The Brainy Business | Understanding the Psychology of Why People Buy | Behavioral Economics

270. Scarcity: Why Does Less Available Feel More Valuable? (Refreshed Episode)

03.14.2023 - By Melina PalmerPlay

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Today’s episode is all about scarcity. This is a term you are familiar with, but I am willing to bet you aren’t using it in all the ways it can be leveraged in your life and business. The term gets thrown around a lot and people know some of how it works, but the nuance is so so so much more than you can imagine.  This refreshed episode, which originally aired in the fall of 2018, will introduce you to the depth that this topic can have to set you up for this Friday’s episode with Mindy Weinstein, author of the book The Power of Scarcity which will absolutely blow your mind. It is so good. Within the book, she includes so much depth and nuance in a way I have never heard anyone else talk about scarcity. It’s fascinating.  Today is a primer to expand your thoughts about scarcity in a way that will get you ready to continue your learning when that episode comes out on Friday. As you listen, reflect upon times in your own life where you have been pulled in by scarcity, and where you can incorporate it more into your business. Show Notes: [00:39] Today’s episode is all about scarcity. This is a term you are familiar with, but I am willing to bet you aren’t using it in all the ways it can be leveraged in your life and business. [02:15] In traditional economics, scarcity occurs when an item has limited availability but unlimited desire for that item. This could include natural resources like oil and water or more abstract concepts like time. [02:55] Studies have proven that we see things as more valuable when they are less readily available.   [05:55] Scarcity and value are closely tied together. Our crazy brains think less equals more…even when it is kinda weird. When something is scarce it triggers our loss aversion because we don’t want to miss out on the opportunity.  [08:13] Scarcity can only take effect when items are truly limited. This means not everyone gets one. [10:49] Scarce items can take on a life of their own.   [11:37] Scarcity can create a cult following, which means other people do the marketing for you. This makes the brand bigger than anything you can do on your own. [14:57] These examples from Starbucks and Disney are a combination of scarcity and availability. This is essentially capitalizing on something popular and becoming part of the craze.  [15:26] If you are going to take a shot at incorporating scarcity, know that not everything will cause an uproar of epic proportions. Sometimes there will be duds and that is ok. The question is what did you learn from them for next time? [16:50] There are some words you can use to trigger scarcity in the brain of your consumer, including: limited time, extended, custom, handcrafted, one of a kind, closeout sales, everything must go, and last chance. These terms can be added to more than products, extending into services as well.  [18:27] If you do a promotion or discount, make sure it is short term and remind people when it ends. You can also limit the quantity available and stick with it.  [20:16] Contests and giveaways can work really well for you, but there are a lot of rules and you need to make sure you play the game.  [21:37] It is easy to sound like a cheesy infomercial when you’re using scarcity, so take a step back and don’t get too over the top. [23:23] Scarcity and availability are another peanut butter and jelly sort of concept grouping like anchoring and relativity.  [26:15] Scarcity is a tactic that works especially when combined with availability.  [27:05] If there is not enough value they need to control the supply that is available to keep demand high.  [28:12] Melina’s closing thoughts Thanks for listening. Don’t forget to subscribe on Apple Podcasts or Android. If you like what you heard, please leave a review on iTunes and share what you liked about the show.  I hope you love everything recommended via The Brainy Business! Everything was independently reviewed and selected by me, Melina Palmer. So you know, as an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases. That means if you decide to shop from the links on this page (via Amazon or others), The Brainy Business may collect a share of sales or other compensation. Let’s connect: [email protected] The Brainy Business® on Facebook The Brainy Business on Twitter The Brainy Business on Instagram The Brainy Business on LinkedIn Melina on LinkedIn The Brainy Business on Youtube Join the BE Thoughtful Revolution – our free behavioral economics community, and keep the conversation going! Learn and support The Brainy Business: Check out and get your copies of Melina’s Books.  Get the Books Mentioned on (or related to) this Episode: The Power of Scarcity, by Mindy Weinstein What Your Customer Wants and Can't Tell You, by Melina Palmer Influence, by Robert Cialdini What Your Employees Need and Can't Tell You, by Melina Palmer Power of Regret, by Dan Pink Top Recommended Next Episode: Availability Bias (ep 15) Already Heard That One? Try These:  The Top 5 Wording Mistakes Businesses Make (ep 2) What is Value? (ep 234) Loss Aversion: Why Getting New Stuff Is Not The Same (ep 9) The Truth About Pricing (ep 5) The Power of Regret with Daniel Pink (ep 214) Dr. Robert Cialdini and the (Now!) 7 Principles of Persuasion (ep 157) A Behavioral Economics Analysis of Costco (ep 47) Starbucks: A Behavioral Economics Analysis (ep 73) Disney: A Behavioral Economics Analysis (ep 144) Other Important Links:  Brainy Bites - Melina’s LinkedIn Newsletter  What is ‘Scarcity’ Influence: Science and Practice (5th Edition) Narcissists as consumers: The effects of perceived scarcity on processing of product information The Top 10 Most Expensive Stamps In The World The Five Most Expensive Coins Ever Sold at Auction Costco Business Model and Their Strategy @TheRealPSL on Twitter Want a Starbucks Unicorn Frappuccino? Too bad. Most stores sold out Starbucks Coffee Rose Gold Pink Sequin 24oz Venti Tumbler Cold Cup The Rarest and Best Disney Mickey and Minnie Mouse Ears How ‘Tickle Me Elmo’ Caused Holiday Hysteria Back In 1996 Have You Ever Tried to Sell a Diamond?

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