Hi, it's Dennis again.
Dennis:This is Connect & Convert.
Dennis:Insider strategies for small business sales success.
Dennis:We have a topic today that I think all of us will find interesting.
Dennis:I hope so.
Dennis:It's called scarcity.
Dennis:Scarcity.
Dennis:Yeah.
Dennis:What's scarcity.
Dennis:But before we dive into that, I have a wonderful announcement.
Dennis:Joining me today in this podcast and hopefully on subsequent podcasts,
Dennis:if she likes it and can stand me is Leah Bumphrey, an esteemed colleague,
Dennis:a fellow Wizard of Ads partner, a brilliant sales mind, an inspiring
Dennis:writer, now my partner on the podcast.
Dennis:I think Leah is going to provide a little different perspective.
Dennis:We share a lot of the same thoughts on sales, but her perspective
Dennis:is interesting and different.
Dennis:Leah, please introduce yourself to our audience.
Leah:Hey guys, I just.
Leah:Pleased to Dennis.
Leah:I love working with you.
Leah:And yes, we come at at times on different topics from a different
Leah:angle, but we both love radio.
Leah:We both love having clients where we can make a difference and training
Leah:is something that's important to us because we see that is a huge
Leah:need and something that we can do joining you guys from here in Canada.
Leah:And we're not that different.
Leah:So this is going to be fun.
Dennis:You're just a little colder and snowier than we are here in Florida.
Dennis:That's all that's, that's not a problem is we can deal with that.
Leah:Yeah, we'll, we'll be okay.
Dennis:Okay.
Dennis:Let's jump in F O M O FOMO.
Dennis:You've heard of FOMO, FOMO, the fear of missing out.
Dennis:That is one of the powerful driving forces that we know of in sales
Dennis:marketing, the fear of missing out.
Dennis:So today, Leah and I are going to do a deep dive.
Dennis:Into one of Cialdini's, Robert Cialdini, Dr.
Dennis:Robert Cialdini, the godfather of influence into one of his key principles,
Dennis:and that is the principle of scarcity.
Dennis:I will preface this by saying what you think about scarcity and what
Dennis:you possibly know about scarcity may not be 100 percent on target.
Dennis:I've got some new little Things that I want to share with you about scarcity.
Dennis:I'm a founding member of the Cialdini Institute that was just recently formed.
Dennis:I am a certified Cialdini Influence coach and practitioner, so I've done
Dennis:a very deep dive into influence.
Dennis:I'm now able to all of Dr.
Dennis:Cialdini's information research, and I'm going to share a
Dennis:lot of that with you today.
Dennis:These principles are ethical.
Dennis:And they're right there in the moment.
Dennis:They're right there in the moment.
Dennis:They don't need to be manufactured, but they're often overlooked.
Dennis:Hopefully after today, that won't be the case.
Leah:When you say overlooked, Dennis, that makes me think of Wizard Academy.
Leah:Often overlooked as a, as a place to go for business.
Leah:Or for training opportunities.
Leah:Uh, they are a sponsor of our podcast, but there's a reason for that.
Leah:You both have been exposed to Royce principles that really make
Leah:sense when it comes to building business and the why of it.
Leah:We don't want to overlook that.
Dennis:I can't help but remember the first time I went to an academy.
Dennis:The word I keep you, you know, it's transformation.
Dennis:I know that word sometimes over, but it transformed the way I thought business.
Dennis:I went with to, of course, taught by Michelle Miller, Marketing to Women.
Dennis:My radio stations were very fiendish.
Dennis:And I need to learn more about marketing to women.
Dennis:And boy, did she change my brain.
Dennis:I've been going back every year for over 20 years.
Dennis:I never miss, uh, taking at least one course at the wizard Academy.
Dennis:Uh, I can only ask our listeners to go to wizardacademy.
Dennis:org, wizardacademy.
Dennis:org.
Dennis:And look at the menu, look at the offerings.
Leah:There's just so much there.
Leah:That it doesn't matter what industry, it doesn't matter if you're coming
Leah:at it from the prospect or from the perspective of being a business owner, or
Leah:someone trying to help business owners, there's something there that you need.
Leah:I mean, there's even courses and I took my one of my sons to the young
Leah:writers class, and that is held in the summer, and that's when.
Leah:Probably 10 years ago now and he has continued to to go to the
Leah:wizard academy because there's just so much there as he calls it.
Leah:It's real learning.
Leah:It's a little bit different than that university stuff.
Dennis:But it's real learning, but it's done from perspective that gets inside
Dennis:your brain and makes you think thoughts you've never thought before that you
Dennis:need to think, but you never thought before, so give it a shot wizardacademy.
Dennis:org.
Dennis:Okay, let's jump into today's podcast.
Dennis:Today's episode on scarcity.
Dennis:Let me introduce the topic by telling you a bit of a story, and
Dennis:see if you can relate to the story.
Dennis:Let's say we could wind the clock back in the Dennis Wayback Machine, or the
Dennis:Leah Wayback Machine, and tell someone that in the 70s and 80s, we could
Dennis:wind back to the 70s and 80s and tell someone that in 40 years, people were
Dennis:sleeping all night, camping out in front of a store to buy a cell phone.
Dennis:What would you think of that, Leah?
Leah:I would have laughed.
Leah:I would not have thought that was possible.
Leah:I'm thinking back in the late 80s I had one of those nice big cell phones.
Leah:I was pretty trendy.
Leah:Just, just clear and you know, with a bit of a brick and I can't
Leah:believe I ever recycled that.
Leah:I wish I still had to show my kids because they don't believe me.
Dennis:They don't believe it.
Dennis:I know I had many of those bricks, but iPhone, of course, transformed everything
Dennis:for the the mobile phone business.
Dennis:So here's an amazing story.
Dennis:This is real.
Dennis:Two women were in the iPhone line.
Dennis:I don't remember which model that was new, but it was just announced
Dennis:and it was announced as available.
Dennis:One of them was in position number 23.
Dennis:The other one was in position 21.
Dennis:So fairly close.
Dennis:They started a conversation.
Dennis:21 gave 23 a compliment on her handbag.
Dennis:"You have a beautiful bag."
Dennis:It was an original.
Dennis:Louis Vuitton worth thousands of dollars, probably like the one you carry, we
Dennis:don't want to all depends on that.
Dennis:I understand.
Dennis:Well, anyway, number 23 replied, "Hey, you can have my bag.
Dennis:If I can have your position in line", what she was move up two
Dennis:positions from 23 to 21 and give her a multi thousand dollar bag.
Dennis:She was asked later, what the heck were you thinking?
Dennis:Um, and she said, hey, well, "I heard the store only had a limited number of new
Dennis:iPhone and I did not want this my chance to get that iPhone on the very first day."
Leah:That's what you call first world scarcity.
Leah:My goodness.
Dennis:Yes.
Dennis:First world problems.
Leah:And I'm assuming that they both ended up getting their, uh, their phone.
Dennis:Story that I have didn't go that far, but I would assume
Dennis:they did, but I know 21, the one who was 23 and swapped the 21.
Dennis:She got one for sure.
Dennis:Okay.
Dennis:I think 23 got one too.
Dennis:So powerful.
Dennis:How do we use this in sales?
Dennis:Leah, have you ever had any experience with using the principle of scarcity?
Dennis:The fact that there are only a few of these available.
Leah:Absolutely.
Leah:And you always have to be cautious when doing it, because
Leah:if, if there isn't scarcity.
Leah:Then you look like a salesperson who just cares about the sale, but if you have an
Leah:actual situation where there is a limited number of products or a concern about that
Leah:limiting, uh, limiting inventory, then it's real and you can make a difference.
Leah:I think you and I both come from a radio background.
Leah:And when I started in radio, and that's almost three decades ago, the idea
Leah:that there was a limited inventory, we couldn't just add paper, remember back
Leah:to the newspapers, a lot of ads, you could add more, you could find filler
Leah:content, you can't do that in radio, you can't take away the announcers,
Leah:you can't take away the music or the talk, so there's so many ads, and once
Leah:those ads are gone, you're finished.
Dennis:Well, you're right.
Dennis:Scarcity is a big deal in the radio business, and, uh, we talked, we've
Dennis:talked about this in other episodes, but, uh, You mentioned something about
Dennis:those who say it is scarce when it isn't.
Dennis:One of the things that Dr.
Dennis:Cialdini, when he brought us into the Cialdini Institute, said, and
Dennis:repeats and repeats and repeats, You must use influence ethically.
Dennis:There are unethical ways to use it.
Dennis:And ethical ways.
Dennis:He said, everything that I will teach you can be used either
Dennis:for the good or for the bad.
Dennis:He said, your obligation as a professional as a certified Chaldean
Dennis:professional is to use it for the good.
Dennis:And I take that quite seriously.
Dennis:So,
Leah:There are, there's humor, everything from, from context or
Leah:to just conversations and stories that we share with friends where a
Leah:salesperson has tried to stop us on price has tried to say, you know what?
Leah:I only have so many of these available.
Leah:I've got a little old lady.
Leah:That's been looking at this house for a while.
Leah:We know we, we are much more educated buyers than ever before and all
Leah:of us, from whatever perspective, we realize that that's total BS.
Leah:Even the people saying that know that works.
Dennis:And unethical you and today we want to talk about
Dennis:the ethical use of scarcity.
Dennis:Are there ways that you can scarcity that are ethical and effective?
Dennis:And I'll start with what makes you have you ever done an inventory
Dennis:of your company or of yourself?
Dennis:What rare talents?
Dennis:What skills?
Dennis:What abilities?
Dennis:Do you or your company possess?
Dennis:Let's give an example of athletes.
Dennis:This is one of the favorite topics of my wife.
Dennis:She doesn't understand how professional athletes can make all that money.
Dennis:Okay.
Dennis:She said, it's not right.
Dennis:It's not fair.
Dennis:That should be for the teachers and she's not totally wrong, but why?
Dennis:Okay.
Dennis:Leah, why do athletes, professional athletes make so much money?
Leah:It's a business, it's an absolute business.
Leah:They're making money because the business then is able to make money because there's
Leah:not that many athletes at that level.
Dennis:There it is.
Dennis:Uh, it's a number one.
Dennis:It's a business and it's a capitalist business what the market will bear.
Dennis:But what they do is scarce.
Dennis:I'm a big fan of NFL football.
Dennis:I know you guys in Canada.
Dennis:You don't care about that.
Dennis:So.
Leah:Are you kidding?
Leah:That is that it's a hot ticket.
Leah:If you come to my house on a Sunday, my husband all over all the time.
Dennis:I'm a Miami Dolphins fan, through and through, spent all of
Dennis:the last several, many decades in Florida and in Miami and Tyreek
Dennis:Hill, Tyreek Hill is my example.
Dennis:This dude is one of the greatest athletes, I think that I've ever observed.
Dennis:He runs track meets, he runs circles around, he's the
Dennis:fastest player in the NFL.
Dennis:Okay.
Dennis:And he's thankfully a Miami Dolphin and he, and, Tua Tagovailoa they have
Dennis:teamed up to a one, two combination.
Dennis:And they both are paid multi millions of dollars because what they do, almost
Dennis:nobody else can do, and it's a business.
Dennis:So they are unique.
Dennis:And their talents are scarce.
Dennis:So I, I invite you inventory your personal story.
Dennis:I'll bet when you go back and look at yourself, you have some
Dennis:experiences or your company has had some experiences that are unique.
Dennis:There's something that no one else has.
Dennis:Find out what's your creative superpower.
Dennis:Okay.
Dennis:Quality creative output is scarce.
Dennis:For instance, in our business, Leah, uh, writing.
Dennis:Creating great commercials, spots, uh, talk a little bit about that.
Dennis:How scarce is that someone who can actually write and produce
Dennis:a really good radio spot?
Leah:You know, that's the backbone of any of any campaign, is to be able to
Leah:tell the message of the business in a way that is not just advertising the industry.
Leah:We live in a world where conformity at some point became.
Leah:So overwhelmingly important to people, especially to kids,
Leah:and we can see this happening.
Leah:Everyone thinks that they're being unique by being different by being the same.
Leah:That's not what we're talking about.
Leah:So if we're talking about, let's take a commodity like insurance.
Leah:So insurance is insurance is insurance, but if you're selling insurance,
Leah:Dennis, it's going to be a lot different than how I would sell insurance.
Leah:And those differences are important because for everybody selling it
Leah:for everyone providing that service, there is also different types of
Leah:people that require it and you're going to feel comfortable with it.
Leah:So, when you hear these ads, and it's about, you know, in, in
Leah:certain business for 25 years, we have free parking and located.
Leah:A whole bunch of businesses that can say that.
Dennis:Yeah, that's not really that's not scarce, is it?
Dennis:And that's what that's what you hear on radio ads these days.
Dennis:TV ads.
Dennis:We're the biggest.
Dennis:We're the largest.
Dennis:We're the best.
Dennis:We have more selection.
Dennis:Who can't say that?
Dennis:What is it that you say about your business that no one else can say?
Dennis:What's that superpower?
Dennis:That's the thing we need to look for to exercise the principle of scarcity,
Dennis:something that no one else has.
Dennis:So also, it can be a unique perspective.
Dennis:Maybe you or your business, you have a perch that's different than
Dennis:other people in your industry.
Dennis:Uh, you know, two people can view the same event and describe it totally differently.
Dennis:How is your perspective?
Dennis:And here's another one.
Dennis:What you Relationships.
Dennis:Do you have?
Dennis:Who do you know?
Dennis:We've talked about this before.
Dennis:Do you have relationships with people that are scarce that are valuable and scarce?
Dennis:Hey, those kind of scarce relationship and contacts.
Dennis:Those are leverage.
Dennis:Those can put you in a different ballgame.
Dennis:And yet they're always there in the situation.
Dennis:We rarely think of them.
Leah:As a business owner, it is critically important that you And
Leah:that you are excited about the things that make you different.
Leah:Otherwise, why are you in business?
Leah:Think about a franchise.
Leah:Even, why would you go to that McDonald's versus the other McDonald's?
Leah:Location, that's about it, right?
Leah:But they're different than any other, uh, than a Taco Bell or a Taco Con.
Leah:So that becomes their unique selling proposition.
Leah:But when you're talking about the lifeblood of business and family
Leah:businesses, that little bit of difference that we bring to it
Leah:individually, that's Is is everything.
Dennis:That could be your scarcity.
Dennis:Claim it.
Dennis:If it just sits there under the bushel, as they say, and never
Dennis:open it, it doesn't help you.
Dennis:You've got to claim it.
Dennis:So let's jump to another topic real quick about scarcity.
Dennis:I get this a lot.
Dennis:People ask me this question, what motivates more the joy of the
Dennis:game or the pain of the loss?
Dennis:Okay.
Dennis:Well.
Dennis:Science based again.
Dennis:All of Cialdini's work is science based and therefore all of what
Dennis:I tell you is science based.
Dennis:Loss aversion.
Dennis:Studies are very clear.
Dennis:The pain of losing something is twice as powerful as the joy of
Dennis:gaining something of equal value.
Dennis:Equal value.
Dennis:Great story.
Dennis:They were doing a home bill study in California.
Dennis:They were going door to door to assess energy use.
Dennis:They had three messages.
Dennis:Message one.
Dennis:By installing more insulation and solar panels on your house,
Dennis:you can reduce your energy bill.
Dennis:Message two.
Dennis:If you take this proposal, you will save XXX amount of dollars in energy per month.
Dennis:Message three.
Dennis:If you don't take advantage of this offer, you will continue to lose.
Dennis:To lose X access per month, Leah, what do you think was effective
Dennis:message and getting someone to comply with the request?
Leah:Oh, definitely the last frame take this bond that makes
Leah:all the difference in the world.
Dennis:Science is very clear loss framing in that particular research
Dennis:had 150, 150 increase in guesses.
Dennis:It's the same money.
Dennis:It's different frame.
Dennis:The money was the same.
Dennis:Okay, but a different frame.
Dennis:Losses get our attention.
Dennis:They're visible.
Dennis:The downside of something, something not happening is more salient to our brain.
Dennis:Benefits of a potential game in sales.
Dennis:And maybe you found yourself doing this.
Dennis:I know I have, I'm always, you know, being the optimist.
Dennis:I want to tell you about what you could gain, what you could win, but
Dennis:wouldn't it be better, maybe more successful in sales if we emphasize
Dennis:what the client stands lose.
Dennis:If they don't act, how do you, how do you see that, Leah?
Dennis:Have you had experience with that?
Leah:Well, you know what?
Leah:It's interesting because like having a premium attached to a purchase.
Leah:So let's take it out of the business venue and you're going to buy something.
Leah:And if you buy this bottle of whiskey, here's your price, but if they're, they
Leah:have a limited amount of the whiskeys with glasses associated with them.
Leah:Same price.
Leah:Well, you got to buy it now because you know, it's going to be, you're
Leah:going to be gone where you don't want to lose out that opportunity.
Leah:I don't need any glasses, but trust me.
Leah:And I don't think many of us do, but if you have that opportunity to
Leah:get a little something extra, you're going to move in that direction.
Leah:It also makes me think of kids.
Leah:When you have little kids that are eating supper, they don't want to eat it.
Leah:And then you can get dessert.
Leah:Now I'm not advocating that.
Leah:But doesn't it work?
Leah:Who's that broccoli's going down if you know the cookie doesn't come
Leah:after because there's that fear of loss You really want the cookie?
Leah:I'll choke back the broccoli.
Dennis:The FOMO the fear Missing out, right?
Dennis:Yeah, absolutely Good good examples.
Dennis:Let's let's jump to our final uh notion today about scarcity.
Dennis:Um, What things do you control that have limited access?
Dennis:And or limited availability i'll bet more than So let me
Dennis:start with the first example.
Dennis:I always get asked this question too.
Dennis:Should I emphasize limited time or limited quantity?
Dennis:Which one of those is more persuasive?
Dennis:Which one executes scarcity or are they the same?
Dennis:You have five minutes to take advantage of this fabulous offer
Dennis:or there are only five items left.
Dennis:Act fast.
Dennis:What do you think, Leah?
Leah:The tangible is the item.
Leah:We're all used to being time start.
Leah:So if somebody tells me, I'm just as likely to go.
Leah:Hey, I don't need it that much.
Leah:I don't want I don't want that pressure.
Leah:I don't want to be elbowing some woman with a little out of the way,
Leah:but if you tell me there's only so many available, what if I need this?
Leah:What if one of my kids needs it?
Leah:What if my husband needs it?
Leah:My goodness, I better grab one of these because there's an opportunity with
Leah:having something with a lot of them.
Dennis:Well, guess what?
Dennis:You are on the side of science.
Dennis:There is no question.
Dennis:They both can be persuasive when used properly, but limited
Dennis:quantity, limited quantity always test better than limited time.
Dennis:So if you're in a, if you're in a conundrum about what to use and
Dennis:ad or how to use in sales, uh, limited quantity beats limited time.
Dennis:How about information?
Dennis:You know, this is a part that most people never even think of
Dennis:information that you control, that you create, uh, that you curate.
Dennis:Information can be fierce.
Dennis:What information do you possess or does your company possess
Dennis:that's unique, proprietary, not readily or equally available?
Dennis:Maybe you have a proprietary database, a certain technique that you have perfected
Dennis:and own a system that only you offer.
Dennis:What is that thing?
Dennis:What is that thing?
Dennis:What is that scarcity of information that you?
Dennis:Yes, another twist on this.
Dennis:I have some some people that I talked to about this and they will refuse to offer
Dennis:a sales proposal, a proposal for business.
Dennis:If they don't have enough, they make their proposal scarce.
Dennis:They will not submit.
Dennis:A price, a program, a presentation until they have appropriate information.
Dennis:Another use of scarcity.
Dennis:Okay.
Leah:That makes a lot of sense because we're talking
Leah:about ethical use of scarcity.
Leah:Yes.
Leah:And the ethical thing I can think of is the Ability and
Leah:the desire and offer to share.
Leah:Right, if I need some help with something again, Dennis,
Leah:I could give you a shout and.
Leah:If it's an area that, you know, I know you're going to
Leah:share that information with me.
Leah:I don't have it.
Leah:I'm going to ask, but as a business, if you offer that, you're willing to
Leah:offer the fact that you have this, this, and this is not available.
Leah:I mean, that's the information is the cabbage patch tip of the eighties.
Leah:Remember when?
Leah:That was a big deal.
Dennis:Memories of horror.
Leah:I see a little nervous twitch happening there.
Dennis:I couldn't get those for my kids and I was a bad daddy, you know?
Dennis:Scarcity, but it's real.
Dennis:And what you just said is real.
Dennis:So let's close out.
Dennis:I want to give, let's give our listeners a bonus today.
Dennis:You think we should give them a bonus?
Dennis:Let's give them a bonus.
Dennis:One more, one last thought on scarcity.
Dennis:How to increase your chances of winning when negotiation.
Dennis:Now we all get into big negotiations, little negotiations.
Dennis:I'm talking about any negotiation.
Dennis:Okay.
Dennis:So you're in a negotiation.
Dennis:You get hung up on some fairly minor detail.
Dennis:Okay.
Dennis:That happens all the time.
Dennis:You, the big things are falling in line, but there's just a few little things
Dennis:that just you can't reach agreement.
Dennis:I'm going to suggest to you, you try turning it around.
Dennis:Most of us would say, well, until you do XYZ, we don't have a deal.
Dennis:What does Dr.
Dennis:Cialdini teach us based on research science?
Dennis:We have a deal.
Dennis:You just need to do XYZ.
Dennis:Now you've set up a lose situation, haven't you?
Dennis:You've set up a loss situation.
Dennis:We have a deal.
Dennis:You just need to do this.
Leah:You don't, you don't recommend giving them a signing pen?
Dennis:Of course that's, but Leah, I don't mean to be
Dennis:rude, but that's old school.
Dennis:There are, in my opinion, we'll do a podcast on that.
Dennis:Okay, I love that.
Dennis:Here's the pen.
Dennis:Just sign here.
Dennis:Oh my gosh.
Leah:Keep the pen.
Dennis:Oh my.
Dennis:Dr.
Dennis:Cialdini personally stands behind the advice I just gave you.
Dennis:This comes direct from the doctor.
Dennis:Okay.
Dennis:We have a deal.
Dennis:You just need to do this.
Dennis:He has clients of his that have 100 percent success with that technique.
Dennis:And nothing works 100 percent of the time, but in this case, it does.
Dennis:Try it.
Dennis:You'll like it.
Dennis:So that's a pretty deep dive into scarcity.
Dennis:Scarcity is your friend.
Dennis:If used ethically, it gives you leverage.
Dennis:It's in situations.
Dennis:Go through the checklist that we recommended today.
Dennis:You're going to find scarcity in life.
Dennis:Okay, that does it for Connect & Convert, our deep dive into scarcity.
Dennis:We share insider strategies for small business sales success.
Dennis:Leah and I will be back soon.
Dennis:Tune back in soon.
Dennis:We'll be back.