Site icon SaltMinePublishing.com

Case Study: Reverse Pricing Strategy Doubles Sales

Warning: This is a counterintuitive concept, but it’s backed by psychology and proven results, so don’t just dismiss it as nonsense.

Mei Pak makes and sells necklaces in the shape of snow cones on Etsy.

Just to build a little foundation, let’s talk about what most marketers do when they want to sell more of their product: They lower their prices. The problem with this is two-fold:

1: Competitors will then lower their price to stay competitive, and now you have a race to the bottom. Ouch.

2: It still takes you the same time to do things like create a product, perform customer service and so forth. Thus, you are now being paid less for your time, not more.

Here’s what you might not realize – many (most?) shoppers are not doing comparison pricing, especially for lower cost items. They see something they want, and they buy it.

And if your product is in a category of its own, then your customers cannot price shop because there is no one doing exactly what you offer.

If you’re offering a necklace for sale that looks just like the necklace 2 or 20 other sellers are offering, you have a commodity. Commodity selling is nearly always a race to see who can charge the least, and that’s bad.

But if, like Mei, you are creating a product that is unique, then you have no competition and you can charge more.

Also keep in mind that many sellers undervalue their product or service. Most customers care about the outcome of what a product is or does. Is it unique? High quality? Beautiful? Does it make them feel good? Does it solve their problem quickly? They don’t care so much about what goes into the product or how it’s made but rather what the product does for them.

Okay, you know where we’re headed, right?

Mei raised her prices and doubled her sales. But she didn’t raise her prices just once. Here’s what happened:

Mei conducted a pricing experiment on her best-selling product, a handmade scented snow cone necklace. Originally, she had it priced at $28.00, and she sold so many of them that she had a difficult time keeping up with the orders.

Her first test was to sell it at $35 instead of $28. Result? The increase in price didn’t hurt sales. In fact, MORE people bought at the higher price.

Next, she tested $40, and again, more people puchased at the higher price.

But she wasn’t done yet.

She tested $45 and yes, sales went up again, making her more money and profit.

Finally, she tested at $50, and sales dropped.

Mei figured that $45 must be the sweet spot.

But after a few weeks, she had a thought: There was room between $45 and $50 to do another test.

Can you guess what price she tested?

$49.99.

Lo and behold, the $49.99 price WON. At this price, which was almost double her original price, she’s getting MORE people viewing the product listing, more sales and more revenue.

And the best thing was, she didn’t have to change anything else about the product.

Do you have any idea why this worked? I suspect it’s because $49.99 sounds like a much higher quality item than $28.

If you can do this in your own business, you will only need half the traffic to make the same amount of money, or the same traffic to essentially double your revenue.

Tips to successfully boost sales by pricing higher

Here are some tips to sell more by raising prices:

  1. Elevate Your Presentation:
  1. Reposition Your Brand:
  1. Play with Pricing Psychology:
  1. Focus on Customer Experience:

What You Need to Know:

By implementing these strategies, you can confidently raise your prices while increasing sales and building a stronger, more profitable brand.

Exit mobile version