To make a high price seem reasonable, anchor it against a different, more expensive component of the customer's total budget that delivers less long-term value. For example, compare a $100k entertainment package to a $300k flower budget, arguing budget should align with memorability.
High prices are not inherently 'expensive'; their affordability is relative to the customer's income. For a high-earning client, a premium purchase can be an impulse buy, equivalent to a fast-food meal for an average person. This reframes pricing from absolute cost to a measure of the buyer's resources.
People gravitate toward the middle option when given three choices, a bias known as extremeness aversion. To sell more of a specific product, frame it as the middle choice by introducing a more expensive, super-premium 'decoy' option. Its role is not to sell, but to make the target option look like a reasonable compromise.
Introduce a significantly more expensive, highly customized version of your service alongside your main offering. This price anchor makes the actual product you want to sell appear like a fantastic deal, even if it has a high price point, thereby increasing conversion rates.
If a customer is shocked by your price, your marketing has already failed. Every public-facing asset—vehicle wraps, social media posts, uniforms—builds a perception of value that primes the customer to expect a certain price level before your team even presents an estimate.
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.
To increase average deal size, introduce a new, much higher-priced package (e.g., $100k) and pitch it as your primary offer. Commit to selling it hard. For clients who object, you can then downsell to your original core offer (now priced at $35k), which appears incredibly reasonable by comparison. This captures whales and boosts conversions on your main offer.
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.
The way a price is presented alters a consumer's emotional response, even if the total cost is identical. Breaking a large sum into smaller installments, like Klarna does, makes it feel more manageable and less intimidating, thus boosting sales.
To escape price comparisons in a commoditized market, shift the conversation from cost to risk. Use industry statistics to highlight the expensive, unforeseen problems that occur with cheaper alternatives. Position your higher-priced service as the logical choice to avoid those costly failures.