What is manufactured urgency, and how do I recognize it?
also called: the pressure close, scarcity play, "now-or-never" move
Manufactured urgency is pressure designed to force a decision faster than the matter actually requires, through invented deadlines or scarcity. You recognize it by lines like "today only," "this offer expires now," or "we have to decide right away", when there's no real reason for the rush. The goal isn't information, it's getting you to skip thinking.
What it sounds like
How Hearium reports it
Manufactured urgency
Them I can only hold this price if you sign today.
Under time pressure, slow, checking thought switches off. Someone who believes they must decide this instant stops comparing and stops asking questions.
How to respond
- 1
Question the deadline: "What concretely happens if I decide tomorrow?" A real deadline has a traceable reason, an invented one falls apart under the question.
- 2
Set your own pace: "I'm not deciding this today." An offer that only holds under haste is rarely a good offer.
- 3
Use a night to think as a test: anyone who won't grant you one is selling the pressure, not the thing.
Common questions
Is every deadline manufactured urgency?
No. Some deadlines are real: an expiring contract, a genuinely limited batch. It becomes manufactured when the haste is used to force a decision, yet the deadline can't be justified when questioned, or suddenly moves once you decline.
Why does time pressure work so reliably?
Under pressure the brain takes shortcuts instead of weighing things carefully. That's exactly the point: the rush is meant to stop you from comparing, recalculating, or getting a second opinion.