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The best way to grow in 2019: Increase Your Prices

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Manage episode 228580176 series 1402915
Content provided by Conversio and Adii Pienaar. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Conversio and Adii Pienaar or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

1. Double your prices.

As long as you don’t lose more than 50% of sales, you’re coming out ahead, mathematically. Imagine, you get higher gross margin since you’re selling for a higher price.

Also, you’re selling enough products that doubling their prices increases your revenue without necessarily increasing the volume, too.

Not yet convinced why you should do this? Customers usually associate higher price = more value for their money. Just check out how Apple prices their products: according to a recent study, it costs Apple $247.51 to create an iPhone, yet they sell it for over $1,000.

Higher revenue and less volume of transactions translates to less overhead expenses. You get to enjoy the benefits of increased profit with decreased costs - how sweet is this? Doing this enables you to get that extra 1% or 5% that’ll help you increase your bottom line profit.

2. Increase your prices by 10%

Compare your conversion and profit every time you change your pricing.

For example, increasing your prices by 10% this February 2019 and comparing its profit versus your profit last February 2018 can help you figure out which of your products have more price sensitivity compared to others - perhaps you’re better off increasing the prices of your more “premium” or “exclusive” products?

The only way you’ll know if this is effective is by experimentation with product pricing according to the historical performance of your sales. Start with one product or one category: focus on the 20% of your products that provide the most value for 80% of your target market. Once you prove that this strategy is effective in increasing conversion, go ahead and try the other product lines, too.

3. List down your top 10 products with the highest conversion rates and find out the pricing strategies behind them.

Look at your sales history: which products have the highest conversion rates for an average of three to five years? This means we’re looking for products that have consistent performance and sustainable sales among the years.

Prioritize the top ten products and look into the pricing strategies you’ve adopted for each product. Find their similarities - have they performed well due to “power of 9” pricing, cost-based pricing, fragmented pricing, or bundle pricing? If you’re not sure which pricing strategy it specifically is, check out this helpful guide for your reference.

Once you’ve found out the pricing strategy of your best-performing products, use it in pricing your under-performing products and compare profits over the same selling period.

4. Compare your pricing strategy with your competitors and price according to the concept of “exclusivity”

Instead of offering your product at a lower price than your competitors, premium pricing allows you to offer your product at a higher price than expected because exclusive products naturally cost more.

Just think of premium brands like Apple Macbooks or Rolex watches - if someone offered the same brands at a lower price, you’d undoubtedly think something has to be wrong about the products they’re selling, right?

You can take advantage of premium pricing by offering functional value (it does what it says it does) and psychological value (not everyone can have access to this product so you’re pretty special if you do).

It’s all about product positioning in relation to value perception.

How do you market your premium products? What branding message do you want to tell your audience so you can tug at their heartstrings and invoke emotions that make them want to buy your exclusive products at higher prices? What makes your brand and your products high-quality and premium that your customers would willingly want to be associated with them?

Implementing these product pricing strategies can help you increase your bottom line profit and boost your company’s growth this 2019. Have you incorporated these tactics into your product’s marketing and development?

Learn with our FREE Ecommerce Academy:
Conversio Academy
Facebook
Twitter
Instagram

Music featured in this episode was "Celery Man" by Birocratic and can be found at www.soundcloud.com/birocratic.
This podcast was produced by comealivecreative.com.

  continue reading

87 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 228580176 series 1402915
Content provided by Conversio and Adii Pienaar. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Conversio and Adii Pienaar or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

1. Double your prices.

As long as you don’t lose more than 50% of sales, you’re coming out ahead, mathematically. Imagine, you get higher gross margin since you’re selling for a higher price.

Also, you’re selling enough products that doubling their prices increases your revenue without necessarily increasing the volume, too.

Not yet convinced why you should do this? Customers usually associate higher price = more value for their money. Just check out how Apple prices their products: according to a recent study, it costs Apple $247.51 to create an iPhone, yet they sell it for over $1,000.

Higher revenue and less volume of transactions translates to less overhead expenses. You get to enjoy the benefits of increased profit with decreased costs - how sweet is this? Doing this enables you to get that extra 1% or 5% that’ll help you increase your bottom line profit.

2. Increase your prices by 10%

Compare your conversion and profit every time you change your pricing.

For example, increasing your prices by 10% this February 2019 and comparing its profit versus your profit last February 2018 can help you figure out which of your products have more price sensitivity compared to others - perhaps you’re better off increasing the prices of your more “premium” or “exclusive” products?

The only way you’ll know if this is effective is by experimentation with product pricing according to the historical performance of your sales. Start with one product or one category: focus on the 20% of your products that provide the most value for 80% of your target market. Once you prove that this strategy is effective in increasing conversion, go ahead and try the other product lines, too.

3. List down your top 10 products with the highest conversion rates and find out the pricing strategies behind them.

Look at your sales history: which products have the highest conversion rates for an average of three to five years? This means we’re looking for products that have consistent performance and sustainable sales among the years.

Prioritize the top ten products and look into the pricing strategies you’ve adopted for each product. Find their similarities - have they performed well due to “power of 9” pricing, cost-based pricing, fragmented pricing, or bundle pricing? If you’re not sure which pricing strategy it specifically is, check out this helpful guide for your reference.

Once you’ve found out the pricing strategy of your best-performing products, use it in pricing your under-performing products and compare profits over the same selling period.

4. Compare your pricing strategy with your competitors and price according to the concept of “exclusivity”

Instead of offering your product at a lower price than your competitors, premium pricing allows you to offer your product at a higher price than expected because exclusive products naturally cost more.

Just think of premium brands like Apple Macbooks or Rolex watches - if someone offered the same brands at a lower price, you’d undoubtedly think something has to be wrong about the products they’re selling, right?

You can take advantage of premium pricing by offering functional value (it does what it says it does) and psychological value (not everyone can have access to this product so you’re pretty special if you do).

It’s all about product positioning in relation to value perception.

How do you market your premium products? What branding message do you want to tell your audience so you can tug at their heartstrings and invoke emotions that make them want to buy your exclusive products at higher prices? What makes your brand and your products high-quality and premium that your customers would willingly want to be associated with them?

Implementing these product pricing strategies can help you increase your bottom line profit and boost your company’s growth this 2019. Have you incorporated these tactics into your product’s marketing and development?

Learn with our FREE Ecommerce Academy:
Conversio Academy
Facebook
Twitter
Instagram

Music featured in this episode was "Celery Man" by Birocratic and can be found at www.soundcloud.com/birocratic.
This podcast was produced by comealivecreative.com.

  continue reading

87 episodes

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