3
2 Comments

Tip: Increase sales by letting customers pick their prices from a set of three options

While it can be benefical at launch, pay-what-you-want pricing often reduces conversions. But with a small tweak, sales can be increased substantially. Consider allowing customers to choose from a pre-determined list of prices.

While studying pay-what-you-want pricing, researchers found that allowing customers to pick from three or four prices (as opposed to any price) actually boosted sales considerably. In fact, sales went up so much in the studies that this pricing model was beneficial even when people were paying less for the products. Put simply, the pick-your-price model gives customers a sense of control and they feel like they're getting a deal, yet it requires very little mental effort (unlike pay-what-you-want). Interestingly, the researchers also found that it is twice as effective as a normal fixed-price promotion at the same (average) price. It's certainly worth testing, as long as you only sell one product at a time. For best results, make it clear that customers can't pick any price. And consider adding an indicator for the most popular price.

More 30-second growth tips?

We share a tiny, bite-sized tip for growing your business a few times a week. Click here to see more and get Growth Bites in your inbox 👌

posted to Icon for group Growth
Growth
on May 10, 2021
Trending on Indie Hackers
I spent more time setting up cold email than actually selling. Here is what fixed it. User Avatar 38 comments I got my first $159 in sales after realizing I was building in silence User Avatar 36 comments I just wanted to taste AI coding tools. A week passed. User Avatar 26 comments I got tired of rewriting the same content for 9 different platforms. So I built Repostify. User Avatar 23 comments A pattern I keep seeing in EdTech: traffic isn't usually the problem. User Avatar 20 comments I built a PDF API because every team I know has a haunted corner of their codebase they never want to open User Avatar 19 comments