135 points

But it IS how we see prices. If there weren’t science behind it, they wouldn’t be doing it.

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65 points

A lot of marketing strategies are pseudoscience. Just like a lot police investigation practices or body language assumptions.

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19 points

JC Penny kinda showed that no. It isn’t pseudocience

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8 points

What’s the story about JC Penny?

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11 points

Some marketing strategies are pseudoscience, but this one isn’t.

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1 point

Does anyone in the thread have actual info to back this up?

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6 points

I was watching a PBS documentary about the first humans in the Americas. All the scientists are super cool until you get to the American anthropologist who starts using phrenology to explain why Native American tribes shouldn’t be given repatriation rights, only for a Danish geneticist to say “yeah, this is absolutely a Native American and i am willing to testify to that in any court of law”

Pseudoscience is still all the rage if it can be used to push a political agenda.

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4 points
*

But it IS how we see prices.

I don’t. Never did. I’m sure I’m not the only one.

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5 points

Same, I’ve always just rounded up. Even when it comes to things like .50¢ I still just round it up to the next dollar.

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0 points

You do though

At some level you will favor the 19.99. You might justify it with some other rational but there will be the bias.

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3 points
*

No, I dont though.

It really depends on the study you choose to believe into. (No, everyone does it, isn’t a pro argument. People always had strange beliefs which later changed. I think it’s called major consensus narrative or maybe consensus reality

I like this hill, I’ll stay here. Thank you.)

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1 point
*

dowsing for suckadrippas

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110 points

$20 and $10 shipping: 😡

$30 and free shipping: 😄

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18 points

It is kind of a dick move when companies overcharge for shipping. I only charge calculated shipping on large or heavy items because those are the ones that vary a lot and I don’t want someone in zone 8 (like Southern California or even someone in HI buying it and shipping costing more than they paid. If it’s under 1 lb then I just give free shipping and bake it into the price.

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3 points

This reminds me of my early shopping days using EBay, where it wasn’t uncommon for sellers to under-price their products so they show up near the top of the price (cheapest-most expensive) sort pile, and then charge an outrageous amount in shipping.

I’ve found that almost always (at the time), that the seller offering free or low cost shipping was usually cheaper.

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2 points

That was because their fees were based on the sale price of the item minus the shipping. So they were only paying fees on 1 cent. They changed the fees so that the total sale including shipping is calculated.

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12 points
*

Part of it is that there’s less hidden costs. I like it when it’s just “the total is $30” instead of “there’s $8 shipping and a $2 service fee and then $4 in taxes and…”

I’ve also seen some online stores lure in a customer with a really cheap initial price and then on the last page just slam them with insane shipping and handling fees hoping that the customer either doesn’t notice or feels too invested at this point to cancel their purchase.

But yes, part of it is also people are stupid when they see the word “free” as if the store wouldn’t move the cost somewhere else.

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5 points

I don’t understand people who won’t pay £5 for shipping, but will instead spend another £15 on something they don’t need so they get free shipping.

All you’ve done is lost money.

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8 points

It depends. If it’s something I know I’ll use, especially a consumable, I’ll do it.

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5 points

That at least allows you to retrieve the full amount if you return the goods. Shipping costs you don’t get back.

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29 points

Honestly, however much I want to pretend to be better than that, I think it does work on me. Obviously not on a conscious level, I know how numbers work, but some part of my monkey brain sees the 1 instead of the 2 and therefore concludes that it must be way cheaper. It’s a feeling that no amount of facts is going to disable. And in the end many purchasing decisions aren’t based on a full analysis but on feelings.

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28 points

This is locally grown artisanal bullshit, it’s actually $300, please tip.

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4 points

please tip

I’ve actually started carrying cash again for the first time in 20 years because I’m sick of every fucking POS machine in the world asking for tips. Yes, I can choose not to tip, but there’s an emotional cost associated with that decision. There’s a cost associated with just seeing the option instead of being able to simply pay for my item and go about my day.

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26 points

Most people are idiots most of the time.

Some people are idiots some of the time.

No one is never an idiot.

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6 points

Can confirm. I’m idiot most of the time

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