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Making the price Right
by Marcia Yudkin
When customers whine that prices seem too high,
too many businesses conclude that they need to slash what they charge.
Counter-intuitively, sometimes you can keep prices exactly where they are, or
even raise them successfully by doing a better job of justifying them.
Do clients know you have more certifications than any
contractor in the area? Do they realize your calibrations last twice as long as
standard ones? Do they appreciate that your guarantee means pests absolutely,
positively vanish?
If explaining why the price is warranted doesn't work, try
adding value. Pile on extra benefits that cost you little and mean a lot, such
as:
- More personal attention. Say you'll answer their questions, offer advice
for no extra charge. Making it explicit that you do this makes it more likely
that folks who ask for help will value you for giving it.
- More affordability. Accept credit cards if you haven't, start a delayed
payment plan, offer a pre-payment discount.
- More speed. Stop dilly-dallying with orders and deliver service faster
than they expect.
- More security. Strengthen or lengthen your guarantee. This nudges many
potential purchasers over the decision line, and contrary to fears, longer
guarantees prompt fewer returns.
- More stuff. Toss in bonuses. Often you can get these from businesses
complimentary to yours at no cost to you. If you run a spa, get a hair salon
to offer discounts to your clients. If you're a Web designer, cut a deal with
a Web hosting service so your clients get their first two months up on the Web
free.
- More duration. Lengthen the duration of each transaction: free updates for
a year for a resume service, free sixth-week checkup for a chiropractor.
- More convenience. Make house calls. Deliver when and where the customer
wants it. Offer evening or weekend hours where that's not usual. Create
standing orders or appointments.
- More accessibility. Publicize the fact that you have people on staff who
speak Portuguese or know sign language. Guarantee that you return phone calls
within a certain period of time, or let people know that you read all of your
own e-mail.
Here are a few more pricing tricks used by master marketers.
- Institute tiered pricing, with regular and deluxe options. The higher
tiers boost the perceived value of the options just below them. Photographer
Denise Passaretti of Watertown, Massachusetts, noticed that she always sold
the most enlargements of the second largest size available. When she made a
new, larger photo size available, she sold more of the size formerly the
largest.
- To stimulate sales without devaluing your image, offer time-specific
rebates or discounts with an explicit rationale (we overbought, we finished
another project early), rather than lower prices across the board.
- Set a high price by comparing your item to something buyers know costs
more. For instance, compare audiotapes to the cost of live seminars rather
than books; software to the cost of custom programming; consulting to the cost
of hiring an expert on staff. It works!
©2005 Marcia Yudkin
Article reprinted with special permission.
Marcia Yudkin is the author of '6 Steps to Free Publicity', 'Persuading on Paper', 'Web Site Marketing
Makeover' and eight other books on business communication. Sign up for her free weekly newsletter on creative marketing at www.yudkin.com/marksynd.htm
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