Doctor SpinThe PR BlogSocial PsychologyThe Power of Artificial Scarcity

The Power of Artificial Scarcity

Artificial scarcity is fair game—just don't lie.

Cover photo: @jerrysilfwer

Creating arti­fi­cial scarcity works — but is it ethical?

In my line of work as a spin doc­tor, I some­times cre­ate arti­fi­cial scarcity to ful­fil my PR object­ives. I’m not alone — many com­mu­nic­at­ors and mar­keters do the same thing.

In this blog art­icle, I will dis­cuss why cre­at­ing scarcity works, why we use it, and wheth­er or not it is ethical.

Here we go:

The Principle of Scarcity

The prin­ciple of scarcity is well-estab­lished in sci­entif­ic lit­er­at­ure. If some­thing seems scarce, we anti­cip­ate our pos­sible regret of fail­ing to acquire the resource in time:

In 2 exper­i­ments, a total of 200 female under­gradu­ates rated the value and attract­ive­ness of cook­ies that were either in abund­ant sup­ply or scarce sup­ply. […] Results indic­ate that (a) cook­ies in scarce sup­ply were rated as more desir­able than cook­ies in abund­ant sup­ply; (b) cook­ies were rated as more valu­able when their sup­ply changed from abund­ant to scarce than when they were con­stantly scarce; and © cook­ies scarce because of high demand were rated high­er than cook­ies that were scarce because of an acci­dent.“
Source: Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 1Worchel, S., Lee, J., & Adewole, A. (1975). Effects of sup­ply and demand on rat­ings of object value. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 32(5), 906 – 914.

We are pro­grammed for sur­viv­al and will, there­fore, a) over­value items and ser­vices that are scarce and b) under­value those plen­ti­fully. 2Silfwer, J. (2016, August 4). FOMO & Digital Trends: You Don’t Have To Catch Them All. Doctor Spin | The PR Blog. https://​doc​tor​spin​.net/​f​o​mo/

Creating arti­fi­cial scarcity (by lim­it­ing avail­ab­il­ity) is a power­ful PR strategy, but to avoid back­fir­ing, the PR pro­fes­sion­al must refrain from fram­ing the offer using untrue statements.

Learn more: The Power of Artificial Scarcity

Artificial Scarcity

Artificial scarcity: “Only 5 spots left for this exclus­ive lead­er­ship train­ing — sign up now or miss out on this once-in-a-life­time opportunity!”

Artificial scarcity occurs when a com­pany or indi­vidu­al cre­ates the illu­sion of a lim­ited sup­ply or urgency to manip­u­late con­sumer beha­viour, even when the scarcity is not genu­inely based on the avail­ab­il­ity of resources. This tac­tic often encour­ages rushed decisions and cre­ates a sense of urgency that may not be justified.

In a busi­ness con­text, arti­fi­cial scarcity can pres­sure cus­tom­ers into mak­ing hasty decisions, lead­ing to over­con­sump­tion, regret, or loss of trust. While it may drive short-term sales or engage­ment, it can also under­mine long-term brand loy­alty if con­sumers feel manip­u­lated or deceived by the false urgency.

To avoid fall­ing into the trap of arti­fi­cial scarcity, busi­nesses should focus on build­ing trust and provid­ing genu­ine value rather than rely­ing on psy­cho­lo­gic­al manip­u­la­tion to drive sales. 

Transparency, clear com­mu­nic­a­tion about product avail­ab­il­ity, and cre­at­ing mean­ing­ful exclus­iv­ity or lim­ited-time offers can help busi­nesses main­tain eth­ic­al mar­ket­ing prac­tices while still sus­tain­ably gen­er­at­ing excite­ment and demand.

When scarcity is craf­ted, desire grows not from need but from the illu­sion that what is lim­ited is some­how more valuable.

Learn more: The Power of Artificial Scarcity

Artificial Scarcity and Public Relations

People tend to act more quickly when they believe that the thing they want is about to dis­ap­pear. The fear of not hav­ing some­thing can drive people to take action when they would­n’t have oth­er­wise acted.

Our brain releases dopam­ine in response to a poten­tial reward, which causes our beha­viour to be rewar­ded by the pro­spect of a new thing. It’s FOMO (fear of miss­ing out).

PR pro­fes­sion­als often base their PR strategies on cre­at­ing arti­fi­cial scarcity. We know that the more scarce some­thing is, the more people want it.

In a world where everything has become read­ily avail­able, it isn’t hard to under­stand why many PR pro­fes­sion­als, com­mu­nic­at­ors, and mar­keters use arti­fi­cial scarcity as one of their favour­ite tricks. We apply arti­fi­cial scarcity in many ways, such as lim­it­ing quant­it­ies, expiry offers, exclus­ive stor­ies, and rare occurrences.

I once cre­ated an invite-only wait­ing list for a new stream­ing ser­vice. Your place on the wait­ing list was par­tially determ­ined by your num­ber of social fol­low­ers and the num­ber of fol­low­ers of the per­son who invited you. The scarcity of avail­able seats sparked intense anticipation.

The Ethics of Artificial Scarcity

The Principle of Scarcity is an effect­ive motiv­at­or because it appeals to people’s instinct to acquire what they per­ceive as lim­ited. People have an innate desire for things or activ­it­ies that are scarce.

Creating arti­fi­cial scarcity can be an effect­ive motiv­at­or if appro­pri­ately util­ised. Is it eth­ic­al? I wish I could deny the inher­ent cyn­icism that seems to accom­pany our scarcity bias.

My approach is to use arti­fi­cial scarcity sparingly.

Example: I could use a count­down timer to get more users to sign up for a spe­cif­ic deal. But I would only use the timer if I were con­fid­ent that the offer would­n’t remain or resur­face soon after the count­down runs out.

Another way of put­ting it:
Creating arti­fi­cial scarcity is okay. But lying nev­er is.


Jerry Silfwer - Doctor Spin - Spin Factory - Public Relations

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Annotations
Annotations
1 Worchel, S., Lee, J., & Adewole, A. (1975). Effects of sup­ply and demand on rat­ings of object value. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 32(5), 906 – 914.
2 Silfwer, J. (2016, August 4). FOMO & Digital Trends: You Don’t Have To Catch Them All. Doctor Spin | The PR Blog. https://​doc​tor​spin​.net/​f​o​mo/
Jerry Silfwer
Jerry Silfwerhttps://doctorspin.net/
Jerry Silfwer, alias Doctor Spin, is an awarded senior adviser specialising in public relations and digital strategy. Currently CEO at Spin Factory and KIX Communication Index. Before that, he worked at Whispr Group NYC, Springtime PR, and Spotlight PR. Based in Stockholm, Sweden.

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