On Pricing Strategy
I'm working on a business model that requires charging something for a web-based service (not consulting/nothing hourly). I've never known where to begin the process of arriving at the 'right' price. Clearly, there are marketing/customer perception implications to:
1) providing something on a free trial basis initially 2) increasing the cost of a service later 3) charging too little and being deemed insignificant "How could $5/month give me that much value?" 4) charging too much and being seen as a ripoff, leaving room for others to step in.
I know it's easy enough to arrive at or at least be aware of a market price (median/average) if there's enough competition in the space to do a back-of-napkin statistical analysis. I'm not sure how that carries over into concepts with a 'first mover' advantage, or markets where competition is light.
I know there must be theory relevant to this (probably volumes). Can anyone recommend a place to start? How have you dealt with pricing your startup's services?
15 comments
[ 3.2 ms ] story [ 69.4 ms ] threadMy last startup charged for a web-based service. It was a consumer impulse buy and so we tried to keep the price down for that reason. When we got enough size, we ran statistical tests to figure out the best price point in terms of maximization of profits.
I also have had experience selling an online book. As you suggest, sometimes the demand curve is not a straight line and raising the price can increase volume because prices can of course influence perceived value. I raised it from $9.99 to $24.99 and that is exactly what happened--increased volume.
No, I am not trying something different with groupomatic. You hit on the head. I am trying to be a better meetup.com. I imagine it will be a slow, long haul, but it doesn't hurt to be free :). I tried to start out as simple as possible and not just copy all their functionality. In so doing I've already made several departures, errr improvements imo, e.g. group scheduling, no forced site registration, group specific handles, etc.
http://www.amazon.com/Strategy-Tactics-Pricing-Growing-Profi...
It was on the reading list for a pricing class I took. All I can say is that pricing should be the culmination of your marketing strategy. The book does a great job of explaining some real rationale and logical thinking on how to set your price.
The nice advantage you appear to have is that you can tweak or iterate your pricing strategy? maybe try different prices for different people or times of the day/month/year?
Good luck!
Also note that educating the customer about the value (in monetary terms) that they will receive by using your service is the key to make this strategy work.
Really Basic Example: A skype based cell phone should be priced similarly to comparable phones, with a premium because skype is cheaper than other cell phone plans.
For web products, one trick I learned is to use Google Adwords with different prices and features listed, and observe CTR.
2. Tell them it costs $D
3. Observe
4. Change D as necessary
5. Repeat until the reaction you consistently get is "Wow! That's awesome, what's your website, I'm going to buy it when I get home."
Market research is the best way to figure prices out. Alternatively, as yubrew said, comparables works. Think outside the box when you're trying to come up with indirect competitors. We are building a subscription-based web app, but an alternative to our service could be a book. That books costs a certain amount of money. Thus, we can charge at least that amount, plus a premium because, well, our service is a lot better.
Thank you (all) for the comments - this is remarkably informative.
1. 3 is an arbitrary number; pick whatever works for you.