🎰 Guy Selling Timeshare at Club Wyndham Grand Desert
I went on a trip to Vegas for my birthday recently, to see Death Valley, Anyma in the Sphere, Meow Wolf, the Atomic museum, Real Bodies, and, only because it refunded two nights of my hotel stay, I attended a 2 hour timeshare presentation.
I expected to be bored and zone out, but instead witnessed a live masterclass in applied human psychology. It was manipulative, a little bit, but also a perfectly engineered sales funnel.
Honestly I’m impressed. Here’s what I learned:
Levelset with honesty and transparency to build trust.
“Who came here just to get their room rate refunded?”
Unexpected opening line, but the presenter aligned herself with the audience right away. We both know why you're here, you can be real. Now let's talk.
You don’t sell a product, you sell a feeling
Hide the math, don’t start with pricing or logistics. Start with you: “
What’s your dream destination?” “Why do you love to travel?” “Who do you travel with?”
Before they even mention ownership, they’ve anchored the idea of owning a hotel room in the emotions. And it’s all that matters, life is only about what we feel.
Make it feel affordable
When I learned the price was $20k, I classified Timesharing as a “real investment for real adults like my parents”. But they’ve developed payment plans with $300 down payment and a $200/month.
This tiny shift reframed the purchase from a “luxury investment” to “I can actually land this with some budgeting.” Suddenly, there’s no cost barrier to entry to play, and I actually started to think about whether or not this investment had returns that made sense.
Create phantom value
Tell me you’ll give me cashback without telling me you’ll give me cashback.
They had this reward system that handed out points that “works just like cash”. You get [x] points each year just for owning a timeshare, and they’ll tell you “it’s worth a free week in Hawaii!” but the catch is that the points don’t convert to cash 1:1, not even 1:10, it’s a fluctuating exchange rate and on the brochures they only list cash prices, not point values, to stop your brain from doing math.
Let them un-commit without un-committing
“You can exit any time, by transferring your share to someone else…” “use your points later…”
Technically true, you can walk away, but not with a cash refund.
Use a second person to drop the price
After 90 minutes of selling and a tour of the place, the first guy left. A second guy walked in:
“Hey, I’m his manager and here to assess his performance. Did he communicate well? Was he knowledgeable? Oh, also, I can give you a $3000 discount from a $20,000 price point.”Having someone else lower the price made it feel unplanned, like a lucky exception, not a negotiation tactic that makes me feel backstabbed if I committed at the full price.
Salespeople should love the thing they sell
The presenter told us her story: her mom worked hard her whole life, raised 5 kids, and never got the chance to travel (picture). Then, she got this job, bought a discounted timeshare as an employee, and took her mom to places she never imagined (more pictures). Before she passed, that is.
If your product can bring people happiness, that’s true intrinsic value.
Did I mention hide the math? Hide the math
Like, really, they hid the math. Aside from points and dollars not converting one-to-one, they had things like annual renewal rates, expiring points, and maintenance fees. One thing I did catch was that the locked-in $3000 price came with a 0.5% monthly maintenance fee that Wyndham can raise at any time.
Ease the pain of paying
From closing big real estate deals to checking out Shopify carts, the pain of paying is the last hurdle.
“Did you know this part is tax-deductible?”
“You can rent it out for passive income!”“Airfare discounts! (selected trips only) A vacation planner! (beyond a certain tier only)”
The payment isn’t just giving money away, it’s unlocking more future value.
Apply pressure at the finish line
“Can’t decide today? No problem. Just sign here to waive your chance to ever buy again.”
Framed for FOMO, and also, they can’t have people recycling the room rate rebate. Understandable.
What I’m taking back to Morphace:
It’s easy to dismiss all this as manipulative, but I felt some of it, so I’m keeping what I loved.
Make people feel something. That’s also what creatives do!
Make them picture how they’ll use it, not just what it is.
Make affordability real: $300 now, not $3000 later. Tools like Affirm can help.
Let people try before they commit, offer a trial return window so they’re not trapped by a fake refund.
Everyone on our team should use Morphace at least once, from devs to UI designers (especially devs and UI designers?).
Ditching the point systems designed for confusion, ditching pressure tactics, and one-time-only deals. If Morphace brings value to our users, they’re not buying because of these tactics.
Price slashing kills brand trust. Interestingly, this recently happened to RF competitors in China, where a change in medical device regulation policy caused them to dump inventory at more than 50% off.
To think more on - making payment feel like a transformation, not a transaction. I’ve also noticed that having credit card info saved makes buying much easier, like I’m trading Amazon goods for some game points.
I didn’t buy timeshare. But I did leave with a growing confidence in selling to consumers. I am a consumer, so just be genuine and get our message across.
Get our narrative of what life could be like across :)