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Focusing marketing messaging on the experience and feeling of using a product makes customers less sensitive to its price. Conversely, focusing on discounts or cost makes them more price-conscious. Highlighting the experience allows for premium positioning.

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Businesses selling low-margin products can break free from price sensitivity by shifting their focus from utility to purpose. Storytelling attracts customers who value the mission, not just the price, creating a more defensible market position.

Brands often see premium CX and low prices as a trade-off. However, consumers expect both. A Five9 report shows 72% value support quality while 45% are motivated by deals. The key is to see them as complementary expectations that build loyalty, not an either/or choice.

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.

Consumers use price as a proxy for quality. In one study, people rated the same wine 70% higher when they thought it cost $45 versus $5. A premium price creates an expectation of a premium experience, which can become a self-fulfilling prophecy for the user.

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.

By consistently delivering results and owning a point of view over time, you build immense trust. For your core audience, this strong positioning makes a price increase a non-issue; they are buying into you and the promised transformation, not haggling over the price tag.

Affluent buyers use price as a filter for quality. If your product is priced too low for the value it claims to provide, they won't believe it works and will choose a more expensive competitor. Raising prices can counterintuitively increase conversion rates by signaling confidence and quality.

You cannot command a high price if the customer's experience feels low-value. Every touchpoint—from the technician's uniform and vehicle condition to the dispatcher's tone—must align. A mismatch in this "vibe check" makes a high price feel unjustified and shocking.

Instead of cutting prices to close a deal, which devalues your brand and trains customers to wait for sales, maintain your price integrity. Create a "bonus bank" of valuable add-ons (extra support, exclusive access) to offer as incentives, making the customer feel they're getting a great deal without compromising your product's perceived worth.

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.