effective ones say “but for a limited time only...” and “call while supplies last!” and “we can only guarantee this offer for the next 24 hours...” even though it’s the exact same infomercial that has been on at the exact same time every night for a month. I’ve also never seen one of these products that wasn’t “on sale” at some sort of “reduced” price.
They also usually include freebies “worth” hundreds of dollars with an item they are selling for less than $20. I’ve always wondered that anybody could be stupid enough to think that an item actually worth $100 would be included in a million $20 orders.