I may be wrong!
Sometimes, that strategy actually works., however probably not in this case.
Several years ago my wife(ex) and i were eyeing a lamp in an antique store that we regularly frequented. We both felt the price was a bit high, and there was no negotiating with this fella. probably a year or more went by, and the lamp remained in the same spot in his shop. One afternoon my wife tapped me on the shoulder "look, there's a new price tag on it". So, with lots of hope and anticipation on board i strolled over and flipped the tag around where i could see it. He'd raised the price by 225 bucks, we just tee hee'd among ourselves.
Well, wouldn't you know that on our very next visit to his shop our beloved lamp was gone!
I had to ask, and thus began a very interesting and friendly conversation. He explained that "sometimes if you don't price it high enough, customers get suspicious that something is amiss". He further explained "by raising my price significantly, to some people it suggests real value on a higher level and that's all the incentive they need, who am i to tell them different?"
as many of the pictures as i could get -
ImageShack Album - 37 images
guns kill people,
like spoons made rush limbaugh,
fat ....
There's a lot of stuff there, but $600K worth? Sure would be fun to visit.
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