How To Find The Optimal Price To Charge For Your Products

In a previous article entitled how to command premium prices for your small business, I emphasized the importance of coming up with a unique selling proposition for your products and services. A good USP grants you the ability to charge a premium for the products that you sell.

Once you’ve pinpointed the strengths of your company and can effectively convey that message to a customer, it’s now time to search for your pricing sweet spot. While there’s no magical formula or quick solution to finding the right price, the techniques outlined in the article below will allow you to eventually determine the optimal pricing for your products.

One thing to keep in mind is that pricing is highly dynamic and always changing. Finding the optimal price is not a one time affair. You need to constantly keep track of your market and adjust accordingly.

Know Your Customer And Your Market

Are you targeting a high end customer or a low end budget customer? If you are targeting someone in search of a premium product, then low prices are not going to entice them to buy. In many cases, if you set your price too low for the high end customer, your products will come across as cheap and low quality.

Are you targeting an industry that is price insensitive? For example, businesses in the wedding industry can usually charge outrageous prices because brides will go all out for the biggest day of their life. Similarly, the baby care industry can command high prices as well because parents want only the highest quality products for their child.

Perception Is The Key

Pricing is all about perceived value. You need to analyze a customer to extract how much they are willing to pay. This starts by assessing and quantifying all of the benefits a customer will get from using your products. Here are some questions to ask yourself

  • How much does your product reduce risk for your customer?
  • How much does your product enhance your customer’s life?
  • What price would be too much for your customer?
  • What price would your product come across as cheap?
  • How much additional profit will your product generate for your customer?

If you can answer these questions, make sure you take these numbers into account when setting your prices. Do not even consider how little it costs you to produce your product. It’s not about you, it’s about how much someone else is willing to pay. Some benefits are easier to quantify than others.

For example, if I was selling a gizmo that replaced my cell phone, GPS, mp3 player and laptop, I might set the price in the ballpark of the cost of all of the gadgets put together plus a premium for the convenience of not having to carry all of those things in my pocket.

If I was selling rechargeable batteries, I would set the price at several times the cost of regular replaceable Alkaline batteries.

In many cases, quantifying the benefits of your product isn’t straightforward. Take our wedding linens business for example. When we sell our personalized wedding handkerchiefs, we are essentially selling memories to the bride and groom. How do you set a dollar value to a memory? How do you quantify the unquantifiable?

Determine Your Price

We used an iterative process to find optimal pricing for our products. In fact, we still haven’t completely perfected our pricing because we haven’t been in existence long enough to have adequate records for comparison.

This “iterative” part of our strategy is based on strategic trial and error. Thanks to our unique selling proposition, we know we have the ability to play with the pricing of our products. If we sold only commodity products, we wouldn’t have any leverage at all. That is why the USP is so crucial to a small business.

In a nutshell, our pricing strategy consists of setting an initial price for a particular product at a small premium to the market. We then reprice our products at regular intervals making sure to take detailed records how the product performs at a given price.

For example, we might set the cost of one of our hankies at 10 dollars and then raise the price 2 dollars after 4 months. Following the price increase, we then analyze the overall profit for the product across the entire gamut of prices.

If we make more profit with the higher price, we continue to raise the price. If we make less profit, then we lower it back down. There are many other variables to account for as well such as seasonality and other environmental impacts so the longer the time interval, the more accurate your pricing tests will be.

What we discovered was that some items we sold were not price sensitive. We could increase the price by a wide margin and the customer would not seem to balk at all. However, with other items even a small increase in price stopped a customer from making a purchase.

What is ironic is that several of the items that we predicted would be sensitive to price were not sensitive at all. Conversely, products that we predicted would not be sensitive to price were extremely sensitive to price increases.

It just goes to show that no matter how much analysis you do, your predictions will probably be wrong in some shape or form. When I look back at our plans and projections, I’ve found that our predictive abilities are pretty much nonexistent.

Increasing Your Prices

I’ve read my fair share of pricing books and they all tend to contradict each other when it comes to raising prices. Some books recommend you have a single large price increase across the board in one fell swoop.

Other books recommend that you slowly inch your price up over time. I don’t think there’s a right or wrong answer. You just have to use what works for your business. For us, inching the prices up slowly across different product groups seemed to work well for us.

Since we sell so many different products, it’s not immediately obvious to the customer which products we increase at a given point in time.

Conclusion

If you’re lucky enough to run a business where the benefits are easily quantifiable, then you can probably find your optimal price point fairly quickly. But if you’re like most businesses, you’ll probably need to do a bit of trial and error to find the sweet spot.

Even then, you still have to stay on top of things because pricing will always change over time.

Further Reading

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About Steve Chou

Steve Chou is a highly recognized influencer in the ecommerce space and has taught thousands of students how to effectively sell physical products online over at ProfitableOnlineStore.com

His blog, MyWifeQuitHerJob.com, has been featured in Forbes, Inc, The New York Times,  Entrepreneur and MSNBC.  

He's also a contributing author for BigCommerce, Klaviyo, ManyChat, Printful, Privy, CXL, Ecommerce Fuel, GlockApps, Privy, Social Media Examiner, Web Designer Depot, Sumo and other leading business publications.

In addition, he runs a popular ecommerce podcast, My Wife Quit Her Job, which is a top 25 marketing show on all of Apple Podcasts

To stay up to date with all of the latest ecommerce trends, Steve runs a 7 figure ecommerce store, BumblebeeLinens.com, with his wife and puts on an annual ecommerce conference called The Sellers Summit.  

Steve carries both a bachelors and a masters degree in electrical engineering from Stanford University. Despite majoring in electrical engineering, he spent a good portion of his graduate education studying entrepreneurship and the mechanics of running small businesses. 

13 thoughts on “How To Find The Optimal Price To Charge For Your Products”

  1. Jared O'Toole says:

    I think 1 more point I would look it is the image your product and brand gives off.

    People pay $100 for t-shirts that say Ralph Lauren on them. There a reason he developed a brand.

    I am in the midst of launching a t-shirt line (NotClothing.com) at the time and our shirts are $20 for a simple shirt with a phrase across the front. Why? Because we don’t want just anyone wearing a shirt. We want to try and develop it as a brand, a club. People who wear one feel like they know something. They aren’t just wearing a random $8-10 t-shirt that they might use at the gym. They are wearing a message with an idea behind it.

    Now again Ralph Lauren didn’t start selling clothes that were so high priced but he worked his way up. But you have to look at how you want your brand to feel. Is your product really just an everyday t-shirt or do you want it to be something more? If more then you can probably get away with higher prices but you better make sure people get your message.

  2. Steve says:

    Hi Jared,

    Couldn’t agree with you more. Your brand is part of your unique selling proposition. When a customer purchases from you, they are getting the benefit of joining an exclusive club. They are buying the powerful message that you project on your t-shirts. I took a look at your site and I like your product concept. Best of luck!

  3. Carla says:

    I’m not sure how or if this applies to me. I am currently retailing other lines and the prices are set. This gives me really good ideas though.

  4. Steve says:

    Hi Carla,

    It’s extremely difficult to write an article that applies to everyone. These are just some tactics that I used because I had absolutely no idea how much the market could bear for some of my products. If your prices are already set, you might want to ask yourself why you set your prices that way at some future point.

  5. Carla says:

    Hi Steve,

    The prices are set by the vendors though I can discount if/when I want/need to. I have no plans on doing that anytime soon though. Once I have my own line/products, I will have more of a choice.

  6. Pingback: Pricing: Psychological Mind Games That Stores Play | MyWifeQuitHerJob.com
  7. Pingback: How To Command Premium Prices For Your Small Business | MyWifeQuitHerJob.com
  8. shea says:

    could you help or give me some advice? I’d like to sell my paintings, but not sure how to do that, tried e bay before but didn’t have much success, in fact probably took a loss although it was fun. Thanks.

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  10. Akemi - Yes to Me says:

    Interesting post.
    I have increased the price of my service dramatically in the 1.5 years since I started it. The funny thing is people don’t seem to care — I get about the same rate of orders at any price point. Perhaps within reasonable range. . .

    Akemi

  11. Pei Yin says:

    We tend to compare our price with our competitors, to check our price range is in between. There are people will compare the price and the service given, for instance, my boyfriend. He will do few rounds of research and evaluate the product/service before purchase.

    The USP of the products/services and the support from the company really take into consideration. If me and my bf felt the products/services worth the price, we both will go for it. The pricing itself sometimes does not affect much.

  12. Bagtabulous says:

    Inching up the price seems to work well for most new businesses. It’s the idea of using low prices to get the first crowd of customer base, impress them with your quality and service to build up the trust. Once you have their trust, reasonable amount of price increase in return for good service appears to be quite tolerable.

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