I'm a winner! |
I know what you’re all
thinking; how on Earth did I win so much and what am I going to do with all
that money? Well sorry to disappoint but this isn’t as simple as it first
seems. A couple of weeks ago I received this email and without hesitation
deleted it, knowing it is a very common scam. The sender alerts you to the fact
you have somehow been given a lot of money and all you have to do to receive it
is to send them some personal information. Firstly they’ll ask for basic
information such as your name and address. Even with this simple information
they could probably commit some sort of scam but the sender won’t stop there.
Upon receiving your name and address the next step is to ask for you bank
details so they can “transfer the money”. To many it seems blatantly obvious
the route this would take if I were to comply with their requests, but not
everyone is as clued up and many end up penniless because of such scams. So why
does this technique work?
It’s an example of Freedman
and Fraser’s (1966) Foot in the Door technique.
Freedman and Fraser
(1966) aimed to examine whether you are more likely to comply to a second,
larger request if you comply to a smaller request first. In an experiment
participants were split across a performance condition and a one contact
condition. In the performance condition participants were first asked to
complete a smaller request then 3 days later were asked to complete a larger,
related request. The one contact condition on the other hand just asked participants
to carry out the larger request.
The first smaller task involved the
experimenter ringing an individual and asking if they could answer a few short
questions about what household products they use. The larger request was to allow
a number of individuals to enter your home and verify what household products
you have. Freedman and Fraser (1966) hypothesised that those in the performance
condition would be more compliant.
As you can see in table 1, 52% of those who were first
asked to complete a smaller request went on to complete the larger request,
whilst only 22% of those who were only asked to complete the larger request did
so. This therefore supports the foot in the door
technique in which once you have asked for a small favour and have your foot in
the door, the participant feels obliged to carry on with the course of action
and so will continue to comply.
In the case of my email,
if I send them my name and address and they consequently ask for more
information such as my bank details, they already have their foot in the door
asking for a small request and so I should feel obliged to then comply with
their next larger request, which in this case will most likely be my bank
details. Luckily for me however I'm obviously taking this persuasion module and
can see right through their attempts of persuasion!
References
Freedman,
J. L., & Fraser, S. C. (1966). Compliance without pressure: the
foot-in-the-door technique. Journal
of personality and social psychology, 4(2),
195.
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