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Within the core 'market penetration' quadrant, changing pricing isn't just about raising prices. It's a form of product development. Creating new tiers, offering read-only options, or bundling features strategically can unlock growth without writing a single line of new code.

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SaaS companies scale revenue not by adjusting price points, but by creating distinct packages for different segments. The same core software can be sold for vastly different amounts to enterprise versus mid-market clients by packaging features, services, and support to match their perceived value and needs.

Treating pricing as a "set it and forget it" task is equivalent to ignoring user feedback on a core feature. It must be continuously monitored and iterated upon based on feature adoption, delivered value, and market changes, just like any other part of the product.

Product marketers often struggle to prove direct ROI. By influencing pricing strategy, they can make a tangible and measurable impact on revenue and ARR. Pricing is a form of value communication—a core PMM competency—making it a natural area for them to lead and demonstrate their contribution to the bottom line.

Small, incremental price jumps like $100 to $129 appeal to the same customer segment and fail to capture high-end buyers. A truly effective upsell tier should be 5 to 10 times the price of the previous one, designed to capture the small percentage of customers with vastly greater spending power.

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.

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.

Instead of showing two final prices (e.g., $99 vs $169), frame the premium option as the base price plus a small add-on ("$99, or get everything for $70 more"). This 'differential price framing' focuses on the small extra cost, not the total, and can double premium sales.

Many businesses over-index on marketing to drive growth. However, strategic price increases and achieving operational excellence (improving conversion rates, average tickets) are equally powerful, and often overlooked, levers for increasing revenue.

The naive view is that lower prices are always better for customers. However, higher prices generate higher margins, which can be reinvested into R&D. This allows the vendor to improve the product much faster, ultimately delivering more value and making the customer better off than with a cheaper, stagnant product.

Direct response brands like Pulsetto use comparison charts not just against competitors, but to compare their own product tiers (e.g., 'Lite' vs. 'Pro'). This visually frames the upsell, making the value of the higher-priced option clear and justifying a small price increase.

Pricing and Packaging Are Product Development Levers, Not Just Sales Tactics | RiffOn