unedited 7/27/08

 

 

 

Baiting

  • Fraud: "A knowing misrepresentation of the truth or concealment of a material fact to induce another to act to his or her detriment." Black's law dictionary page 685.

B-1. Luring customers for legitimate purposes such as offering a "loss leader." While the loss leader may be inexpensive and of value the rest of the merchandise in the store is high priced.

B-2. Luring customers with a "loss leader" while the rest of the merchandise is cheap or shoddy and of little value.

B-3. Luring a customer or client with no genuine intent to deliver fully. Offering the symbol of service or value but giving cheap product or service.

Bait and Switch
Offering the symbol but not the substance. A product might appear to be something of value or of high quality but in reality it is cheap or of poor quality. This is a deceptive business practice.

Bait and Hook

Unlike bait & switch, bait & hook seems a more legitimate practice in business. From a conventional ethical standpoint there might seem something unethical about bait & hook. However in the practical world businesses are forced to try many creative methods to drum up business. There are many types of business where a systematic extraction process follows hooking a customer. The ethicacy of bait & hook can be found in an analysis of how aggressive the business implements their baiting. Does the bait have the look of value but in fact having little value? Was the bait overpowering playing on powerful emotions. For example, a buyer and seller of homes outfit houses he puts on the market with fancy gold facets. This can be distracting to a first time buyer who sees only a staged house but not a marginal foundation and marginal structural integrity. The staging appears to strong emotions, the facets push them over the edge appealing to fantasies a first time buyer might have. There is a definite point where baiting can overwhelm clear thinking. In making an ethical evaluation of a business this might be one of a hundred factors taken into consideration to determine the ethical framework a business is operating in.

Baiting

Luring a potential buyer or client to a business. An example of this can be seen in the practice of advertising a "loss leader." A specialty shop that replaces brakes on cars might advertise a $79 brake job. A closer examination of the fine print states this includes labor and brake pads for the front disc brakes on most cars. This is a very good price for changing brake pads. What the repair shop does not tell you is that they will not guarantee the work unless your worn rotors are either machined or replaced with new ones. And for technical reasons they are only replaced in pairs. By the time the customer gets out of the shop they have spent $700. Moreover, they have a brake job that uses cheap brake pads and rotors. The customer could have gone to a reputable auto shop that specialized in repair their brand of automobile and paid the same but the parts would have been of the highest quality and highly professional mechanics working on the car. It’s difficult to say this is unethical. There is a learning curve involved in shopping around for food, clothes, houses, cars and services. Word gets around about businesses that aggressively bait customers. As their reputation grows, it limits their ability to expand their customer base. Most shoppers have a good sense of value and seek out something better.

  • Extraction
  • Concealment of a Material Fact