The above United Nation study shows the effect of anchoring, even with seemingly totally irrelevant numbers, in the human mind when confronted with uncertainties. In the rest of the book, there are many many examples of real world pricing schemes that exploit the weakness in our psychology and decision making under uncertainty.
In 2002, my family went to the US for
summer holiday. One of our stops was Las Vegas, and one of our to-dos in Las Vegas was to see the Cirque du Soleil show "O" in the Bellagio. I asked someone I know in the US to purchase the tickets, without giving specific instructions. Out of his habit, he bought the cheapest tickets. I wasn't very happy about it, and thought that I should have told him to get the most expensive tickets. The reason was the we travelled all the way from the other side of the earth at great expenses, why save a few hundred US$ risking not getting the better seats?!
Does it ring a bell? How many times you decided to purchase the expensive (maybt not the most expensive but the 2nd most expensive) tickets when you are unfamiliar with the seatings? I know I have done it many times.
One of the many anchoring stories from the book is the ticket prices at Broadway & Las Vegas! Cheap seats don't sell. When most customers are tourists who have no idea about the value of a seat, they judge the value of the seat by the price. Successful productions would have outragously high price seats, and these seats made the less-outragously-priced-but-still-very-expensive seats reasonable. In fact one of the producer revealed that sometimes "70%-80% of [all the seats] is top price."
And one of my favorite studies is the pricing of luxury goods. Living in Hong Kong, we are constantly exposed to bombardment of luxury goods, products that are very expensive and supposedly shows "who you are!". In a Muse Magazine article, it was said that on average Hong Kong people spend HK$6000 on designer brands every three months.
I have started a thread showing (bragging?) some of the gifts I received, including a Cartier key ring retailed at US$280, a Tiffany money clip retailed at US$150. In the same thread I recounted stories of people buying HK$1500 key chains. Whilst I don't think I would ever pay these high prices for items that have very cheap and equally functional alternatives, I always wonder why some people do, and why people would line up outside the store under a very humid weather to buy plastic bags from LV? (Out of curiosity we bought one, found it much less functional than much cheaper bags, store it away gathering dust for a few years, and recently gave it away to someone who treasures the brand.)
Now back to the book. One of the chapters examined anchoring in the pricing of luxury goods. "You sold one thing to the king, but everyone in court had to have a lesser one" sums up the idea. The "one thing to the king" would be the $280,000 handbag you see in the magazine high society party page, and the "lesser ones" would be the $8000 plastic bag or the $2000 key ring.
I am recounting many of my personal experience here because reading the book made me reflect on my own past. Was I hooked to the anchoring just like the majority? How do I step back to see the big picture and value things rationally? I believe a good book makes you think.