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CONTINUOUS ASSESSMENT COVERING SHEET 2011
                          Please staple this sheet to your essay.

Surname: Serenaite       Initials: Grita            Student Id:

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Surname:                 Initials:                  Student Id:

Surname:                 Initials:                  Student Id:

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Programme: Postgraduate Advertising and Digital Communications

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Date of Submission: 13/12/2011________________________________________________

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The submission attached for assessment does not contain any work or effort or ideas or
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Signed:                                     Date:




                                                                                         1
Priceless: The hidden psychology of value
By William Poundstone

<>
Did you ever notice that Dunne Stores entry doors are on the right? Any suggestions why is that?
<>
Mostbizarre finding in this book suggests that US supermarket shoppers spend on average $2 per trip more
when moving through the store in an anti-clockwise direction. (Just because it is handier to reach shelves
for right-handed people)
<>
Did you notice that stores like Prada carry few obscenely expensive items that no one can really afford to
buy? Let’s say 4000$ bag? Why is that?
<>
To boost sales for everything else which look like a bargain in comparison. For example 400$ bag looks a
great deal comparing with $4,000 one.

What beer would you choose in the off license: pricy €2.5 per can, or bargain for €1? What if I give you one
more choice for €1.80, which one will you choose now? Why is that? Seems most rational choice isn’t it?

Thou the price is just a number, it can evoke a complex set of emotions, something now visible in brain
scans. Depending on the context, the same price may be perceived as a bargain or a rip-off; or it may not
matter at all.
<>
“Poundstone has managed to write a book that is fun to read and yet well-researched and substantive.
Without a minute of suffering the reader gets to know nearly all the key contributors to the science of
decision making. Recommended for anyone who has to make decisions.” —Richard H. Thaler, coauthor
(with Cass R. Sunstein) of Nudge: Improving Decisions on Health, Wealth and Happiness
<>
I have to agree with Ritchard H. Thaler, it’s hard to believe that book that has 43pages ofacademic
references can be so easy to read. William Poundstone makes complicated economic and psychological
conceptsunderstandable by using day to day language, experiments and refreshingly short chapters.

Priceless is divided in 4parts and 55 chapters.
<>
First part “The more you ask for the more you get”
Poundstone’s opening scene for the book is controversial lawsuit in which a jury awarded $2.9 million in
damages to a woman who had spilled a scalding cup of McDonald's coffee on herself. How did the jurors
agreed to this legal award? The jurors were amazingly persuaded by lawyers’ demand –
<>
“to penalise McDonald’s in the amount of one or two days of the company’s worldwide coffee sales, which
is approximately $1.35 million a day”.
To be able to understand why it worked we have to understand the concept of anchor.
<>
Psychophysics determined that people are very sensitive to difference and not so sensitive to absolute
values. Imagine you are asked to lift a suitcase and guess the weight. How accurate would your guess be?
Given two identical looking suitcases one weighting 15kilos and one 18kilos, it’s a easy to tell which heavier
by lifting. But without the scale you wouldn’t be able to tell if it would meet an airlines 20 kilo limit.
Judgements of monetary value have much in common with sensory judgements like weight, brightness,
loudness, warmth, intensity of odours. People display a similar cluelessness about prices.
<>

                                                                                                            2
Behavioural decision theory introduced anchoring and adjustment concept.Tversky and Kahneman
theorised that an initial value (the anchor) serves as a mental starting point for estimating an unknown
quantity. It is like anchor exerts a magnetic attraction pulling estimates closer o itself.
Anchoring is an artefact of guessing. Whenever we guesstimate an unknown quantity that cannot be
calculated we are liable to be influenced by other numbers just mentioned or considered. It isn’t something
that we are aware of.
Poundstone provides big amount of case studies, experiments and theories through out the book to show
the influence of an anchor for behavioural decision making.
One of the experiments brings us back to court rooms. Eight students were presented with hypothetical
case of a young woman who said contracted ovarian cancer from birth control pills and was suing her
health care organisation. 4 groups heard different demand for damages: 100$; 20,000$, 5 million and 1
billion. The ‘jurors’ were asked to give compensatory damages only. The results were as follows:
<>
Demand            Award
$ 100             $990
$20,000           $36,000
$5 million        $440,000
$1 billion        $490,000
The more you ask for the more you get
<>
Impressive.

Now lets go back to McDonalds’ case. So why did it worked? Because the anchor was set by lawyer and it
was indeed memorable. A day or two of McDonalds coffee sales had the ring of poetic justice and it also
made jurors scaling (comparing and adjusting) easier.
<>
Part two “Black is white with a bright ring around it”
In part two Poundstone explains psychophysics further. Here down to earth definition of psychophysics
would say it is a study of the relationship between physical quantities (noise, light, heat, weight) and
subjective perception of them.
One of the many examples was that working under the ruby-red light in a photographic darkroom you can
note something odd. The tip of the cigarette glows green. It makes it look green in comparison. Eyes and
brain are not registering an absolute colour, but a difference between colour of the cigarette and the
baseline colour of the room.

In part two Poundstone also introduces the economists and psychologists love hate relationship during the
decades. He introduces two different perceptions:
<>
To an economist a reserve price is the maximum amount a buyer is willing to pay, or the minimum a seller
is willing to accept. Transactions are expected to take place at price somewhere between these
extremes.Economics investigates how market forces affect prices paid.
<>
But there is quite different way of looking at things. Reserve prices can be thought of as magnitude scale.
For a buyer prices are a numerical measure of desire to possess something. For a seller, prices measure
desire to keep what one already has (including such all-important possessions as time, energy and self
respect).

Even though economists at the time didn’t want to hear it at the time, psychologist was stating that when
estimating monetary values, people are easily swayed by the legerdemain of the anchoring, by illusion
trading on contrasts and the power of suggestion.

                                                                                                         3
You can clearly see it in the market today, when people are considering 60euro Nike tracksuit as a huge
bargain, and 60euro Penneys tracksuit as a rip-off.
<>
Part three “incoherence is more than skin deep”
In the part three Poundstone historically looks into evolution of psychophysics, the influence of anchor and
birth of behavioural economics. Here author provides examples of different experiments held on
behavioural psychology, including gambling, fair price, ultimatum game experiments. All of these
experiments supportanchor theory.

In Kahneman and Tversky’s terminology – reference point is much like the ‘adaptation level’ of
psychophysics. The reference point (anchor) determines whether something is entered as a gain or a loss
on the mental ledger. That can make a huge difference in behaviour. For example the house you want to
sell. Even though you get the offer greater than current market value, you would accept it as a loss, if you
compared it with the price you bought the house for. Another example could be Deal or No Deal show,
where player already expects to win 10,000euro, and gets an offer of 7000euro from the banker, but he
sees it as loss, even though there is a possibility to walk out with empty pockets.
In prospect theory – losing money hurts more than gaining the same thing delights. Gamble experiments
showed that more people went for sure deal (more chance to win smaller amount, rather than relative
chance to loose vs wining bigger award).

Certainty effect also showed huge subjective difference between absolute 100%sure and something that is
only 99%likely, expressed in prices as well as choices. Meanwhile difference between 10% and 11% was
shrugged off.
<>
Cardinal rule of fairness appeared to be don’t increase your profit at my expense. When asked to share 10$
with their peers majority participants in the experiment referred to support fair deal and divided it 50:50.
However, when the rules were changed, and participants didn’t have to face each other in transaction,
majority kept all 10$ to themselves. It is not fairness so much as the appearance of fairness that drives the
psychology of prices.
<>
Negotiation isn’t a pretty picture. Much of the time the skilful negotiator is the one who best misrepresents
value.

To sum up, price numbers are influences by factors the conscious mind would reject as irrelevant,
irrational, or politically incorrect. Contrasts create emotions, and emotions influence actions. As Amos
Tversky noted : we choose between description of options rather than between the options themselves.

Part four “pricing is the dangerous lever”
Part four is a list of marketer’s magic tricks, suggestions and warnings. Here are few of them:
<>
   1. A profusion of blind taste tests claim that avid drinkers can’t tell Budweiser from Miller from Coors.
        The one trade-off is between price and quality (and you have to wonder whether ‘quality’ is an
        illusion of marketing.
        Third choice, either higher or lower price, increases a volume of sales of a middle choice.
<>
   2. In 1961 Procter & Gamble introduced Pampers, disposable nappies. Was seen as convenient but far
        more expensive. Later on in 1978 Procter & Gamble rolled out a higher-priced brand Luvs, to create
        the contrast. What can I say – it worked.
   3. Restaurants know what they want to sell you. Bundling is most known method . By discounting the
        third item a small amount the overall gross profit goes up. Restaurants also employ fairness

                                                                                                           4
research findings. When the prices are increased, they add notes that petrol or tax went up. Don’t
        put prices into column. Menu isn’t a pricelist. Also avoid euro signs. Pictures in the menu is a seller.
     4. The anchor is for sale, but its fine if no one buys it. Its realy there for a contrast. Ergo – the way to
        sell a lot of £500 shoes is to display some 800 shoes next to them
     5. Don’t rise the price, lower the discount. Price 100euro but give discount of 25. When you want to
        increase the price just reduce the discount. People are not sensitive to inflation, but sensitive to
        price rises.
     6. Better looking employees are paid more. However it was more profitable to be a man than to be
        very attractive.
<>
    7. We all end up paying for air. Lets take batteries. What you are buying is battery life. But non of the
        batteries states the life time. We buy into pink bunnies.
    8. Relative 100$ is undreamed of richness for 5year old, and meaningless to billionaire.
    9. 9 is truly magic number. None of explanations (people rounding down or think it’s been discounted)
        can give the answer. And yet the winner is sale price marking
    10. Discount wholesalers know that you think you are getting best prices. So are you?
    11. Who is happier- Mr.A who won 50 and 25 in two lotteries or Mr.B who won 75. Everyone said Mr.A.
        It is valuable to brake down product in several products and sell it as bundle.
    12. “Free food” in cruise. People forget that they paid hell of a lot of money beforehand.
Last<>
    13. Do you know a real cost of MSG<> – 1/1,000 cent. Do you remember the price we used to pay and
        still paying? No wonder the text message business plan was huge success.



     14. Loss-aversion as fear can push around buying and selling prices.
     15. A person who is risk-averse in one situation will become reckless in another all it takes is changed
         reference point.
     16. Price scanner data offers a bridge price psychology and practical reality. It captures any and all
         behavioural effects and provides information on how customers react/ don’t react to a price
         increase, sale or rebate.Customers who use loyalty cards are self-selected group of misers
     17. The gym. We all have done it. We think it is reasonable to buy membership instead of getting one
         off entrance time to time. And if you divided your membership by how many times you went there
         – what would you get?
     18. Things no one believes still effects behaviour
     19. Anchor works in negotiation for promotion
     20. Our society is a crazy Pavlov’s dog experiment in which money is a bell. After much repetition we
         salivate over the hollow symbol, not the meat.




                                                                                                               5

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Priceless presentation notes

  • 1. CONTINUOUS ASSESSMENT COVERING SHEET 2011 Please staple this sheet to your essay. Surname: Serenaite Initials: Grita Student Id: Surname: Initials: Student Id: Surname: Initials: Student Id: Surname: Initials: Student Id: Surname: Initials: Student Id: Surname: Initials: Student Id: Surname: Initials: Student Id: Programme: Postgraduate Advertising and Digital Communications Module: Lecturer: Date of Submission: 13/12/2011________________________________________________ Declaration: The submission attached for assessment does not contain any work or effort or ideas or arguments from unattributed sources. Signed: Date: 1
  • 2. Priceless: The hidden psychology of value By William Poundstone <> Did you ever notice that Dunne Stores entry doors are on the right? Any suggestions why is that? <> Mostbizarre finding in this book suggests that US supermarket shoppers spend on average $2 per trip more when moving through the store in an anti-clockwise direction. (Just because it is handier to reach shelves for right-handed people) <> Did you notice that stores like Prada carry few obscenely expensive items that no one can really afford to buy? Let’s say 4000$ bag? Why is that? <> To boost sales for everything else which look like a bargain in comparison. For example 400$ bag looks a great deal comparing with $4,000 one. What beer would you choose in the off license: pricy €2.5 per can, or bargain for €1? What if I give you one more choice for €1.80, which one will you choose now? Why is that? Seems most rational choice isn’t it? Thou the price is just a number, it can evoke a complex set of emotions, something now visible in brain scans. Depending on the context, the same price may be perceived as a bargain or a rip-off; or it may not matter at all. <> “Poundstone has managed to write a book that is fun to read and yet well-researched and substantive. Without a minute of suffering the reader gets to know nearly all the key contributors to the science of decision making. Recommended for anyone who has to make decisions.” —Richard H. Thaler, coauthor (with Cass R. Sunstein) of Nudge: Improving Decisions on Health, Wealth and Happiness <> I have to agree with Ritchard H. Thaler, it’s hard to believe that book that has 43pages ofacademic references can be so easy to read. William Poundstone makes complicated economic and psychological conceptsunderstandable by using day to day language, experiments and refreshingly short chapters. Priceless is divided in 4parts and 55 chapters. <> First part “The more you ask for the more you get” Poundstone’s opening scene for the book is controversial lawsuit in which a jury awarded $2.9 million in damages to a woman who had spilled a scalding cup of McDonald's coffee on herself. How did the jurors agreed to this legal award? The jurors were amazingly persuaded by lawyers’ demand – <> “to penalise McDonald’s in the amount of one or two days of the company’s worldwide coffee sales, which is approximately $1.35 million a day”. To be able to understand why it worked we have to understand the concept of anchor. <> Psychophysics determined that people are very sensitive to difference and not so sensitive to absolute values. Imagine you are asked to lift a suitcase and guess the weight. How accurate would your guess be? Given two identical looking suitcases one weighting 15kilos and one 18kilos, it’s a easy to tell which heavier by lifting. But without the scale you wouldn’t be able to tell if it would meet an airlines 20 kilo limit. Judgements of monetary value have much in common with sensory judgements like weight, brightness, loudness, warmth, intensity of odours. People display a similar cluelessness about prices. <> 2
  • 3. Behavioural decision theory introduced anchoring and adjustment concept.Tversky and Kahneman theorised that an initial value (the anchor) serves as a mental starting point for estimating an unknown quantity. It is like anchor exerts a magnetic attraction pulling estimates closer o itself. Anchoring is an artefact of guessing. Whenever we guesstimate an unknown quantity that cannot be calculated we are liable to be influenced by other numbers just mentioned or considered. It isn’t something that we are aware of. Poundstone provides big amount of case studies, experiments and theories through out the book to show the influence of an anchor for behavioural decision making. One of the experiments brings us back to court rooms. Eight students were presented with hypothetical case of a young woman who said contracted ovarian cancer from birth control pills and was suing her health care organisation. 4 groups heard different demand for damages: 100$; 20,000$, 5 million and 1 billion. The ‘jurors’ were asked to give compensatory damages only. The results were as follows: <> Demand Award $ 100 $990 $20,000 $36,000 $5 million $440,000 $1 billion $490,000 The more you ask for the more you get <> Impressive. Now lets go back to McDonalds’ case. So why did it worked? Because the anchor was set by lawyer and it was indeed memorable. A day or two of McDonalds coffee sales had the ring of poetic justice and it also made jurors scaling (comparing and adjusting) easier. <> Part two “Black is white with a bright ring around it” In part two Poundstone explains psychophysics further. Here down to earth definition of psychophysics would say it is a study of the relationship between physical quantities (noise, light, heat, weight) and subjective perception of them. One of the many examples was that working under the ruby-red light in a photographic darkroom you can note something odd. The tip of the cigarette glows green. It makes it look green in comparison. Eyes and brain are not registering an absolute colour, but a difference between colour of the cigarette and the baseline colour of the room. In part two Poundstone also introduces the economists and psychologists love hate relationship during the decades. He introduces two different perceptions: <> To an economist a reserve price is the maximum amount a buyer is willing to pay, or the minimum a seller is willing to accept. Transactions are expected to take place at price somewhere between these extremes.Economics investigates how market forces affect prices paid. <> But there is quite different way of looking at things. Reserve prices can be thought of as magnitude scale. For a buyer prices are a numerical measure of desire to possess something. For a seller, prices measure desire to keep what one already has (including such all-important possessions as time, energy and self respect). Even though economists at the time didn’t want to hear it at the time, psychologist was stating that when estimating monetary values, people are easily swayed by the legerdemain of the anchoring, by illusion trading on contrasts and the power of suggestion. 3
  • 4. You can clearly see it in the market today, when people are considering 60euro Nike tracksuit as a huge bargain, and 60euro Penneys tracksuit as a rip-off. <> Part three “incoherence is more than skin deep” In the part three Poundstone historically looks into evolution of psychophysics, the influence of anchor and birth of behavioural economics. Here author provides examples of different experiments held on behavioural psychology, including gambling, fair price, ultimatum game experiments. All of these experiments supportanchor theory. In Kahneman and Tversky’s terminology – reference point is much like the ‘adaptation level’ of psychophysics. The reference point (anchor) determines whether something is entered as a gain or a loss on the mental ledger. That can make a huge difference in behaviour. For example the house you want to sell. Even though you get the offer greater than current market value, you would accept it as a loss, if you compared it with the price you bought the house for. Another example could be Deal or No Deal show, where player already expects to win 10,000euro, and gets an offer of 7000euro from the banker, but he sees it as loss, even though there is a possibility to walk out with empty pockets. In prospect theory – losing money hurts more than gaining the same thing delights. Gamble experiments showed that more people went for sure deal (more chance to win smaller amount, rather than relative chance to loose vs wining bigger award). Certainty effect also showed huge subjective difference between absolute 100%sure and something that is only 99%likely, expressed in prices as well as choices. Meanwhile difference between 10% and 11% was shrugged off. <> Cardinal rule of fairness appeared to be don’t increase your profit at my expense. When asked to share 10$ with their peers majority participants in the experiment referred to support fair deal and divided it 50:50. However, when the rules were changed, and participants didn’t have to face each other in transaction, majority kept all 10$ to themselves. It is not fairness so much as the appearance of fairness that drives the psychology of prices. <> Negotiation isn’t a pretty picture. Much of the time the skilful negotiator is the one who best misrepresents value. To sum up, price numbers are influences by factors the conscious mind would reject as irrelevant, irrational, or politically incorrect. Contrasts create emotions, and emotions influence actions. As Amos Tversky noted : we choose between description of options rather than between the options themselves. Part four “pricing is the dangerous lever” Part four is a list of marketer’s magic tricks, suggestions and warnings. Here are few of them: <> 1. A profusion of blind taste tests claim that avid drinkers can’t tell Budweiser from Miller from Coors. The one trade-off is between price and quality (and you have to wonder whether ‘quality’ is an illusion of marketing. Third choice, either higher or lower price, increases a volume of sales of a middle choice. <> 2. In 1961 Procter & Gamble introduced Pampers, disposable nappies. Was seen as convenient but far more expensive. Later on in 1978 Procter & Gamble rolled out a higher-priced brand Luvs, to create the contrast. What can I say – it worked. 3. Restaurants know what they want to sell you. Bundling is most known method . By discounting the third item a small amount the overall gross profit goes up. Restaurants also employ fairness 4
  • 5. research findings. When the prices are increased, they add notes that petrol or tax went up. Don’t put prices into column. Menu isn’t a pricelist. Also avoid euro signs. Pictures in the menu is a seller. 4. The anchor is for sale, but its fine if no one buys it. Its realy there for a contrast. Ergo – the way to sell a lot of £500 shoes is to display some 800 shoes next to them 5. Don’t rise the price, lower the discount. Price 100euro but give discount of 25. When you want to increase the price just reduce the discount. People are not sensitive to inflation, but sensitive to price rises. 6. Better looking employees are paid more. However it was more profitable to be a man than to be very attractive. <> 7. We all end up paying for air. Lets take batteries. What you are buying is battery life. But non of the batteries states the life time. We buy into pink bunnies. 8. Relative 100$ is undreamed of richness for 5year old, and meaningless to billionaire. 9. 9 is truly magic number. None of explanations (people rounding down or think it’s been discounted) can give the answer. And yet the winner is sale price marking 10. Discount wholesalers know that you think you are getting best prices. So are you? 11. Who is happier- Mr.A who won 50 and 25 in two lotteries or Mr.B who won 75. Everyone said Mr.A. It is valuable to brake down product in several products and sell it as bundle. 12. “Free food” in cruise. People forget that they paid hell of a lot of money beforehand. Last<> 13. Do you know a real cost of MSG<> – 1/1,000 cent. Do you remember the price we used to pay and still paying? No wonder the text message business plan was huge success. 14. Loss-aversion as fear can push around buying and selling prices. 15. A person who is risk-averse in one situation will become reckless in another all it takes is changed reference point. 16. Price scanner data offers a bridge price psychology and practical reality. It captures any and all behavioural effects and provides information on how customers react/ don’t react to a price increase, sale or rebate.Customers who use loyalty cards are self-selected group of misers 17. The gym. We all have done it. We think it is reasonable to buy membership instead of getting one off entrance time to time. And if you divided your membership by how many times you went there – what would you get? 18. Things no one believes still effects behaviour 19. Anchor works in negotiation for promotion 20. Our society is a crazy Pavlov’s dog experiment in which money is a bell. After much repetition we salivate over the hollow symbol, not the meat. 5