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Is Something For "Free"Really So? It May Hurt Business

Is Something For "Free" Really So? It may hurt business


In the trades and retail industry we have many challenges besides meeting the concerns, wants, and needs of our precious clients. Many businesses have resorted to marketing on the basis of something for less or free. It prompts clients to want what is offered for free, however, at the same time, causes the knee jerk reaction question to arise, “How can it be free, what’s the catch”?
 This poses itself as one of the challenges most noteworthy; the honest perception of value that is created. For a certainty, most trends are to downplay, for market segmenting purposes, the true value of reputable trades or product.

As businesses we need to realize that no sale is really complete until a successful installation of product or service has been provided for the paying, trusting client. This client in-turn may or may not be a super advocate for our business’ success, depending on the final result.

Wouldn’t it make sense as businesses to present all services and products in the true light of actual cost, thus leveling the playing field by being forthright in our business dealings? Is it not tantamount to lying to present any trade services as something that can be commoditized for less than its true value, or for free, when we know it isn’t?

To advertise something for “free” in reality means something else needs to recoup the costs related to the “free” product or service. This is, in all respects, “Bait and Switch” by offering something for free that really isn’t. Doing so, may call into question the honesty in our dealings and end up hurting our business.

“Bate and Switch” tactics are used all the time by many larger corporations and have severely damaged flooring installation, renovation, carpet cleaning, vacuum sales and services, design agent services, retailers, product value and the like. The result leaves well intentioned clients in a quandary of who, why and what they can trust.

All operations that work on lowest price marketing, set everyone up for failure and feed our waste facilities with massive amounts of materials, due to bad decisions made, as a direct result of unscrupulous enterprises who are in it just for the money and opportune themselves to the consumer disposition, being taught today.

It may be manufacturers, distributors, retailers, advantage driven designers and sales persons who are not forthright in their business dealings. Full disclosure of what is lacking in the offer is skilfully sold over to reap unjust profits, at the expense of the honest and unwary, with no regard to the environmental impact.


Lowest cost marketing is not being forthright in business dealings, as it may not spell out the true reason something is less, or much less, as many products and services, on the surface, appear to be the same.

The adage, “ You Get What You Pay For”, is usually visited after the disappointment comes, once the bargain fails to meet the expectation and the delight for the savings is replaced by the sinking feeling, “I’ve been had again”. As businesses, is this really the outcome we want our clients to experience, let alone, having to deal with it once exposed?

Being responsible businesses, we should never want to feed the greedy price shopper mentality created by corporate opportunists and smaller businesses who buy into this mindset.

By reflecting on true value all the way around, it makes good sense to present our services and that of others in the true light of costs and need.

Today many are thinking in line with, save the planet. This means, as forward thinking businesses, we want to be the forerunners in leading and educating by example.

Therefore, let us be forthright in our business dealings, and thus save our businesses and services, giving due representation to great trades, products, costs, the environment and education of our precious clients while we are at it.


Ron Preston

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