Going to have to cram for the final
My wife and I flunked Psychology 101 a couple of weeks ago. No, that
isn’t quite accurate. We flunked the mid-term exam. We haven’t
finished the course yet, but no matter how well we perform the rest
of the way, we can’t beef it up to more than a “C.”
This academic failure took place not in a formal school, but in a
challenge of the real world that I suspect a good many of you have
either experienced or considered. For some years -- ever since our
income got above what developers consider the poverty level -- we’ve
been receiving invitations to enjoy a free vacation at newly
constructed resorts. The only hitch, we are told, is that we must
give our host an hour or two to show us around his place.
We’ve resisted these invitations out of deep suspicion that if we
ever accepted this largess, we would be caught in real estate
tentacles that would squeeze us the rest of our lives. This was a
disquieting feeling because it forced us to face the concern that we
were neither smart enough nor tough enough to resist the
entrepreneurs we would go up against.
As a result, every time one of these invitations came, I would put
it in my save pile rather than throw it away. There, it would expire
quietly until the next one came.
That was the situation when friends from Portland, Ore. arrived
for a visit. We had just received a resort promo, and it was fresh on
my save pile when we discovered that our friends were on their way to
take advantage of the same offer. So we asked them to report to us
after their stay.
They did, and were downright ecstatic about the experience. When
they finished describing the pleasures of the resort, we asked them
rather timorously if they had bought anything. “No,” they said, “of
course not. We listened and said we weren’t interested at this time,
and went back to enjoying our vacation.”
So my wife and I decided we were surely as strong as they were,
and it was time for us to take advantage of this offer. So I phoned
the number on the invitation and set a date. We had to pay what
amounted to about one-third of the room cost, but we also got a $100
credit to spend as we saw fit at the resort. All of this was tied up
with remarkable efficiency by the people on the other end of the
phone before we took off.
Our quarters were delightful, we enjoyed a splendid dinner on the
house, and we were feeling quite mellow by 11 the next morning when
the sales pitch was to take place. I had envisioned a roomful of
people like us who would be shown a slide presentation of the resort.
There would be questions afterward and a signup sheet for those of us
who would like to look at the models. Salespeople would then be
available to discuss terms with any interested parties.
That vision wasn’t even close. There was no mass meeting, no slide
film and no voluntary sales sessions. We were one-on-one from the
get-go, without breathing space to prevent our mental faculties from
turning to mush. We recognized this as it was happening, but we were
always one step -- sometimes more -- behind the process.
And it was slick. I like professionals, whatever their gig happens
to be, and these people never missed a beat. Even though their
technique was for the most part as obvious and predictable as their
persistence (two of the salespeople, for example, told us they had
fathers named “Joseph”), we were still carried along.
This was largely because a routine that had been proven successful
in selling people like us a piece of the ranch was followed
scrupulously, regardless of any diversions we might introduce. And
also because they were very good at it.
We dealt with three different salespeople: Good Cop, Bad Cop, Good
Cop, all of whom played their roles impeccably. I don’t remember
their names, so we’ll call the first one Jim. He was the new guy on
the staff, kind of bumbling, but likable and determined to plod
through his script and use all of the sales tools in his arsenal. We
were finally helping him along, mentoring him a little. He showed us
the models, and they were splendid, but we told him that although we
were intrigued, we were not ready to make this kind of investment.
So he took us to the Bad Cop. We’ll call Cliff. No warm, fuzzy
affection here. He was the tough guy, showing us in broad strokes on
a pad how we were already spending more on vacations than this plan
would cost while seeing far less than the variety of hotels and
resorts in their catalog, all of which we could access by a rather
complex point system. When we told Cliff this was all very
interesting, but we would have to think it over and talk it over
before we could make any such commitment, he was astonished at our
failure to jump at such an offer.
That’s when he pulled out the black book with the large type
listing the special inducements -- including a bundle of points -- if
we would make a decision now. He had us teetering until I asked if
these inducements would hold until the next morning so Sherry and I
could talk it over tonight. He said, “No, you must either decide now
or pass up the inducements forever.”
And Sherry said, “You might have had us, but you just lost us.”
Cliff shut his book and was gone. I thought we were, too, but then
Jim led us to Henry, an avuncular sort who truly hated to see us lose
all those goodies. So he had an idea. If we would sign on for a
truncated program that would give us four nights at our present site
plus enough points for another four nights elsewhere, he could fix it
so they would hold the original offer, with all its inducements, open
for 18 months. That’s when we flunked the mid-term exam by joining
up.
So now we’re getting letters from our new time-share pals
welcoming us to the “family” and even giving us a certificate number.
I’m not sure of its function, but it feels good. They sign their
letters “with great expectations,” and I don’t know if we have the
same expectations they do. But I have 18 months to find my college
psychology book and see how they nailed us.
I hope when we go back, we don’t get Cliff again.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
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