the pyschology of pricing

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| 1 of X | www.productfocus.com © Product Focus Cambridge Product Management Network The Psychology of Pricing Ian Lunn Thanks to our sponsors

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Page 1: The pyschology of pricing

| 1 of X | www.productfocus.com © Product Focus

Cambridge Product Management Network

The Psychology of PricingIan Lunn

Thanks to our sponsors

Page 2: The pyschology of pricing

© Product Focus www.productfocus.com

Ian Lunn

Following Computing degree started life working in IT consultancy – Logica and Hoskyns

Senior marketing, product management and consultancy roles at Cable & Wireless, Lucent, Vodafone and Orange

Head of marketing in ‘dot-com’ company

Wide experience across business and consumer markets in both small companies and large multi-nationals

Co-founded Product Focus 6 years ago

Over 20 years product management and marketing experience in Telecoms, IT and software

Page 3: The pyschology of pricing

© Product Focus www.productfocus.com

Product Focus

Europe’s leading product management training and

consultancy business with a focus on Telecoms, IT and

Software

Page 4: The pyschology of pricing

© Product Focus www.productfocus.com

The importance of pricing

It’s important beyond the obvious that it determines what

you get paid for your product or service

It also Determines the volume of sales

Is a tool to maximise profit

Can create up-sell and cross-sell opportunities

Creates a perception in the mind of your staff, potential

buyers and your competitors

Page 5: The pyschology of pricing

© Product Focus www.productfocus.com

Mini-exercise

Imagine you’ve just been made redundant and

you’ve decided to go into business with your

friend who’s in the same situation (and who

happens to be sitting next to you)

You’ll be landscape gardeners

What’s the name of your business and how

much will you charge for a day of your time?

Page 6: The pyschology of pricing

© Product Focus www.productfocus.com

Reference prices

Pricing a product launched into an existing category

(product area) is subject to ‘reference’ pricing limits

$50 $349

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© Product Focus www.productfocus.com

Key constraints on pricing

Com

petitorsCus

tom

ers

Cost

Price

Page 8: The pyschology of pricing

© Product Focus www.productfocus.com

Pricing strategies: value-based

Maximises the revenue from differentiated products

Price the product or product features relative to each

other based on the value the customer derives from their

use

Requires an excellent understanding of the target

customer and what they value

“ There are two fools in any market, one that does not charge enough and the other that

charges too much”

Russian proverb

Page 9: The pyschology of pricing

© Product Focus www.productfocus.com

Influencing value-based price

Objective Value e.g. Time saved x hourly cost (10 hours at £100 = £1000)

£1000

Opportunity value

Cachet / desirability

Reduce ‘disliked’ activity

Uncertainty

Switching costs

Resistance to change

Perc

eiv

ed

Valu

e

+

-

Page 10: The pyschology of pricing

© Product Focus www.productfocus.com

Example : energy saving light bulbs

£5.40Lifetime cost

Price to customer £0.60

Lifetime electricity cost £4.80

Standard light bulb

Reference points + uncertainty + resistance to change depress this resulting in a realistic market price

£3 - £5

Energy saving light bulbs

Lifetime cost - Objective value

Value (£5.40 x 8) £43.20

Lasts 8 times longer uses 1/6 electricity

£36.80

Less cost of electricity (£4.80 x 8/6) £6.40

Page 11: The pyschology of pricing

© Product Focus www.productfocus.com

Psychology of pricing If there are no easy reference points …

Customers will look at proxies i.e. things that are similar

They will look at other products in your range – if they are

judged to be reasonably priced or expensive then they will

assume it will be true for a new product

They will subconsciously be influenced by anchor points

So try and set an expectation with your customers about

why your product is worth X

Page 12: The pyschology of pricing

© Product Focus www.productfocus.com

Magic numbers

$199.99 seems a lot less than $219.99 ($20 difference)

$119.99 and $199.99 don’t seem that far apart ($80 difference).

‘Charmed’ prices end in 99, 98 or 95

Source : an extract from a Microsoft web page selling Windows 7 – April 2010

Page 13: The pyschology of pricing

© Product Focus www.productfocus.com

How to present an offer

What do psychologists claim will be the most

successful promotions in these scenarios ?

Page 14: The pyschology of pricing

© Product Focus www.productfocus.com

How to present offers

Potential purchasers are twice as likely to defer a decision to buy on which of these offers?

Mobile phone

Latest model,

touch screen,

music & video play,

5mpx camera

500 mins, 500 texts

£50 + £25/month

Mobile phone

Latest model, touch screen, music & video

play, 5mpx camera500 mins, 500

texts£50 +

£25/month

Page 15: The pyschology of pricing

© Product Focus www.productfocus.com

Decoys to boost sales

Page 16: The pyschology of pricing

© Product Focus www.productfocus.com

People love a bargain!

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© Product Focus www.productfocus.com

Product Management Journal

A bi-annual publication that provides best practice,

insights and explanations to over 2,000 product

managers across Europe

Online at www.productfocus.com

Page 18: The pyschology of pricing

© Product Focus www.productfocus.com

Thank you

If you haven’t already, please

sign up to our Journal (back

issues online) and check out

our blog – Product Focus

Soapbox

Please check out our training

– our next course runs 22nd to

24th Feb in London

If you’d like to link on LinkedIn,

please let me have you email

address

Thank you for listening

Online at www.productfocus.com