Why YSK: Online platforms, particularly some very prominent offenders, may artificially spike prices before creating âdiscountsâ. Whether this is intentional or the result of third party sellers fighting amongst themselves, I cannot say. Either way, donât blindly purchase something because of a deal (camelcamelcamel is great to see price history if you just care about Amazon). Besides, if your sole motivation to purchase something is based on a discount, you might be better off cutting consumption instead.
Source: I run fetchnotifs. While checking the logs this morning, I was scared to death I deployed a bug to productionâNope, itâs just that day of the year.
Actually, you donât even need to change the price to get customers to buy something âon saleâ. The supermarket Iâve worked in for a couple of years regularily advertised a certain brand of soft ice cream this way (not going to say any names here). âOnly 2,99⏠this weekâ (without comparing that price to anything in particular) and people bought that stuff en masse, even tho that was the exact same price as the week before, and the same price again after the âsaleâ. The only thing that changed during the âsaleâ week was the color of the price tag.
Laws regarding these types of advertising only work if customers actually compare prices, and most just donât do that.
Yeah, Iâve noticed such offers as well. Idk, is it just me or does it feel quite close to TĂ€uschung?