Drew Ott
Wish I were banned.
How common knowledge is it that the funeral industry is corrupt?
My mom worked at a funeral home. I was about to graduate high school and she figured she'd get a part time job. She saw an ad looking for a grief counselor at a funeral home and was given the job. The job paid commission and during training she was taught to "upsell upsell upsell." 6 months later she quit. A poor family had spent their last $5,000 to pay for the father's funeral service, and my mom's boss kept telling her to suggest upgrading the vault to granite, otherwise the casket was at risk of being crushed (which is a lie).
I got pretty intrigued by all of this and started reading books about the funeral industry. If this sounds interesting to you, I highly highly recommend "The American Way of Death Revisited." It's both terribly depressing and hilarious.
I've since gone to a couple funeral homes pretending I wanted to prearrange my own funeral. I was given the same sales techniques that I had read about. It's absolutely bizarre, the people are like used car salesmen. I could barely tell what was true and what wasn't, even though I'd studied their techniques. It's tragic to imagine families in grief being taken advantage of. The salespeople speak with gentle voices and feign empathy, but they lie and manipulate like anybody else.
While I was in the funeral homes, I used a pocket audio recorder. If anybody is interested, I can cut together a little highlight reel of some of the ridiculousness. I have a few hours of material and there's some gold in there.
My mom worked at a funeral home. I was about to graduate high school and she figured she'd get a part time job. She saw an ad looking for a grief counselor at a funeral home and was given the job. The job paid commission and during training she was taught to "upsell upsell upsell." 6 months later she quit. A poor family had spent their last $5,000 to pay for the father's funeral service, and my mom's boss kept telling her to suggest upgrading the vault to granite, otherwise the casket was at risk of being crushed (which is a lie).
I got pretty intrigued by all of this and started reading books about the funeral industry. If this sounds interesting to you, I highly highly recommend "The American Way of Death Revisited." It's both terribly depressing and hilarious.
I've since gone to a couple funeral homes pretending I wanted to prearrange my own funeral. I was given the same sales techniques that I had read about. It's absolutely bizarre, the people are like used car salesmen. I could barely tell what was true and what wasn't, even though I'd studied their techniques. It's tragic to imagine families in grief being taken advantage of. The salespeople speak with gentle voices and feign empathy, but they lie and manipulate like anybody else.
While I was in the funeral homes, I used a pocket audio recorder. If anybody is interested, I can cut together a little highlight reel of some of the ridiculousness. I have a few hours of material and there's some gold in there.