Do you mean techniques a door to door salesman might use, such as purporting to just be taking an entertainment survey to get you talking to him, while he gathers enough info about you to note that your profile is perfectly suited to the discount club in which he can offer you a membership?
And do you refer to the salesman, when you protest that you aren’t prepared to make a decision tonight, exercising the “negative take-away” and telling you the offer can only be made while he is there that night, and this will be an opportunity forever lost if not acted upon now.
And are you also referring to the fact that said salesman is armed with a repertoire of pat replies to objections, such as, for the above situation, “Well, you know, when you think about, every decision is a snap decision?”
Or do you perhaps think of the politician, who’s long been a proponent of higher energy prices and restrictions on domestic drilling as a means to combat pollution, stating during a campaign at a point when the public’s mind is on a temporarily high gas prices that we will develop our own energy resources to escape dependency on foreign sources that leave us at the mercy of market prices? Possibly you believe such a politician cynically thinks that the policy wonks that don’t like him won’t believe for a minute that he’s changed course, but they were lost to him anyway and the policy wonks who do like him won’t for a minute believe he’s changed course, but will recognize he’s just saying what he feels he needs to to get elected, and the only minds he might sway are those that will never know or understand his efforts in the energy arena anyway.
While I don’t so much now, but may again in the future, in the past I’ve had to pitch deals within my industry. And I still look at the other guys’ deals. That’s a case of professionals pitchin’ to professionals, and we all know all the tricks. Sins of ommission are not condoned, but people do get by with that because we all recognize that there may be something we just don’t know. Optimistic estimates or interpretations of data are OK, as optimism drives business. Outright fibbing will get you a bad reputation very quickly, and nobody wants that, although some seem to persist forever with Jolly Rogers flying.
It’s hard to imagine a world without selling.
“Are your hamburgers good?”
“They’re just like the ones across the street, but hey, you’re already here (whoops, some selling).”