That’s the lie though. .99 of us would just pay the five bucks. They’ve been playing that game for like 200 years, we get it. It’s stupid. Yet for some reasons gas stations charge us $3.2999 like bro what
Capitalist cannot help but try brainhack us, like evil little parasites always trying to fleece us and shit in our brain. Sometimes I wonder if they like that more than money itself, the trill of controlling someone else’s actions, even if it’s a small portion of the population. They love their converts that they dominate no matter how few they are
I usually round up prices like 4,99 to 5 in my head, but I met many people IRL who would only remember the base of the price with no cents if it wasn’t rounded up for them. They would remember 4,99 as 4, and then be confused why they only got 1 cent of change. I guess this is the kind of people who is the target audience of this practice. It seems cheaper to them than it really is because they are cent blind 😆
This is what happens when we don’t put these manipulator shitheads in their place. If we’d occasionally make a scene that’s “WTF THIS SAID 4$ FUCK YOU AND YOUR HORSE” They’d eventually rethink trying to hack our brain all the time with their little bullshit tactics, flashing lights and artificial smells. These little money goblins really get on my damn nerves.
Yeah, I agree. These people’s entire business model is frying your brain for profit, and then people wonder why everyone is so oversaturated lately. I always wished we could just officially round prices up instead of doing the *.99$ bullshit because no matter where I go, store workers are almost always low on 1 cent coins, and then they have to either hope that the customer has spare cents on them to balance it out or that the customer will just skip getting the 1c change. I worked in a shop for several months once and this was one of the most stressful things at handling money, because not every customer would be fine with it. Some of them would be so petty that they would stand in the middle and scream because “they want their money”, and I would physically have nothing to give them because every single transaction made would just dry out all my small coins. When I was a teenager, my parents had their own shop and I was usually collecting all the stray small coins and give them to my mom to make her work easier. I feel like this “trick” makes everything more complicated for everyone.
In “Priceless, the Myth of Fair Value,” William Poundstone attempts to explain this phenomenon.
First he mentions the advent of the “99-Cent store” the first of which was created by a shopkeeper who noticed sales increased when prices were 99-cents despite the same item being even cheaper before.
One theory as to the beginning of this phenomenon dates back to British colonialism in America. Conversion from British shillings produced an odd-penny prices in local currency, so the strange prices were associated with higher quality imported goods.
Another theory comes from the invention of the cash register. Since change could only be made after the sales amount was punched into the machine (and recorded for later review by the shopkeeper), odd prices made it more difficult for employees to sell items on the sly and pocket the cash. Unless that employee had a pocket full of change.
Though he admits that neither of these explanations (if even valid) would explain why specifically prices ending in 9 (called “charm prices”) are so popular.
A experiment carried out at the University of Chicago found that when different versions of women’s clothing catalogs were sent to a random sample of people, the same item would sell better at $39 than at $34.
This is interesting especially because it partly debunks the “mental rounding down” that allegedly happens when you see a price ending in a 9.
Some people have come to associate it with things being marked down or somehow discount, and studies showed that higher end brands see less benefit from charm prices. A study showed that a charm priced item sold similarly well to a non-charm priced item that had an explicitly called out sale price (like “$40, reg $48”).
I know when I worked at Circuit City, the status of the item was sometimes coded into the price. $x.99 was normal price while $x.97 was clearance, etc.
Ultimately, we do it because it works but there’s no definitive answer as to why it works.
Psychology aside, when I was a wee waddler working my first retail job, my boss told me that the reason they priced items ending in 99 cents specifically at his store was because the change from a dollar left over was a shortcut to telling the cashier how many items had been rung up. “Rung up” itself being very apt in this case, because when he started his business back in the Lower Cretaceous period, they used mechanical cash registers that went ding and everything, but didn’t have fancy electronic readouts of the running total and items registered so far. If the customer handed you seven items you knew that the pennies end of the change if you rounded up to a dollar should be $XX.93, and you could use that to tell handily if you missed anything or double-rung something.
It seems that the prospect of “losing” a penny in the sense of making a $1 item 99 cents instead was probably a better proposition versus having cashiers let un-rung items walk out the door all the time.
I think this explanation was crafted specifically to dispel the so-called myth.
I suspect this “study” would fare about as well as the rest of the replication study in social sciences.
I really wish we had governance that was staffed entirely by the ghoul’s prostitutes and would put on their pants and tell the money goblin to quit it with the incessant brainhacking of the public.Even at damn costco ! They make you do never ending price-gymnastic to desorient you on the price of things $/kilo, $/100g, $/100ml,$/L and when all else fails to hide the really bad prices it’s $/unit.
It’s ducking EXHAUSTING
I think it works due to the vast quantity of uniformed idiots.
it’s because 4 is a smaller number than 5 therefore the better price
i have a wide array of other savvy money saving tips