How To Set Your Prices

How To Set Your Prices

Chances are, you are not asking the right amount for your product or service. And it is just as likely that you are asking too little, not too much!

The price of your product or service tells your customers what to expect in terms of quality and value before they even buy the item. In most people's minds, low-priced products indicate either a bargain or low quality while a higher price often indicates superior value. For example, people have much higher respect and admiration for the high-priced Ritz Carlton Hotel than they do for a Days Inn or Motel 6. The Ritz has actually used its high price as a specific marketing technique to attract an exclusive clientele.


Determine Your Pricing Floor

Where do you start? First, you must know exactly what it costs to make your product or deliver your service. Leave no stone unturned. Factor in all the critical costs such as raw materials, equipment, shipping, staffing and even overtime. Take pains to be as precise as you can.

Once your costs have become crystal clear, determine your desired profit rate. For example, do you want to 5%, 10% or 15% rate of return? After you have made that decision, you will be ready to pit your prices against the competition.

If you have chosen to use price superiority as your driving force, then you must offer unbeatable prices at all times. But be careful not to price yourself so low that you are hardly turning a profit. It boils down to knowing how to keep the costs of your operations low enough to provide an acceptable profit margin. Many small businesses make a critical error by over-burdening themselves with too much overhead. Some naive start-ups actually end up selling their product or service below true cost.


Understand Your Competition

As much as possible, you should discern how your competitors set their prices and what share of the market they control. If most people perceive your product or service as a commodity, then your pricing plan must take that into consideration. As a rule, commodity items have much less pricing flexibility. If buyers believe that any of your competitors can perform equally well, then your price must also be comparable.


Allow For Marketing Costs

Think about how you will market your product or service. You must price your product high enough to absorb all related marketing expenses. If your product or service requires extensive advertising, the price structure must take this into account.

A classic example is Orville Redenbacher popcorn, which is priced higher than most brands. It doesn't cost much more to grow corn that pops better, but it does cost a lot to convince consumers that the popcorn really is better. Microwave popcorn is priced even higher because companies can add convenience and simplicity to a list of important benefits.

However, while quality or a similar key benefit is important, you must always be ready to shift your prices downward. Customers can be very fickle. If a comparable or less expensive product with similar capabilities arrives on the scene, you must be ready to adjust. To hang onto your customers, you may be forced to match the new pricing realities.


Pricing A Service

Pricing a service follows a few different procedures because the variables are less tangible. Fee-based services in particular are often drastically underpriced because it is so hard to know precisely what those services cost, or what people are willing to pay.

For example, a skilled technician may base fees on how long it actually takes him or her to complete a task. This is not wise because it fails to consider how long it might take the client to do it themselves or how long an "average" technician might need. If it would take a less skilled person two or three times longer, then a great deal of money is being left on the table. Valuable service is being given away.

Another mistake many service providers make is not allowing for overhead like your original training, employees, rent, utilities and travel time when determining fees. Set monthly, weekly and even daily billing goals to avoid underpricing your service. Know exactly how many billing hours it takes to reach your desired profit margin.


Rules Of Price Rounding

Once you have determined your most desirable pricing range, you must begin testing prices for optimal impact. It has long been known that some pricing formats get a far better response than others. Soft sounds such as “f” are more readily accepted than hard sounds such as “t.”

So as you work through the testing process, keep the following natural human preferences in mind.

Under $10 - Use endings in 4, 5 or 9.

$10-$25 - Use endings in .95

$25-$50 - Generally use whole dollar amounts ending in 5, 7 or 9, but .50, .75 and .95 are also okay.

$50-$100 - Use whole dollars ending in 5, 7 or 9.

$100-$1000 - Use whole dollars endings in 5, 9 or 95. Avoid pennies.

Over $1000 - Use endings in 100, 300, 395, 500, 595, 700, 795, 900 or 995.


?? Like this? Share it.

Want to be a better rainmaker?

?? Watch my free 27-minute Rainmaker Workshop at GilTalks.com

?? Join my Rainmaker Network at GilBoards.com

?? Collect my books via GilWrites.com

James Gibbons

President, Writer, Consultant, Gibbons | Peck Marketing Communication, Co-host of #thursdaypoetrysociety

8 个月

Gil, pricing strategy is a part of marketing I’ve always struggled with. I tend to lean toward value pricing. But people understand commodity pricing (how many pounds of X do I get for a dollar?) I (and probably most service professionals) have left a lot of money on the table, just because pricing by hourly rate is so much easier to explain.

要查看或添加评论,请登录

Gil Gerretsen的更多文章

  • A New Way To Build A Better Self-Introduction

    A New Way To Build A Better Self-Introduction

    Professional rainmakers often seem to have trouble during conversations or networking events with getting their…

  • How Service Firms Can Grow Faster

    How Service Firms Can Grow Faster

    Over the last decade, most investor and business media interest seem to have focused on two types of enterprises:…

  • The Business Of Future Political Change

    The Business Of Future Political Change

    There is a political and social shift underway in America that both legacy media and political pundits seem to have…

  • Getting Results At Trade Shows

    Getting Results At Trade Shows

    At a trade show or exposition, you can make sales presentations to five solid prospects per hour. This would often…

  • How To Write Great Sales Letters

    How To Write Great Sales Letters

    There are many times when you must write a sales letter that will move the recipient to take action. Here are several…

  • Is AIO The Next Big Thing In Marketing?

    Is AIO The Next Big Thing In Marketing?

    There’s something new developing in the world of marketing that every business must be aware of. Artificial…

    2 条评论
  • Why Some Companies Grow Faster Than Others

    Why Some Companies Grow Faster Than Others

    Almost every entrepreneur I meet seeks to build a substantial and influential company, but many are structured the…

    1 条评论
  • Networking For Profit

    Networking For Profit

    In my career, I have been fascinated with the art of effective networking. I have watched many people routinely make…

    2 条评论
  • How To Use Stuff With Your Brand On It

    How To Use Stuff With Your Brand On It

    There are a lot of foolish companies who buy stuff with their brand name imprinted on it, then pass it around to…

  • How To Sell Without Selling

    How To Sell Without Selling

    It is 9:45am and you have been in the doctor’s waiting room for over 45 minutes. Your appointment for your annual…

    1 条评论

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了