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Published byEthel Daniel Modified over 9 years ago
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Boost your bottom line by taking the guesswork out of pricing By: Sean Bailey and Joven Rasgo IS IT TIME TO RAISE PRICES?
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Don’t go by your gut Entrepreneurs pricing too low Price reflects Value UNDERLYING THEMES
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“Basically, I’d throw a price out there and see what they’d take” Always set his price too low. Based prices off of a “similar product” Customers felt he was providing a superior service Corporate Clients didn’t take him seriously
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Objective Value Range Most you can rationally charge for a product Least you could rationally charge for a product. Break-even point Perceived Value What a person actually is willing to spend Are you willing to walk for a beer if its lower priced? TYPES OF VALUE
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Initially priced at $50 Dropped to $25 Owner unsatisfied “From our point of view, we’re charging only a fraction of the value we provide.” Has not created enough perceived value to justify the higher price How would you raise the price back to $50/month? LADDERS.COM
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Revenue grew 54% in 2004- $8 million Competes with wine Premium beer- $14 750ml wine bottle Hosts “beer dinners” Attracts early adopters to spread the word Makes sure that there is not enough to satisfy the demand. Scarce products demand a higher price Wipes away reference price DOGFISH HEAD CRAFT BREWERY
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Similar product to Microsoft Offered at $795 a year, boosted to $995 a year. Next 12 months increased to $2,295 a year. “We can push it higher” Customers asked him to push it higher “…[not] very expensive. How are you going to make any money?” SCOPE IT
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Back door pricing Eliminate discounts, change terms and conditions Charge for add-on services Keep price the same but reduce product or service If done correctly, consumers won’t realize the difference Wipe away the reference point WAYS TO PRICE HIKE
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25% increase in price No customers jumped ship Used to close 80% of bids Now closes 40% of bids, much better margins Allows the owner to relax FIRE EYE CONCLUSION
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Do your due diligence when developing your pricing strategy Avoid a price war Avoid snowballing discounts PRICE REFLECTS VALUE Price can open up new doors TAKEAWAYS
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Who provides more value for their customers: PC’s or Mac? Why? Why would you pay for a job site if you could just use others for free? QUESTIONS
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http://www.inc.com/magazine/20050601/pricing_pagen_4.ht ml REFERENCES
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