Mulhern (originally Edmonds) tells the contestant the offer and asks the eponymous question. The contestant responds either "deal" or "no deal". Responding with "deal" means the contestant agrees to sell their box for the amount of money offered, relinquishing the prize in the box. The game is now over, though play continues to show the hypothetical outcome had the contestant not dealt. Saying "no deal" means the contestant keeps their box, and proceeds to the next round, again hoping to reveal small amounts in the remaining boxes.

After the final round, only two boxes remain. If the contestant rejects the final offer and has not dealt, their box will be opened and whatever prize it contains will be what the player has won. However, in some circumstances, the Banker can offer the opportunity for the contestant to swap their box with the other remaining unopened box and take the prize contained in the other box instead. Swaps are more likely to occur when a relatively large prize money value remains in play alongside a much lower monetary value, with the offer done by the Banker in the hope that the player unintentionally gives away a significant prize and leaves with a much smaller amount. In the original series, if the final red in play was the jackpot prize (250,000), the swap would automatically offered to the contestant.


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In the Channel 4 series, various twists, either during themed special shows or permanently, applied to the gameplay. From 2014 to 2016, "Box 23" was added to the game. This allowed contestants to purchase it with their winnings to either double their winnings, halve it, add 10,000, lose it all, or have no change. In the same year, the "offer button" was added - meaning that if the contestant predicted their first offer within a 10% range they were able to call for an offer from the Banker at any time. Other twists like the "Banker's Gamble" (meaning they could return dealt money to win whatever is in their box) or moving on one box at a time before an offer were factors in achieving the original top prize winners.

You can use deal stages to categorize and track the progress of your ongoing deals in HubSpot. Each deal stage has an associated probability that indicates the likelihood of closing deals marked with that deal stage. Stage probability is used to determine the weighted amount shown in board view, which is calculated by multiplying the total amount in each stage by the stage probability.

To delete a stage, hover over a stage and click Delete. If there are deals in the stage you're deleting, you'll need to move these existing deals to another stage. To do this in bulk, navigate to the deals index page, and in list view, bulk edit the Deal Stage property.

You can also customize which deal properties are presented to users when manually moving a deal to a specific stage. Users must have Edit property settings permissions to customize deal stage properties.

Once you've selected your properties, click Next. The properties you've selected will automatically appear when manually creating a new deal in that stage or when moving an existing deal to that stage.

Regardless of your HubSpot subscription, you can update an individual user's access to deals. However, if your account has a Sales Hub Professional or Enterprise subscription, you can also edit deal access based on a user's team and restrict editing access for certain deal stages.

If your pipeline includes deals assigned to multiple teams, you can configure deal access so that users on a team can only access deals assigned to themselves or other team members. This means multiple teams can share a pipeline without affecting the deals assigned to other teams.

With these permissions, the users can now only view, edit, or delete deals where they or another user on their team are the owner. If a user is on multiple teams, they can access deals assigned to any of their teams.

Super admins can set whether deals in specific stages are editable by all users with access to deals, or only by other users with super admin permissions. If a stage is limited to super admins, once a deal enters that stage, only super admins will be able to edit the deal or move it to a different stage. Users with deal access can still view deal records in that stage, but can't make changes until an admin moves it to an editable stage.

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You should have this in your Report library. Navigate to Menu > Reports > Reports and click Reports library on the upper right. Search for "Deal time spent in each stage". (I had to filter the report library by deals first, using the sidebar, and scroll down a bit. The search doesn't work properly for me.)

@Jwyoung It only comes in a summarized data table view - so you can only see average time numbers summarized based on a date property. I was looking for data split into individual deals but had no luck.

In HubSpot, deals represent transactions with contacts or companies. Deals are tracked through your sales process in pipeline stages until they're won or lost. The deals endpoints allow you to manage create and manage deal records, as well as sync deal data between HubSpot and other systems.

In your request, include your deal data in a properties object. You can also add an associations object to associate your new deal with existing records (e.g., contacts, companies), or activities (e.g., meetings, notes).

When creating a new deal, you should include the following properties in your request: dealname, dealstage and if you have multiple pipelines, pipeline. If a pipeline isn't specified, the default pipeline will be used.

Please note: you must use the internal ID of a deal stage or pipeline when creating a deal via the API. The internal ID will also be returned when you retrieve deals via the API. You can find a deal stage's or pipeline's internal ID in your deal pipeline settings.

A unique identifier to indicate the association type between the deal and the other object or activity. Default association types are listed here, or you can retrieve the value by making a GET request to /crm/v4/associations/{fromObjectType}/{toObjectType}/labels. Learn more about the associations API.

For the batch read endpoint, you can also use the optional idProperty parameter to retrieve deals by a custom unique identifier property. By default, the id values in the request refer to the record ID (hs_object_id), so the idProperty parameter is not required when retrieving by record ID. To use a custom unique value property to retrieve deals, you must include the idProperty parameter.

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Ideally, the person you cosign for is reliable, never late and never misses a payment. Your willingness to risk your credit helps the borrower get the loan and can help build a positive credit history for the borrower. If the person you cosigned for does not make payments, you are responsible for paying back the debt. The unpaid debt will appear on your credit report, seriously damaging your credit and perhaps your ability to qualify for new credit. If left unpaid, it could also lead to collection accounts and damage your creditworthiness.

You are probably familiar with the hit game show 'Deal or No Deal?', where contestants are pitted against an ominous banker to negotiate the price of their briefcase based on the likelihood of it holding up-to $1 Million. As the game unfolds, host Howie Mandel coaches contestants through a series of rounds in which they reveal more information that changes our perception of how much their briefcase is worth (for more information on how revealing cases changes our perception of the contestant's briefcase, check out Bayes Theorem). After revealing more cases, the Banker presents the contestant with a take-it-or-leave-it offer to purchase their briefcase. But have you ever wondered if the Banker was offering a fair amount? Or if contestants are actually making a good deal?

When there are many cases remaining and the game is young, the Banker has a much lower Offer Bias - around 80% less than a fair offer. However, when there are fewer cases remaining, the Banker clearly gives offers closer to the expected value. In fact, when there are less 4 or less cases remaining, the Banker gives a generous offer 50% of the time, enticing the player into making a deal and walk away a happy camper. In essence, the Banker wants players to keep playing: longer games mean less episodes to shoot, more cliffhanger commercial breaks, and better contestant storyline development (you know, those 3 crazy people the contestant brings along with them who appear to have no problem advising them to repeatedly turn down hundreds of thousands of dollars on national television). The Banker's early low-ball offers steer contestants to keep playing. 2351a5e196

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