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Social psychology (1)
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- The Foot in the Mouth
Bait-and-switch tactic :
A technique for gaining compliance in which once the customers enters the shop; items offered for sale are showed as unavailable or presented of very low quality. This leads customers to buy a more expensive item that is available. It happens because for customers point of view, changing one’s mind and reversing an initial commitment requires hard work, and many people, it appears, would rather pay a higher price than change their minds. 103 C] Tactics Based on Reciprocity : The Door in the Face : A procedure for gaining compliance in which requesters begin with a large request and then, when this is refused, retreat to a smaller one (the one they actually desired to be agreed ). This is exactly opposite of the foot-in-the-door technique: instead of beginning with a small request and then presenting a larger one, persons seeking compliance sometimes start with a very large request and then, after this is rejected, shift to a smaller request-the one they wanted all along. The Foot in the Mouth : When people feel that they are in a relationship with another person-no matter how trivial or unimportant-they often feel that they are obliged to help or considerate to that person simply because the relationship exists. For example, friends help friends when they need assistance, and persons who perceive themselves as similar in some manner may feel that they should help one another when the need arises. A clear demonstration of the power of this tactic is provided by research conducted by Aune and Basil (1994) as stated in Baron, R. A., Byrne, D., and Branscombe, N. R. (2006). These researchers had female accomplices stop students on a university campus and ask them to contribute to well-known charitable organization. In a control condition, they simply made this request without providing additional information. In another condition (which used the foot-in-the-mouth technique), they asked passerby if they were students, and they commented, “Oh, that’s great, so am I.” Then they made their request for funds. Results indicated that a much larger percentage of the persons approached made a donation in the foot-in-the-mouth condition (25.5 percent) than in the control group (9.8 percent). These finding, and those of a follow-up study by the same authors, suggest that the reciprocity principle can be stretched even to such tenuous relationships as “We are both students, right? And students help students, right? So how about a donation?” Download 0.55 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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