My daughter Abigail’s good friend, Maxie, used
to work at a bakery in our hometown of Westerville. One
Saturday morning Abigail and I stopped by to say hello and get a sugary treat
after having coffee. I noticed Maxie was busy replacing donuts and making sure the
pastry trays were completely full. Unfortunately, it was a bad persuasion move
on her part.
I asked Maxie why she was so quick to restock
the trays after a few donuts or pastries were purchased. She said the bakery owner
liked the trays to be full and he believed they looked better that way. I told
her that approach is actually working against the bakery making more sales. Let
me explain.
Two principles of influence were potentially
at work in the bakery if the situation was handled correctly. The first was
consensus – we look to others to see how we should behave in certain
situations. The second principle was scarcity – we value things more when
they’re rare or diminishing.
When people walk into a bakery and see a tray
with very few donuts left, consensus kicks in as the first thought is – those
must be good donuts because everyone seems to be buying them. Next comes
scarcity – with so few donuts left, if I don’t get one soon I might not be able
to get one. Both principles become a huge draw do make a purchase!
I’m pretty confident the owner of that bakery
has many things for employees to do other than constantly restocking the
shelves. One big thing would be having them engage customers and sharing what items
are “selling like hotcakes.”
Have you ever been to a store where you
obviously needed help but an employee or employees seem more concerned with
stocking the shelves? That’s frustrating. Some of that may be due to their
hesitancy to interact with people but I’m sure some of the pressure comes from
a manager who feels fully stocked shelves is a high priority for the store. Not
smart if you want to sell more goods.
Think about where you work. Are there things
you have that people actually see? If so, don’t be so quick to “restock the
shelves” because doing so reduces the impact of consensus and scarcity. Rather,
manage the process so you convey what other people are buying and get your
customer to “act now” so they don’t lose an opportunity. If you’re worried
about employees standing around, teach them how positively engage customers in
such a way that customers enjoy the buying experience and keep coming back.
Brian Ahearn, CMCT®
Chief Influence Officer
Chief Influence Officer
InfluencePEOPLE
Helping You Learn to Hear “Yes”.
Helping You Learn to Hear “Yes”.
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