Hacker News new | ask | show | jobs
by trjordan 5917 days ago
The point is not actually negotiation, but a perceived deal to be had. You don't have to think you can argue for a lower price, you just have to see that the TV is being sold for $10k, then see the "SALE!" sign next to it that tells you the TV is on sale for $3k. By then, you've already anchored to 10k, and the "negotiation" took 3 seconds.

Full negotiations will definitely drive some people away, but to use anchoring effectively, you can definitely advertised a "standard" price and the real price. With that, I don't see how you'd lose somebody based on that original, and you'd gain a few based on the perceived deal.

1 comments

You're right. My point only applies when we're talking about making offers in a vacuum. This thread was discussing making offers or demands such as for salary, where there aren't different numbers floating around. In fact, if you were the first person to interview for a job and demanded a high price, the next guy might look like a bargain in comparison. It is when the other side believes there is room for negotiation that you can make a high/low offer and take advantage of anchoring. If they don't believe they can negotiate then you'll just drive them away.