skills/offers/references/scarcity-urgency.md
The reason to buy now, not later.
This is the most misused offer lever in the industry. Done right, it's a meaningful conversion lift and a respect-the-buyer's-time gesture. Done wrong (fake countdown timers, lies about inventory), it converts once and torches trust permanently.
The repo voice: only ship real scarcity. If the scarcity is fake, take it off the page.
| What it limits | Examples | |
|---|---|---|
| Scarcity | Quantity | Cohort size, seats, inventory, batch, capacity |
| Urgency | Time | Cohort deadline, season, bonus expiry, price increase |
Both work via the same mechanism — they convert "I'll think about it" into "decide now." The difference is what enforces the decision: a limit on how many, or a limit on when.
The bar: the constraint has to be real. Here are the formats that work without lying.
You can only deliver to N customers at a time. The next slot opens when one finishes.
"We take 2 fractional CMO engagements per quarter. Next slot opens September 15."
Works for: services, agencies, coaching, consulting, anything labor-bound.
The class starts on a date. After the date, the door closes until the next cohort.
"Cohort 7 starts October 1. Doors close September 28. Next cohort: January."
Works for: courses, programs, group coaching, anything synchronous.
The first N buyers get a different price. After that, the price goes up.
"Founding pricing — $497/mo for the first 50 members. After we hit 50, the price moves to $797/mo."
Works for: SaaS, communities, memberships. Critical: actually raise the price when you hit 50. Otherwise it was a lie.
You have N units. When they're gone, they're gone.
"We're only producing 100 of the print edition. Sold out, no reprints."
Works for: physical products, limited-run digital, bespoke services.
Demand or capacity is seasonal.
"Tax-prep service for Q1 2026 closes January 15. After that, we focus on existing clients only until April."
Works for: tax, retail Q4, events, education enrollment, anything calendar-bound.
A bonus is available only until X date. The core offer stays the same; the added value expires.
"Order by Friday and the 1:1 onboarding session is included. After Friday, the offer is the same but onboarding is +$497."
Works for: anything with a launch window. Critical: actually remove the bonus when the date hits.
The price goes up on a date. Communicate it transparently.
"On November 1, the program moves from $1,997 to $2,497. Anyone enrolled before November 1 keeps the $1,997 price for life."
Works for: courses, SaaS, communities. Builds credibility because the buyer can verify it later.
Pattern-match and rip these off your page:
The timer hits 0:00 and refreshes. The buyer comes back tomorrow, same timer, same urgency. Every buyer who notices loses trust.
If you use a countdown, it ends on a real date. After that date, the discount or bonus actually ends — verifiably.
Especially on digital products where there's no capacity constraint. Especially when the number stays at "3" for weeks.
Use this only when the constraint is real (cohort, capacity, inventory) AND when the number reflects reality.
"127 people are looking at this page right now."
These can be honest on some platforms (Booking.com etc.) when they reflect actual traffic. They're dishonest when fabricated. Buyers increasingly assume fabrication.
"This bonus expires at midnight!" — but every page on the site says the same thing at midnight every night.
The bonus has to actually expire, or the line is a lie.
Repeated "FINAL HOURS" emails that send weekly. Every recipient who notices unsubscribes or stops opening.
Use "last chance" once. If you use it multiple times, you've taught your list that "last chance" is meaningless.
Buyers compare notes. The internet is small.
Real scarcity converts ~the same as fake scarcity at the moment of purchase. The difference shows up at month 6, when fake-scarcity offers are facing trust collapse and real-scarcity offers are still compounding.
If you have to fake it, you don't have an offer-design problem — you have a value-equation problem. Go back to value-equation.md.
Some offers don't need scarcity:
Don't force scarcity into offers that don't need it. The forced version is worse than no scarcity.
For an existing offer with weak or no scarcity:
If you can't find a real constraint, don't ship scarcity. The "trick" of fake scarcity is one of the most expensive shortcuts in marketing. The honest version is usually cheaper than people think — every business has some real constraint (capacity, calendar, batch, attention).
Scarcity is the final lever. It only works if the rest of the offer is strong.
If conversions are bad, scarcity is rarely the first thing to fix. Run the diagnostic from value-equation.md first.
The order is:
Scarcity is the close, not the offer.