Innovate by adding unique, low-cost features with high perceived value. For a sports league, this could be live commentary by volunteers or custom trading cards, creating a premium experience that justifies a higher price.
Offering cheap one-off tune-ups can devalue a maintenance club. To justify a recurring subscription, the club must provide exclusive perks like priority service or loyalty credits toward new systems. This creates a clear value proposition and makes members feel like true VIPs.
Customers don't care about your P&L or that a competitor is a "side hustle." To justify a higher price, you must clearly communicate tangible benefits like better organization, time savings, or superior staff, which directly improve their experience.
To sell more of a $300 package instead of a $200 one, introduce a $500 option. Most won't buy the decoy, but its presence shifts the customer's reference point, making the $300 package appear more reasonable and valuable by comparison.
Consumers find prices more appealing when broken down into smaller increments, like a daily cost versus an annual fee. This 'pennies-a-day effect' can make the same price seem like a much better value because people struggle to abstract small, concrete costs into a larger total.
A blanket price increase is a mistake. Instead, segment your customers. For those deriving high value, use the increase as a trigger for an upsell conversation to a better product. For price-sensitive customers, consider deferring the hike while you work to better demonstrate your value.
Involving prospects in designing their own solution builds a sense of ownership. This "IKEA effect" increases the solution's perceived value, justifying a higher price and neutralizing competitor discounts, even when the final cost is higher.
Even if rarely purchased, a premium one-on-one offer serves as a powerful value anchor. Its high price tag transfers a degree of perceived value to your more accessible, scalable products. To work, you must confront the high price directly with prospects before offering a downsell.
When negotiating a price increase, if the customer accepts immediately without pushback, it’s a strong signal you've significantly underpriced your product. Buildots' founder prepared for a negotiation over a 4x price increase, but the client agreed instantly, revealing the product's true value.
Contrary to the common advice to 'just raise your prices,' you should first increase client volume until your delivery system is strained. This process proves your product's value and operational scalability, giving you the confidence and justification to command higher prices.
Price sensitivity decreases when customers have absolute clarity on what they're buying, when technicians present options with confidence, and when the business consistently provides multiple choices. These three "C's" build perceived value, allowing for higher prices.