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Case study - 6 min read, how to write a pricing strategy for my business plan.

In this blog you will learn about the importance of choosing the right pricing strategy for a successful business plan.

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business plan pricing strategy example

Why is a pricing strategy important for a business plan?

A business plan is a written document outlining a company’s core business practices – from products and services offered to marketing, financial planning and budget, but also pricing strategy. This business plan can be very lengthy, outlining every aspect of the business in detail. Or it can be very short and lean for start ups that want to be as agile as possible.

This plan can be used for external investors and relations or for internal purposes. A business plan can be useful for internal purposes because it can make sure that all the decision makers are on the same page about the most important aspects of the business.

A 1% price increase can lead to an 8% increase in profit margin.

A business plan could be very lengthy and detailed or short and lean, but in all instances, it should have a clear vision for how pricing is tackled. A pricing strategy ultimately greatly determines the profit margin of your product or service and how much revenue the company will make. Thorough research of consultancy agencies also show that pricing is very important. McKinsey even argues that a 1% prices increase can lead up to an 8% increase in profits. That is a real example of how small adjustments can have a huge impact!

It is clear that each business plan should have a section about pricing strategies. How detailed and complicated this pricing strategy should be depends for each individual business and challenges in the business environment. However, businesses should at least take some factors into account when thinking about their pricing strategy.

What factors to take into account?

The pricing strategy can best be explained in the marketing section of your business plan. In this section you should describe what price you will charge for your product or service to customers and your argumentation for why you ask this. However, businesses always balance the challenging scale of charging too much or too little. Ideally you want to find the middle, the optimal price point.

The following questions need to be answered for writing a well-structured pricing strategy in your business plan:

What is the cost of your product or service?

Most companies need to be profitable. They need to pay their expenses, their employees and return a reasonable profit. Unless you are a well-funded-winner-takes-all-growth-company such as Uber or Gorillas, you will need to earn more than you spend on your products. In order to be profitable you need to know how much your expenses are, to remain profitable overall.

How does your price compare to other alternatives in the market?

Most companies have competitors for their products or services, only few companies can act as a monopoly. Therefore, you need to know how your price compares to the other prices in the market. Are you one of the cheapest, the most expensive or somewhere in the middle?

Why is your price competitive?

When you know the prices of your competitors, you need to be able to explain why your price is better or different than that of your competitions. Do you offer more value for the same price? Do you offer less, but are you the cheapest? Or does your company offer something so unique that a premium pricing strategy sounds fair to your customer? You need to be able to stand out from the competition and price is an efficient differentiator.

What is the expected ROI (Return On Investment)?

When you set your price, you need to be able to explain how much you are expeciting to make. Will the price you offer attract enough customers to make your business operate profitable? Let’s say your expenses are 10.000 euros per month, what return will your price get you for your expected amount of sales?

Top pricing strategies for a business plan

Now you know why pricing is important for your business plan, “but what strategies are best for me?” you may ask. Well, let’s talk pricing strategies. There are plenty of pricing strategies and which ones are best for which business depends on various factors and the industry. However, here is a list of 9 pricing strategies that you can use for your business plan.

  • Cost-plus pricing
  • Competitive pricing
  • Key-Value item pricing
  • Dynamic pricing
  • Premium pricing
  • Hourly based pricing
  • Customer-value based pricing
  • Psychological pricing
  • Geographical pricing

Most of the time, businesses do not use a single pricing strategy in their business but rather a combination of pricing strategies. Cost-plus pricing or competitor based pricing can be good starting points for pricing, but if you make these dynamic or take geographical regions into account, then your pricing becomes even more advanced!

Pricing strategies should not be left out of your business plan. Having a clear vision on how you are going to price your product(s) and service(s) helps you to achieve the best possible profit margins and revenue. If you are able to answer thoughtfully on the questions asked in this blog then you know that you have a rather clear vision on your pricing strategy.

If there are still some things unclear or vague, then it would be adviceable to learn more about all the possible pricing strategies . You can always look for inspiration to our business cases. Do you want to know more about pricing or about SYMSON? Do not hesitate to contact us!

Do you want a free demo to try how SYMSON can help your business with margin improvement or pricing management? Do you want to learn more? Schedule a call with a consultant and book a 20 minute brainstorm session!

business plan pricing strategy example

HAVE A QUESTION?

Frequently asked questions, related blogs.

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business plan pricing strategy example

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business plan pricing strategy example

business plan pricing strategy example

The pricing strategy guide: Choosing pricing strategies that grow (not sink) your business

Choosing the pricing strategy for your business requires research, calculation, and a good amount of thought. Simply guessing may put you out of business. Here's what you need to know.

Definition of pricing

What are pricing strategies.

  • Importance of pricing strategy

Top 7 pricing strategies

  • 3 real-world examples
  • How to create your strategy
  • Determine value metric
  • Customer profiles & segments
  • User research & experiments
  • Bonus: 10 data-driven tips
  • Industry differences
  • Final takeaway

Pricing strategies FAQs

business plan pricing strategy example

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Too many businesses set their pricing without putting much thought into it. This is a mistake causing them to leave money on the table from the beginning. The good news is that taking the time to get your product pricing right can act as a powerful growth lever.  If you optimize your pricing strategy so that more people are paying a higher amount, you'll end up with significantly more revenue than a business who treats pricing more passively. This sounds obvious, but it's rare for businesses to put much effort into finding the best pricing strategy.

This guide will cover everything you need to know about setting a pricing strategy that works for your business. 

Check out this introduction video made by the Paddle Studios team.

Price Intelligently is Paddle’s dedicated team of pricing and packaging experts for SaaS and subscription companies. We combine unrivaled expertise and first-party data to solve your unique pricing challenges, break the mold, and catapult your growth.  Learn more

Pricing is defined as the amount of money that you charge for your products, but understanding it requires much more than that simple definition. Baked into your pricing are indicators to your potential customers about how much you value your brand, product, and customers. It's one of the first things that can push a customer towards, or away from, buying your product. As such, it should be calculated with certainty.

Pricing strategies refer to the processes and methodologies businesses use to set prices for their products and services. If pricing is how much you charge for your products, then product pricing strategy is how you determine what that amount should be. There are different pricing strategies to choose from but some of the more common ones include:

  • Value-based pricing
  • Competitive pricing
  • Price skimming
  • Cost-plus pricing
  • Penetration pricing
  • Economy pricing
  • Dynamic pricing

Pricing is an underutilized growth lever

Many companies focus on acquisition to grow their business, but studies have shown that small variations in pricing can raise or lower revenue by 20-50%. Despite that, even among Fortune 500 companies, fewer than 5% have functions dedicated to setting the best price possible. There's a missed opportunity in the business world to see immediate growth for relatively little effort. 

Navigating PLG billing and pricing? Read our latest guide on product-led SaaS

Because most businesses spend less than 10 hours per year thinking about pricing, there's a lot of untapped growth potential in optimizing what you charge. In fact, choosing the best pricing method is a more powerful growth lever than customer acquisition. In some cases, it can be up to 7.5 times more powerful than acquisition. 

The importance of nailing your pricing strategy

Having an  effective pricing strategy  helps solidify your position by building trust with your customers, as well as meeting your business goals. Let's compare and contrast the messaging that a strong pricing strategy sends in relation to a weaker one.

A winning pricing strategy:

  • Portrays value

The word cheap has two meanings. It can mean a lower price, but it can also mean poorly made. There's a reason people associate cheaply priced products with cheaply made ones. Built into the higher price of a product is the assumption that it's of higher value.

  • Convinces customers to buy 

A high price may convey value, but if that price is more than a potential customer is willing to pay, it won't matter. A low price will seem cheap and get your product passed over. The ideal price is one that convinces people to purchase your offering over the similar products that your competitors have to offer.

  • Gives your customers confidence in your product 

If higher-priced products portray value and exclusivity, then the opposite follows as well. Prices that are too low will make it seem as though your product isn't well made.

Buyers are the central tenet of your business

A weak pricing strategy:

  • Doesn't accurately portray the value of your product

If you believe you have a winning product, and you should if you are selling it, then you need to convince customers of that. Setting prices too low sends the opposite message.

  • Makes customers feel uncertain about buying

Just as the right price is one that customers will pull the trigger on quickly, a price that's too high or too low will cause hesitation.

  • Targets the wrong customers

Some customers prefer value, and some prefer luxury. You have to price your product to match the type of customer it is targeted towards.

Let's now take a closer look at the seven most common pricing strategies that were outlined above with more from Paddle Studios .

Click on any of the links below for a more in-depth guide to that particular pricing strategy.

1. Value-based pricing

With value-based pricing, you set your prices according to what consumers think your product is worth. We're big fans of this pricing strategy for SaaS businesses.

2. Competitive pricing

When you use a competitive pricing strategy, you're setting your prices based on what the competition is charging. This can be a good strategy in the right circumstances, such as a  business just starting out , but it doesn't leave a lot of room for growth.

3. Price skimming  

If you set your prices as high as the market will possibly tolerate and then lower them over time, you'll be using the price skimming strategy. The goal is to skim the top off the market and the lower prices to reach everyone else. With the right product it can work, but you should be very cautious using it.

4. Cost-plus pricing 

This is one of the simplest pricing strategies. You just take the product production cost and add a certain percentage to it. While simple, it is less than ideal for anything but physical products.

5. Penetration pricing

In highly competitive markets, it can be hard for new companies to get a foothold. One way some companies attempt to push new products is by offering prices that are much lower than the competition. This is penetration pricing. While it may get you customers and decent sales volume, you'll need a lot of them and you'll need them  to be very loyal  to stick around when the price increases in the future.

6. Economy pricing 

This strategy is popular in the commodity goods sector. The goal is to price a product cheaper than the competition and make the money back with increased volume. While it's a good method to get people to buy your generic soda, it's not a great fit for SaaS and subscription businesses.

7. Dynamic pricing 

In some industries, you can get away with constantly  changing your prices  to match the current demand for the item. This doesn't work well for subscription and SaaS business, because customers expect consistent monthly or yearly expenses.

Three real-world pricing strategy examples

Real-world pricing strategy examples are the best way for a business to better understand the above-listed pricing strategies. Evaluating other businesses' approaches can be a good starting point but keep in mind that the right pricing strategy is based on math, market research, and consumer insights. For now, let’s look at the pricing strategy examples of some of the biggest brands of today: 

1. Streaming services 

Have you noticed that you pay roughly the same amount for Netflix, Amazon Prime Video, Disney+, Hulu, and other streaming services? That's because these companies have adopted competitive pricing , or at least a form of it, called  market-based pricing .

2. Salesforce

When Salesforce first came out, they were the only CRM in the cloud. (It wasn't even called 'the cloud' back then!) Armed with ground-breaking deployment and a target customer of a large enterprise, Salesforce could charge what they wanted. Later, after they'd grown, they were able to lower prices so small businesses could sign up. This is a classic example of  price skimming . 

3. Dollar Shave Club

At one time, you couldn't turn on your TV without an ad for Dollar Shave Club telling you how much cheaper they were than razors at the store. Although an aggressive  marketing strategy  and advertising like that is unusual for the pricing model, they were nevertheless employing economy pricing. It worked out well for them. They were acquired by Unilever in 2016 for a reported $1 billion.

How to create a winning pricing strategy

In the beginning, the actual number you're charging isn't that important.

There are some exceptions, but for the most part, you should first be figuring out the range you're in: a $10 product, $100 product, $1k product, etc. Don't waste time debating $500 vs. $505, because this doesn't matter as much until you have a stronger foundation beneath you.

Instead, understanding the following is much more important:

  • Finding your  value metric
  • Setting your ideal  customer profiles and segments
  • Completing  user research + experimentation

This video from Paddle Studios goes deep on mastering a winning pricing strategy.

Step 1: Determine your value metric

A “ value metric ” is essentially what you charge for. For example: per seat, per 1,000 visits, per CPA, per GB used, per transaction, etc. 

If you get everything else wrong in pricing, but you get your value metric right, you'll do ok . It's that important. Partly because it bakes lower churn and higher expansion revenue into your monetization.

A pricing strategy based on a value metric (vs. a tiered monthly fee) is important because it allows you to make sure you're not charging a large customer the same as you'd charge a small customer.

If you remember your high school or college economics class, the professor put a point on a demand curve for the perfect price and said “the revenue a firm gets is the area under that point.” The problem here is: what about all that other area under the curve?  You’re missing out on that revenue by charging a flat monthly fee.

Revenue potential - one price point. Chart plots price vs quantity. Price x quantity = revenue.

“Good, better, best” pricing strategy is a bit more advantageous, because you end up with three points on our trusty demand curve, and thus more revenue potential. You see this problem among many eCommerce businesses and retailers whose products are constrained by being physical goods—the car with the basic package vs. the car with the stereo and sunroof vs. the car with everything. In software, it’s thankfully dying out, but you’ll still see it with mass-market products:  Netflix, Adobe Creative Cloud, etc.

Revenue potential - three price points. P1xQ2 + P2xQ2 + P3xQ3 = revenue

A value metric, however, allows you to have essentially infinite price points—maximizing your revenue potential. In practice, you’ll never show infinite price points on your pricing page , sales deck, or mobile conversion page, but you may have a new customer come in at a certain level and then grow.

Revenue potential - value metrics. P1xQ1 + P2xQ2+... = reveue

Value metrics also bake growth directly into how you charge because as usage or the amount of value received goes up (and those are not the same thing), the customer pays more. If they end up using or consuming less, they pay less (and thus avoid churning). This is why companies using value metrics are typically growing at  double the rate with half the churn and 2x the expansion revenue  when compared to companies that charge a flat fee or where the only difference between their pricing tiers are features.

To determine your value metric, think about the  ideal essence of value  for your product—what value are you directly providing your customer?

In B2B, it's likely going to be money saved, revenue gained, time saved, etc. In  DTC , it may be the joy you bring them, fitness achieved, increased efficiency, etc. Obviously, we can't measure all of these, but if you can,  and  your customer trusts your measurement (meaning you say you saved them $100 and they agree you saved them $100), that’s your value metric.

As an example, the perfect value metric for  Paddle Retain  (our churn recovery product) is how much churn we recover for you. We can measure this, and our customers agree to the measurement, so we can charge on that axis. Other pure value metric products include  MainStreet , which handles government paperwork to automatically get you back tax credits—you pay a percentage of the money saved.

Track the revenue impact of automatic churn recovery for trial users

Most of you won't have a pure value metric, so the next step is to find a proxy for that metric. Take for example  HubSpot ’s marketing product. Their pure value metric is the amount of revenue their tool drives for your business. This is hard to measure and hard for the customer to agree to in terms of what percentage of credit HubSpot deserves for revenue from a blog post. Proxies for HubSpot are things like the number of contacts, number of visits, number of users, etc.

To find the right proxy metric, you want to come up with 5-10 proxies and then talk to your customers and prospects. You’ll typically find 1-2 of these pricing metrics will be most preferred amongst your target customers. You then want to make sure those 1-2 also make sense from a growth perspective. Your larger customers should be using/getting more of the metric, whereas your smaller customers should be using/getting less of the metric. You also want to make sure the metric encourages retention.

When we look at HubSpot, if they were to primarily price on “number of seats”, folks could share a login and HubSpot wouldn’t make much more money on large customers vs. small. Ironically they wouldn’t get as many people invested in HubSpot, because there’d be friction to adding additional seats. Instead, if they give unlimited seats and price based on “number of contacts” there’s minimal friction to getting as many people into HubSpot as possible to do activities (e.g., blog posts,  email campaigns , landing pages, etc.) that then produce contacts.

The result: HubSpot’s marketing product’s value metric is “contacts”, which ensures growth is baked directly into how they make money. The usage drives the metric, which therein drives revenue. Most importantly customers small, medium, and large are all paying at the point they see the value and then can grow.

Some other examples:

  • Wistia  charges by the number of videos or channels you use/have
  • Zapier  invented the concept of zap (connection of software) and charge based on time to connect
  • Theater in Barcelona charged based on the number of laughs
  • Husqvarna  charges based on time for lawn care products vs. making you buy them
  • Rolls Royce  charges per mile for airplane engines. They own the engines on the plane you own and do all the maintenance. Cool model.
  • Fresh Patch  charges based on the amount of grass you want per month for your dog—yes they deliver grass to you monthly

As a side note, you should stop pricing based on seats for products where each seat doesn’t provide a unique experience. For instance, imagine you're an AE using a CRM. If you log into the account of the AE sitting next to you, you can’t really do your work because you are only seeing their leads and accounts. Conversely, if you were a marketing exec and were to log in to another marketing manager’s account in HubSpot, you could do all the work you need to. Thus, for the latter, seats are not the right value metric.

Per-seat pricing is a relic of the  perpetual license  era when we couldn’t measure usage or value enough within our products. We’re beyond that point, so use the above as a good litmus test.

Step 2: Determine your customer profiles and segments

The second key component of your pricing strategy is determining your target segment and ideal customer profile. We've all heard about personas, and you may be rolling your eyes at the concept, but most personas are useless because they aren’t quantitative enough. When used properly, quantified personas and segments are beautiful tools. The information needs to go beyond just cute names like “Startup Steve" with a cute avatar, and cute meetings where people tell you they’re targeting "developers."

To get quantified personas, you need to pull out a spreadsheet.  Here’s a template  you can use.

Buyer persona template

1. Columns: Customer profiles you're targeting

These can take many forms, but the ultimate goal is to be as specific as possible so that you not only know who you’re targeting but how to monetize and retain them. Pragmatically, you typically separate these customer profiles based on size or role (or both). For example, a marketing automation product may target the following profiles:

  • Marketing leaders (Director and higher) at companies $1M to $10M
  • Marketing leaders (Director and higher) at companies $10.01M to $50M
  • Marketing leaders (Director and higher) at companies $50.01M to $100M

The point is you can’t be everything to all people and you need to understand who you’re targeting in order to make better decisions.

2. Rows: Characteristics of each profile to help you differentiate between them

  • Most valued features
  • Least valued features
  • Willingness to pay
  • Lifetime value (LTV)
  • Customer acquisition costs (CAC)
  • ... and any other metric or category you think could be useful

Quantified buyer personas are data-driven profiles of the customers you're targeting or choosing to ignore

If you're just starting out or you don't have some of this data, it’s fine. Still fill it out though with your hypotheses. You know  something  about your customers.

Next, you then need to validate (or invalidate) the most pressing hypothesis in that spreadsheet based on the decisions you’re going to make. If you're going to validate a new feature for a particular segment, then that's where you should start. Price point the biggest question? Start by researching the price point with each of these roles/segments.

If you don't know who your key roles/segments are, there's no way in hell you’ll set up an efficient growth flywheel, let alone an optimized pricing strategy. Personas act as a constitution within your business to centralize your focus and arguments about direction.

If you don't do segment and persona analysis, you better be able to raise a ton of money. I guarantee you there's some persona or segment on some vision document or in that euphoric part of your entrepreneurial brain that is completely wrong for your business. I see it all the time. Even I—someone who thinks about segments and customer research all the time—fall prey to being an absolute idiot with who we should target.

When we built  ProfitWell Metrics (our free subscription metrics tool) I thought we were geniuses who were going to be billionaires. Turns out analytics products are terrible. Willingness to pay for them is terrible; retention for them is terrible; NPS is terrible. Everything is just terrible, mainly because customers don't appreciate graphs or at least aren't willing to pay much for them. When we did our research this became obvious and put us 18 months ahead of our competitors, pushing us to change up the positioning of the product to freemium, which has fueled our business ever since (oh and our NPS is 70, because we massively over-deliver a free product better than the paid competition).

Never underestimate the power of focusing on the customer through research. You should never, ever just do what they ask, but you need to be an anthropologist who knows them better than anyone else.

Step 3: User research + experimentation

Beyond your value metric and core segments, the monetization game becomes extremely tactical and research-based. Figuring out your price point involves researching those segments and then making decisions in the field. Same with discounting, add-on, and packaging strategies. The point: monetization is never finished because it’s the very essence of translating your value into an optimal framework for your target customer segments.

Practically this is why you should be experimenting with your monetization every quarter. Experimentation can get tricky and have a few quirks, but you’ll find it’s similar to most growth frameworks out there (which are all versions of the scientific method).

Here’s a good prioritization list of what business owners should attack in optimizing their  monetization strategy  once they have the core segments and value metric figured out:

Priority 1: Foundational [see above]

  • Core customer segments
  • Value metrics

Priority 2: Core

  • Order of magnitude price point (are you a $10 product vs. a $500 product)
  • Positioning and value props

Priority 3: Optimizations

  • Add-on strategy
  • Specific price point (are you a $10 product vs. a $11 product)
  • Price localization/internationalization
  • Discounting strategy
  • Contract Term optimization

Priority 4: Growth accelerators

  • Market expansion (going up or down market)
  • Vertical expansion
  • Multi-Product

Your true order of operations with monetization will vary, but for the most part, all companies should work through the foundational and core sections before moving to the optimizations and growth accelerators. If you’re larger or there’s a fire, you may start with an optimization. In fact, this is sometimes a good idea. Something more scoped like “price localization” can help get momentum, be a forcing function to clean up tech and experimentation stacks, and mitigate political conversations. Remember, monetization is something that’s important, uncomfortable, and something you likely don’t know much about, so progress is better than nothing. Start small. You can (and should) always do more.

Bonus: 10 rapid-fire pricing strategy tips rooted in data⚡

In case you're still hungry for more tips on nailing your pricing strategy and achieving maximum profitability, look no further. We've got you covered:

1. You should  localize your pricing  to the currency and willingness to pay of the prospect's region

  • Revenue per customer is 30% higher when you just use the proper currency symbol
  • Having different price points in different regions increases revenue per customer further, and is justified based on different consumer demands in different regions

business plan pricing strategy example

2. Freemium is an acquisition model, not a part of pricing

  • Think of  freemium  as a premium ebook driving leads, not another pricing tier
  • Don't do freemium until you truly understand how to convert leads to customers, because you’ll end up increasing noise or false positives when you’re trying to figure out your segment beachheads. The best folks who deploy free typically don’t implement freemium until two to three years into their business. The exceptions to this notion are if you have a very specific need or network effect (eg., marketplaces, social networks, etc.) or if you have a top 50 growth person on your team.
  • To be clear, we're not saying DON’T do freemium. we're saying it's a scalpel, not a sledgehammer that requires thought. A lot of people end up reading our articles on freemium and end up going, “Cool, let’s do freemium and we’ll be a unicorn.” I’m being pragmatic in that you need to realize freemium is fantastic, but doing freemium properly takes a lot of effort and nuance.
  • Paid users who convert from free tend to have higher NPS, better retention, and much lower CAC .

business plan pricing strategy example

3. Value propositions matter oh so much

In B2B value propositions can swing willingness to pay ±20%, in DTC it's ±15%

business plan pricing strategy example

4. Don't discount over 20%

In some verticals discounting over 20% may be fine, but you're likely not in one of them (although you may think you are), but the size of the discount almost perfectly correlates with higher churn. Large  discounts  get people to convert, but they don't stick around.

business plan pricing strategy example

5. For upgrades to annual discounts, don't use percentages and try offers

Percentages don't work as well as whole dollar amounts for discounts (ie., "one month" will work better than "X percent off"). Annuals see much lower churn rates.

business plan pricing strategy example

6. Should you end your price in 9s or 0s? Depends on your price point

Ending your prices in 9s evokes a discount brand, making the customer feel like they're getting something. Ending in 0 evokes luxury or premium, making them feel like they're getting a high-end product. Studies on this for technology products are inconclusive. We have seen it increase conversion in lower-cost products, but retention isn't as good with those customers.

business plan pricing strategy example

7. You should experiment with your pricing in some manner every quarter

This doesn't mean change you should the price point each quarter, but experiment with variable costs. More changes correlate with increasing revenue per customer. Like all things, focusing on something makes you improve it.

business plan pricing strategy example

8. Case studies boost willingness to pay quite a bit

Social proof is important.  Case studies  that offer proof of the high quality of your products can boost willingness to pay by 10-15% in both B2B and in DTC.

business plan pricing strategy example

9. Design helps boost willingness to pay by 20%

This graph didn't look this way 10 years ago when design didn't do much for willingness to pay. Today, affinity for a company's design can boost willingness to pay considerably.

business plan pricing strategy example

10. Integrations boost retention and willingness to pay

The more integrations a customer is using, typically the higher their willingness to pay and the better their retention. I wouldn't charge for the integrations, but I'd use this as a tool to get people hooked in and paying more or buying different add-ons.

business plan pricing strategy example

Pricing strategies for different industries

Pricing strategies are not one size fits all. Finding the proper pricing strategy is dependent on your industry, as well as your company's unique objectives. But to give you an idea, we've listed a couple of industries and strategies that are well suited for each other. 

SaaS/Subscriptions

For SaaS and subscription-based businesses, value-based pricing is the winner hands down. As long as your customers are willing to pay, you can charge much more than your competitors.  Because your price is based on how much customers will spend, it isn't artificially lowered like other methods that fail to account for that. 

We also like value-based pricing for B2B companies. Value-based pricing requires you to look outward and understand your customers better. This is good for finding the optimal price, but it's also good for building optimal relationships that will also help grow your company. 

No more price guessing, just pricing that works

Accurately pricing your product for maximum growth requires a lot of market research and even more expertise on how to conduct and analyze that research. Our Price Intelligently  service combines our years of experience in the field with powerful machine learning tools to understand your target customer base and what makes them tick. We know the data to collect, the questions to ask, and the people to ask them of. This is important because businesses in different stages of growth need different strategies for evaluating pricing. Additionally, every business has a unique set of potential selling points and a unique target audience to pitch to.

You need someone in your corner who knows how to evaluate pricing options for your specific businesses. With our help, you can be confident that your pricing strategy and chosen price points will unlock growth levers at your company that have been sitting idle, because they'll be tailored to finding and maximizing the value propositions that are unique to your business. 

Which pricing strategy is best? 

This depends on your business model. For SaaS and subscription companies, as well as many others, we recommend value-based pricing.

How do you determine the selling prices of a product?

First, find a pricing strategy that fits well with your business model and product. As you've seen, pricing strategies differ, but they all give clear instructions for how to use them to set prices.

What is the simplest pricing strategy?

Since you only need to add up the cost to make your product and add a percentage to it, cost-plus pricing is the simplest form of pricing to use.

What is a pricing curve?

A pricing curve is a graph that shows you the number of people who are willing to pay a given price for a product.

What are the 4 major pricing strategies?

Value-based,  competition-based , cost-plus, and  dynamic pricing are all models  that are used frequently, depending on the industry and business model in question.

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Updated: 09/13/24

Published: 05/21/19

Pricing your products and services can be challenging, especially since over 80% of consumers say they compare prices between competitors before making a purchase decision.

Set prices too high, and you risk losing sales. Set them too low, and you lose out on revenue.

Fortunately, pricing doesn’t have to be a gamble. There are many pricing models and strategies to help you find the right prices for your audience and revenue goals.

That’s why I created this guide.

Whether you’re a business beginner or a pricing pro, the tactics and strategies in this guide will get you comfortable with pricing your products. Bookmark this guide for later and use the chapter links to jump around to sections of interest.

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Table of Contents

Pricing Strategy

Pricing analysis, cost, margin, & markup in pricing, types of pricing strategies, pricing strategy examples, pricing models, how to create a pricing strategy, pricing models based on industry or business.

A pricing strategy is a model or method used to establish the best price for a product or service. It helps you choose prices to maximize profits and shareholder value while considering consumer and market demand.

If only pricing was as simple as its definition — there’s a lot that goes into the process.

Pricing strategies account for many of your business factors, including:

  • Revenue goals.
  • Marketing objectives.
  • Target audience.
  • Brand positioning.
  • Product attributes.

They’re also influenced by external factors like consumer demand, competitor pricing, and overall market and economic trends.

It’s not uncommon for entrepreneurs and business owners to skim over pricing. They often look at the cost of their products (COGS) , consider their competitors’ rates, and tweak their own selling price by a few dollars. While your COGS and competitors are important, they shouldn’t be at the center of your pricing strategy.

The best pricing strategy maximizes your profit and revenue.

Before I talk about pricing strategies, let’s review an important pricing concept that will apply regardless of what strategies you use.

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Price Elasticity of Demand

Price elasticity of demand is used to determine how a change in price affects consumer demand.

If consumers still purchase a product despite a price increase (such as cigarettes and fuel), that product is considered inelastic .

On the other hand, elastic products suffer from pricing fluctuations (such as cable TV and movie tickets).

Unitary elastic demand occurs when the percentage change in quantity demanded is exactly equal to the percentage change in price.

You can calculate price elasticity using the formula:

% Change in Quantity ÷ % Change in Price = Price Elasticity of Demand

The concept of price elasticity helps you understand whether your product or service is sensitive to price fluctuations. Ideally, you want your product to be inelastic — so that demand remains stable if prices do fluctuate.

Pricing analysis is a process of evaluating your current pricing strategy against market demand. Generally, pricing analysis examines price independently of cost. The goal of a pricing analysis is to identify opportunities for pricing changes and improvements.

You typically conduct a pricing analysis when considering new product ideas, developing your positioning strategy, or running marketing tests. I also think it’s wise to run a price analysis once every year or two to evaluate your pricing against competitors and consumer expectations .

Doing so preemptively avoids having to wait for poor product and sales performance . Likewise, a blunder in this regard can be calamitous and result in negative cash flow in the long term.

How to Conduct a Pricing Analysis

Conducting a pricing analysis is essential for setting competitive and profitable prices for your products or services. Here’s a step-by-step guide to help you through the process:

1. Determine the true cost of your product or service.

To calculate the true cost of a product or service that you sell, you’ll want to recognize all of your expenses, including both fixed and variable costs.

Once you’ve determined these costs, subtract them from the price you’ve already set or plan to set for your product or service.

Cost = Sales – (fixed + variable costs)

2. Understand how your target market and customer base respond to the pricing structure.

In my experience, surveys, focus groups, or questionnaires can be helpful in determining how the market responds to your pricing model. You’ll get a glimpse into what your target customers value and how much they’re willing to pay for the value your product or service provides.

3. Analyze the prices set by your competitors.

There are two types of competitors to consider when conducting a pricing analysis: direct and indirect.

Direct competitors are those who sell the exact same product that you sell. These types of competitors are likely to compete on price, so they should be a priority to review in your pricing analysis.

Indirect competitors are those who sell alternative products that are comparable to what you sell. If a customer is looking for your product, but it’s out of stock or it’s out of their price range, they may go to an indirect competitor to get a similar product.

I suggest creating a competitive analysis chart to visualize how your pricing compares to competitors and identify any gaps or opportunities.

4. Review any legal or ethical constraints to cost and price.

There’s a fine line between competing on price and falling into legal and ethical trouble. You’ll want to have a firm understanding of price-fixing and predatory pricing while doing your pricing analysis in order to steer clear of these practices.

Analyzing your current pricing model is necessary to determine a new (and better!) pricing strategy. This applies whether you're developing a new product, upgrading your current one, or simply repositioning your marketing strategy.

Understanding the role of cost, margin, and markup is also essential when choosing a pricing strategy, especially if you want your pricing to be cost-based .

Cost refers to the fees you incur from manufacturing, sourcing, or creating the product you sell. That includes the materials themselves, the cost of labor, the fees paid to suppliers, and even the losses. Cost doesn’t include overhead and operational expenses such as marketing, advertising, maintenance, or bills.

Margin, often referred to as profit margin , is the difference between the selling price of a product and its cost, expressed as a percentage of the selling price. It shows you the profitability of your product.

There are two types of margins:

  • Gross margin. This is calculated as (Sales Revenue – Cost of Goods Sold) / Sales Revenue. It reflects the profitability before accounting for operating expenses.
  • Net margin. This is calculated as (Net Profit / Sales Revenue). It includes all expenses, providing a more comprehensive view of profitability.

For example, if a product is sold for $100 and the cost to produce it is $60:

Gross Margin = (100 − 60/100​) × 100 = 40%

Markup refers to the additional amount you charge for your product over the production and manufacturing fees. It allows you to set prices that align with market expectations and your business goals.

For example, if a product costs $70 to produce and you sell it for $100, the markup is $30, or approximately 42.9% of the cost price.

Now, I’ll walk you through some common pricing strategies. As we do so, it’s important to note that these aren’t necessarily standalone strategies — many can be combined when setting prices for your products and services.

  • Competition-Based Pricing
  • Dynamic Pricing
  • High-Low Pricing
  • Penetration Pricing
  • Skimming Pricing
  • Psychological Pricing
  • Geographic Pricing

Here are some of the popular pricing strategies available — many are included in our free pricing template below.

I’ll explain what makes each one unique.

1. Competition-Based Pricing Strategy

Competition-based pricing is also known as competitive pricing or competitor-based pricing. This pricing strategy focuses on the existing market rate ( or going rate ) for a company’s product or service; it doesn’t take into account the cost of its product or consumer demand.

Instead, a competition-based pricing strategy uses the competitors’ prices as a benchmark. Businesses that compete in a highly saturated space may choose this strategy since a slight price difference may be the deciding factor for customers.

pricing strategy example, competition-based

2. Cost-Plus Pricing Strategy

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Don’t Mess Up Your Pricing Strategy — Here’s How to Do It Right

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Capturing market share, staying competitive, and growing profits is often about how you price your goods.

business plan pricing strategy example

Richard Harris

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Choosing a pricing strategy is one of the most important decisions you can make as a business leader. Get it wrong and your sales will suffer, causing consumers to question the value of your brand. Get it right and you can increase sales, reduce costs, and improve your company’s profitability.

If you’re wondering where to begin, you’re in the right place. Learn about the different kinds of pricing strategies, the benefits of choosing the right one, pricing strategy examples, and how to create an effective pricing strategy for your business.

What you’ll learn:

What is pricing strategy, 5 different types of pricing strategies, benefits of implementing an effective pricing strategy, how to create a pricing strategy: 5 points to consider, tips for setting pricing strategy from 20 years in sales, unify sales, finance, and legal on the #1 ai crm.

When sales, finance, and legal are disconnected, the customer feels the pain. Learn how Revenue Cloud can help.

business plan pricing strategy example

A pricing strategy is a method to decide what your products and services should cost. Pricing strategy is both an art and a science. It’s about understanding production costs, profit margins, and the competitive landscape, so you can make a profit and keep shareholders happy.

( Back to top )

When you choose the right pricing strategy for your business, you can feel confident that the prices for your products or services are competitive while ensuring profitability. In my experience, these are five of the most popular strategies:

1. Cost-plus pricing

The cost-plus pricing strategy only looks at the unit cost and ignores prices set by competitors. Also known as markup pricing, this strategy is a simple way to determine the sales price of a product. Start by adding up your production costs. Then determine your desired profit margin, or markup, to set your selling price. Here’s an example:

A former aerospace engineer sells a line of high-end boomerangs for collectors, handmade with balsa wood imported from Ecuador. Here are the costs to produce one boomerang:

  • Material: $5
  • Labor (based on industry averages): $20
  • Overhead (for manufacturing space and utilities): $10

The total cost to produce a single boomerang is $35. The engineer then adds a markup of 300%. The formula to set the price looks like this: Production costs ($35) x markup (300% or 3) = selling price ($105)

When to use: Government contractors are well known for using cost-plus pricing because there isn’t similar competition on the market. Retailers, such as supermarkets and department stores also use the strategy, because it’s a relatively simple formula and provides a consistent rate of return.

2. Competitive pricing

This method looks at competitors’ pricing as a benchmark. Instead of using production costs or customer demand, companies set prices at, below, or above their competition.

Here are the different types with examples and when to use them:

  • Above the competition: This method uses higher-than-competition pricing justified by additional or unique benefits customers receive, like convenience. Here’s an example: Four gas stations are all located at the same intersection. But the gas station closest to the freeway on-ramp charges $0.25 more per gallon than the other three, and customers seem happy to pay the higher price for the convenience.
  • Below the competition: Also known as the loss leader strategy , this pricing scheme deliberately sets an item’s price point below the market rate. The business then gains a larger overall profit when customers purchase additional items. Printers are a great example of this strategy. A lower-cost printer might attract customers, but they also need to purchase paper and ink cartridges. This increases the total cost and leads to repeat purchases when ink and paper run out.
  • Matching the competition: When a company sets prices equal to its competitors, the focus shifts from price to the product or service itself. This can happen in industries heavily regulated by the government, as U.S. airlines were before 1978. Before deregulation, U.S. airlines differentiated themselves from the competition by offering perks such as free champagne or gourmet meals.

3. Price skimming

Price skimming is a strategy where a company initially charges a high price for its products or services and then gradually lowers the price to attract a wider audience. Companies employ this strategy when they want to recover sunk costs upfront.

Fashion companies have long used price skimming for unique specialty products in the marketplace. When an innovative new product is released, the price is initially expensive. The company is targeting a smaller pool of consumers willing to pay the high price at launch.

Once the company captures all of the buyers it can at the launch price, it begins to slowly lower the selling price over time. This strategy captures price-sensitive customers while putting pressure on other fashion retailers that enter the market.

When to use: This strategy is used when you have a buzzworthy product in your industry, with early adopters clamoring to get it first. It also helps you create an air of exclusivity; only those with certain budgets can afford your product.

4. Penetration pricing

In contrast to price skimming, penetration pricing is when a business enters the market with a product or service offered at an exceptionally low price. This strategy initially draws attention and attracts hordes of cut-rate customers. For this to be sustainable for the business — and ultimately profitable — prices must eventually be raised.

When to use: Many software companies launch using penetration pricing to make a splash in the market, and then move to competition-based pricing after they’ve gained some brand recognition. This disruptive strategy may incur early losses for businesses that use it, but the hope is that the customers initially attracted by a bargain will stay loyal once the price creeps up.

5. Value-based pricing

With this strategy, companies set a price based on what customers are willing to pay for their products or services — in other words, what they perceive as valuable. You can see value-based pricing in luxury products such as leather handbags, automobiles, and high-end makeup brands.

While the quality may not be measurably different from its lower-priced competitors, luxury brands use marketing to become status symbols for consumers and send the message that their products are high value. When this is successful, buyers are willing to pay a premium.

When to use: With value-based pricing, you need to build a brand focused on value — conveying unique benefits, features, and offerings of your products.

Luxury brands do this well, but the actual value of the product doesn’t always match the perceived value; their pricing is often based on how much their customers think they’re worth rather than on production costs or competition. A substantial investment in marketing, research, and PR is required for this to be a successful formula.

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business plan pricing strategy example

If you choose the right pricing strategy, it can mean the successful launch of your product and fast market penetration. But these are just some of the big wins from pricing correctly.

Here are additional benefits of choosing the right pricing strategy:

  • Conveying the value of your brand: The perception consumers have of your brand will help determine how much of their current pain they are willing to tolerate in relation to the relief your product or service offers them. Think about when you use a delivery service instead of going out and buying something yourself. How much is it worth to you for that convenience? 
  • Adding new customers: Expanding your customer base can increase sales, which leads to increased profits.
  • Increasing the value of current customers: It’s a lot easier to upsell or cross-sell a current customer a new feature or service than it is to find new customers. Pay close attention to your pricing with your best customers to encourage additional sales. 
  • Building brand ambassadors: People who believe in your brand are more likely to become advocates, leading them to recommend your products or services to friends and family. They may also offer positive reviews online or tag your brand in social media posts.
  • Improving sales: When products or services are priced well, you’ll see an uptick in sales. This is where research into your target audience can pay off.

If your pricing strategy falls short of supporting your business goals, you might attract the wrong kind of customers, leading to mistrust and diminishing the perceived value of your brand. That’s why it’s vital to find a fair, reasonable price in the exchange of goods and services that the market will bear.

Choosing the best pricing strategy for your business doesn’t have to be a headache. Here’s how to get started:

1. Understand your goals

Think about what you want your business to achieve. Do you want to grab customer attention quickly with an enticing new product launch? Then maybe you’d go with penetration pricing. Are you trying to build a reputation for your luxury brand? Value-based pricing might be best.

2. Analyze the competition

Make sure you understand what your competition is offering in the marketplace and how much they are charging. This will help you set your pricing because it will give you an idea of what others are willing to pay for similar products.

If you notice outliers, those charging much higher or lower than most, check them out to see how they justify their prices. All research is good research when it comes to understanding the marketplace.

3. Research your target market

Knowing your target audience is a key step in determining your pricing strategy. Understanding who your target audience is, including their age, gender, location, likes, dislikes, and values, gives you a better shot at appealing to the right people with the right offer at the right price.

4. Weigh the pros and cons of each pricing approach

To determine which strategy is right for your business, look at the different pricing approaches and consider their benefits and drawbacks. Keep in mind that some strategies, such as penetration pricing, may be effective during a product launch but are typically not a sustainable long-term strategy.

If you choose to enter the market with this type of pricing, you’ll need to consider what you’ll shift to once the initial product launch period stops drawing in new customers.

5. Test your prices, then learn and adjust

Once you’ve picked your pricing strategy, keep in mind that it’s not set in stone. If sales are slow or there are shifts in the market, you may need to adjust your prices to compensate. Think of this as an opportunity to test and tweak the true value of your product. And if you are an early-stage start-up, expect that in the first year or two you may make deals you would never make again as you gain traction. And in those moments, that’s okay.

If you want to see what dollar amount works, try A/B testing your price on a product page. For example, if you’re selling a book, you could create two landing pages — one priced at $11.99 (with a low-cost add-on, perhaps) and the other at $9.99. Then, you can measure which price attracts the most buyers to inform your strategy.

With an equal number of people visiting each page, how many convert? The page with the most conversions tells me how much most people are willing to pay.

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As the founder of The Harris Consulting Group and with more than two decades of experience in sales, I know what the market bears and I price right in the middle. I don’t ever want to be the most expensive, because when someone turns around and asks for a discount, which everyone does, I can easily come back and say, “My price is based on what the market will bear. How would you like to proceed?”

If you want to see your business grow and flourish, you must first develop an effective pricing strategy that’s appropriate for your goals. Hitting the right price won’t just attract customers; it will also convey the value of your brand. If the price is right, your customers will feel like your products or services meet their expectations. And the price you decide on will ultimately determine the sales revenue and profitability of your company.

When creating a pricing strategy, the first thing I encourage people to do is to understand the economic impact based on the pains they are experiencing in their current ways to solve their problems. This includes what they would be able to do better and faster once they implement your solution. As human beings, we are all comparison shoppers.

Understanding your production costs is also key, of course. This will help you set a price that allows you to not only break even — but also eventually turn a profit. When you create your pricing strategy, consider things such as overhead; how much you pay in rent, salaries, and insurance; and manufacturing costs, services, and labor.

Invest in the right pricing strategy

Getting your pricing strategy right is critical for the health of your business, so it can be an intimidating idea to tackle. Luckily, it’s not a one-and-done motion. Pricing strategies are all about testing what the market will bear, then adjusting based on what you learn. For the health and growth of your company, investing time, money, and resources into your pricing strategy will never be a gamble — it’s an investment in your future.

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Richard has more than 20 years of SaaS experience and teaches revenue teams how to earn the right to ask questions, which questions to ask, and when to do it. Richard’s clients include Zoom, Salesforce, Google Cloud, PagerDuty, DoorDash, Salesloft, and Gainsight. He’s also the co-founder of Surf ... Read More & Sales. Learn more at theharrisconsultinggroup.com.

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Pricing Strategies and Models Explained

Author: Kody Wirth

4 min. read

Updated January 18, 2024

Download Now: Free Pitch Deck Template →

What’s the right price for your product or service?

What price will make you profitable and attract customers?

Not sure? Keep reading to learn the basics of pricing strategy and setting the right price.

  • What is a pricing strategy?

A pricing strategy is the overarching approach or plan a business uses to determine the price of its products or services. 

It considers various factors such as market conditions, competition, production costs, and the perceived value to the customer. The ultimate goal of a pricing strategy is to maximize profitability, maintain or grow market share, and ensure long-term sustainability while meeting the company’s other objectives.

  • What is a pricing model?

A pricing model is the specific method used to set the price of a product or service. It provides a structure to implement your chosen pricing strategy.

What’s the difference?

The distinction between a pricing strategy and a pricing model lies in their scope, purpose, and application.

The pricing strategy aligns prices with business objectives, market conditions, and customer perceptions. A pricing strategy considers market entry tactics, customer psychology, brand positioning, and long-term market objectives. 

The pricing model is the mathematical method you use to create a specific price. It usually involves manufacturing costs, customer demand, and competitor pricing. 

Think of the strategy as the roadmap guiding where a company wants to go with its pricing and the model as the vehicle it uses to get there.

  • Types of pricing strategies

1. Penetration pricing

Setting an initial low price to quickly attract customers and establish a market presence. Ideal for new entrants wanting rapid market share. 

Example: Streaming services offering discounted rates for the first three months.

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2. Price skimming

Starting with a high price and then reducing it over time. Suitable for innovative products. 

Example: New tech gadgets like smartphones often use this strategy.

3. Value-based pricing

Pricing based on the perceived value to the customer rather than production costs. Works best for unique products or services. 

Example: Luxury brands like Rolex or Louis Vuitton.

4. Competitive pricing

Setting prices based on competitor rates. Ideal for industries with many competitors offering similar products. 

Example: Supermarkets pricing staple goods.

5. Premium pricing

Charging a higher price to reflect a product’s premium status and quality. 

Example: Brands like Apple or Tesla.

6. Economy pricing

Offering no-frills products at a low price. Common in mass markets. 

Example: Budget airlines like Ryanair.

7. Bundle pricing

Grouping multiple products together at a discounted rate. Useful for increasing sales volume. 

Example: Cable TV packages.

8. Price leadership

Price leadership occurs when one dominant company, usually the largest or most influential in an industry, sets the price of a product or service, and other competitors in the market follow suit.

Example:  

OPEC often influences global oil prices by adjusting its production levels. 

9. Preemptive pricing

Intended to drive away competition or deter others from entering the marketplace by deliberately selling at below market prices (temporarily, of course).

Amazon launching the Kindle with e-books priced below typical hardcover prices. 

  • Types of pricing models

1. Cost-plus pricing

Calculating the cost of production and adding a fixed gross margin. Common in retail. 

Example: A shirt that costs $20 to make might be sold for $40.

2. Geographic pricing

Adjusting prices based on location or region. 

Example: A software product priced differently for the U.S. versus India.

3. Dynamic pricing model

Prices change based on real-time factors. 

Example: Uber’s surge pricing during high demand.

4. Tiered pricing model

Different prices for varying levels of product features. See an example of how tiers and introductory pricing can be used to introduce and grow your business.

Example: Software packages with Basic, Pro, and Premium tiers.

5. Freemium model

Basic services are free, with charges for advanced features. 

Example: Spotify offers free music streaming but charges for an ad-free experience.

6. Subscription model

Recurring fee for product or service access. 

Example: Monthly Netflix subscriptions.

7. Pay-what-you-want model

Customers choose their price. Often seen in indie industries. 

Example: Some indie video games or music albums.

8. Volume-based pricing

Decreased price per unit with increased quantity. 

Example: Wholesale retailers like Costco.

9. License pricing model

One-time fee for product usage over a period. 

Example: Microsoft Office’s one-time purchase option.

10. High-low pricing model 

Products have a higher standard price but are frequently discounted. 

Example: Department stores having frequent sales.

  • How to choose your pricing strategy

Selecting a pricing strategy comes down to cost, goals, and customer perception. Here’s how:

1. Set business objectives

Define clear goals, such as maximizing profit, penetrating the market, establishing a premium brand image, or achieving specific revenue targets. Your pricing should align with these objectives.

2. Understand your costs

Consider both direct costs (like raw materials and labor) and expenses (such as rent and marketing). Factor in variable costs that change with production volume and expenses that remain constant. Determine the break-even point to identify the minimum price needed to cover all expenses.

3. Analyze the competition

Research competitor prices and understand their value propositions. Identify their market positioning, whether premium or budget and observe any historical pricing trends or changes to gauge market reactions.

4. Know your audience

Understand your target audience’s demographics and what they value in a product. Gauge their price sensitivity and gather feedback on pricing preferences to ensure your price resonates with them.

5. Test and adjust

Before a broad rollout, test the new pricing on a segment of your audience. Refine your pricing based on customer input.

  • More on pricing products and services

Check out our other startup pricing resources to turn your pricing strategy into profitable steps for your business.

  • How to price your products
  • How to price your services
  • Mistakes to avoid when setting prices

Content Author: Kody Wirth

Kody Wirth is a content writer and SEO specialist for Palo Alto Software—the creator's of Bplans and LivePlan. He has 3+ years experience covering small business topics and runs a part-time content writing service in his spare time.

Check out LivePlan

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How to Write Pricing Strategy for Your Business Plan

Product and Service Description Workbook

Product and Service Description Workbook

  • May 16, 2024
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business plan pricing strategy

You have finally created that awesome product. It’s now time to sell.

At what cost?

This is the question that troubles most businesses.

Price your products too high and you see low sales. Price it too low and you struggle to make profits.

What’s the sweet spot to finding a balance between profitability and business sustenance?

The answer is a smart pricing strategy in your business plan . But how to decide on a pricing strategy for your products?

This article is your answer.

In this guide to creating the right pricing strategy, we cover everything you need to know about a pricing strategy from A to Z.

Let’s decode the recipe to a pricing strategy that brings in both: great profit margins and happy customers.

What is a pricing strategy?

A pricing strategy is a model you use to decide the price of your products or services.

It is a critical component of your business plan, as it decides on how you:

  • Make profits
  • Compete against competitors
  • Optimize conversion and lead generation

Creating the right pricing strategy means taking into account various factors such as market conditions, competition, production costs, perceived value to the customer, and so much more.

We agree it’s the hard part.

The main objective: Establish a price point that’s good enough to attract customers while also maintaining profitability for effective financial planning.

Why is pricing strategy critical to a business plan

A recent survey by Bain and Company found that roughly 85% of businesses are seeking an improvement in their pricing decision-making process. On the other hand, McKinsey contends that even a mere 1% increase in prices can result in an impressive 8% boost in profits.

Your business plan is a document that contains the goals of your company and how you plan to achieve them. A pricing strategy highlights how you will be making actual profits from your product offerings to achieve those goals.

The price you set reflects not only the value you assign to your brand’s products and customers but also serves as a pivotal factor that can either attract or deter potential buyers.

Let’s delve deeper into the benefits of the right pricing strategy in a business plan:

Establishes the road to profitability: Your pricing strategy determines your profit margins. By understanding your costs and competitors’ pricing, you can set a price that ensures profitability and sustainability for your business.

Enables better market positioning: An optimized pricing strategy helps you put your products and services in the correct price bracket. It guides your business and helps you decide which market position to occupy for the best chances of success.

Helps project demand: With a good pricing strategy, you can project and satisfy the demand for your product or service. Choosing the optimal pricing strategy (such as skimming, penetration, or value-based pricing) will help you manage demand fluctuations and optimize sales volume. This makes your business plan stronger.

Helps project ROI: You also get a rough idea regarding your sales goals with a strong pricing strategy based on competitor and marketing analysis.

Enhances chances for funding: If you’re a startup seeking funding, a strong and thoroughly analyzed pricing can highly strengthen to secure funding.

With an understanding of the criticality behind integrating a pricing strategy into your business plan, it’s now time to explore some real-world pricing strategies before you come to designing your own.

Choosing the best pricing strategy for your business

“You know you’re priced right when your customers complain—but buy anyway.” — John Harrison

Product/Service Pricing strategies

You know what it is, and you know why you need it. But which strategy should you implement? What’s the best one for you?

Let’s get you out of all these conundrums with our comprehensive list of best pricing plan strategy examples.

Competitive pricing

The competitive pricing strategy involves setting your prices based on what your competitors are charging for similar products and services.

As such, it’s ideal for businesses venturing into markets that sell similar products such as groceries or retail stores.

Think of how airline prices for a particular destination all rise up together during holidays.

A competitive pricing strategy is used both in B2B and B2C sectors like communication services, retail stores, grocery, telecom market, and more.

Essentially, you can implement this strategy by:

  • Setting your prices below competitors’
  • Setting your prices similar to your competitors’
  • Setting your prices a little above your competitors

What approach you choose depends on how well you know your market or customer. For instance, if you price your goods a bit lower, you may attract more customers. However, you must make sure not to attract big losses.

If you decide to set your product prices higher than your competitors, you’ll want to draw on some ideas from value-based pricing strategies that help clarify why you are charging more for your products. Are you offering better quality? Are you treating customers better?

Marketing efforts like a refund scheme, better customer experience, and more will play a crucial role in justifying the higher cost to customers.

Best for: Both B2B and B2C sectors like communication services, retail stores, grocery, telecom market, and others with stiff competition . Works best if your product offers more value than the competition.

Value-based pricing

The value-based pricing method works based on what your customers think the value of your product should be.

Thus, the price is dependent on what the customer is willing to pay (WTP price) for your product.

Depending on the value that you bring to your customers’ business or life, you get a chance to price your products much higher than the actual production cost.

Think of how a fine-dining restaurant sets its price. While it may seem exorbitant to some, patrons willing to throw in that amount happily visit such a place.

This technique is well used by B2C or B2B service providers, freelancers, and experts who teach a specific skill.

Best for: This technique is well used by B2C or B2B service providers, freelancers, and experts who teach a specific skill.

Apple, in particular, is notorious for using this strategy to demand excessive prices for products that are either only slightly better or equivalent to their counterparts.

Cost-plus pricing

The cost-plus pricing strategy pulls us away from a “willing to pay” towards a more business-centric approach. This strategy, aptly named markup pricing, involves taking into account the production cost and simply adding an extra dollar value to it.

Cost-plus pricing, in a nutshell:

My production costs + Markup price = My selling price.

If you plan to sell a product that costs you $100 to produce. Simply speaking, you now need to sell the product at a higher price to earn a profit.

If you want a 20% profit margin, you have to sell at $120. If you want a 15% profit margin, you sell at $115. Pretty easy, right?

With the cost-plus strategy, it becomes easy for you to get a rough draft regarding the profits you can generate depending on the volume of your sales.

So, let’s say you have a profit goal of $10000 and a profit margin of 20% with each product costing $100 to make.

Thus, your sales goal should be

$10000/$20 = 500

You need to sell 500 units to reach that goal.

Best for: Cost-plus pricing strategies are commonly employed in B2C retail settings such as grocery stores, big-box stores, and convenience stores.

Economy pricing

In the economy pricing strategy, you sell products at a bargain price, i.e. at the lowest price to get your potential customers to start buying your products.

While this method might seem quite similar to competitive pricing, there is a hidden catch.

Unlike competitive pricing, economy pricing targets those customers who may be okay with a slightly lower product quality or those who don’t care about brand image.

By sourcing cheaper supplies and streamlining features, you can offer extremely low prices for your goods while remaining profitable.

Best for: This strategy is usually employed in the B2C industry. For instance, large retail stores and food delivery services often use this method.

You might have noticed a retail chain’s cheaper alternative sugar packet stocked right beside the branded ones. Another great example includes generic drugs—they are priced lower because they come with lower production costs.

business plan pricing strategy example

Premium pricing

The premium strategy is exactly the opposite of the economy pricing strategy. Instead of selling products at their cheapest, you hike up the price to give customers the essence of a luxury product.

Of course, companies do add some additional value to their products but the bulk of the pricing comes from the perception of the product as high-end by the customer.

Best for: This pricing approach is generally employed by companies that manufacture upscale B2C goods, such as luxury cars, cosmetics, and devices. B2B companies also use it.

Psychological pricing

The psychological pricing strategy plays with the psyche of your customers to make them want to buy your stuff.

For instance, one of the most popular and widely used techniques in this strategy is the 9-digit effect. It suggests that even though a product priced at $9.99 is essentially $10, customers perceive it as a better deal due to the presence of the “9” in the price.

Placing the target product next to an expensive alternative, giving good deals, tweaking your typography, and inducing FOMO (fear of missing out) are some other basic ways to subtly manipulate buyer psychology.

Best for: This strategy is suitable both for B2B and B2C products. You must understand your customers.

Dynamic pricing

Dynamic pricing goes by many names—surge pricing, demand pricing, or time-based pricing. And as the names suggest, it is a pricing strategy that is flexible in nature and is catered to adjust to the fluctuating market and customer demands.

Dynamic pricing lives and dies with your monitoring and analysis capabilities. You need to stay on top of various metrics like supply and demand, spatio-temporality, customer preferences, and more.

Best for: This strategy suits both B2B and B2C customers. Travel prices are one of the most dynamically priced as you might have noticed airlines or cab services changing their prices depending on your time, location, and demand.

Penetration pricing

In this strategy, you enter the market with a low baseline price for your products. That attracts customers and you set up your market presence. This helps you pull customers away from competitors who demand higher prices for similar products. That’s what the penetration strategy is all about.

Do note that this strategy may not be always sustainable in the long run. This requires you to have a suitable plan in place once you establish a suitable foothold in the market.

Best for: Both B2B and B2C companies can make ample use of this service. We see it in use in telecom services, bulk retailers, and mostly by other market newbies who are trying to establish a presence.

Uber made great use of this strategy. They started with a customer-centric strategy where rides were cheaper than the competing taxi service.

Price skimming strategy

As a complete opposite to the penetration strategy, we have price skimming, where you start off with a high price and slowly bring it down.

Price skimming works best when you are stepping into a market where there’s not a lot of competition, focusing on a specific bunch of customers, and really highlighting the value of your product or service.

Of course, this comes with a hefty upfront investment in marketing and promotional campaigns.

Once more players start popping up in your market, you’ve got a chance to drop your prices a bit and snag a larger slice of the customer pie.

Best for: This strategy should be reserved for innovative products and sectors, both B2B and B2C.

Take the Apple iPhone, for instance. They frequently employ a price-skimming strategy when they first release a new model. But once competitors like the Samsung Galaxy hit the market or they release newer models, Apple adjusts the price downward to maintain a competitive edge

Steps to design an ideal business pricing strategy

We covered a whole lot of potential pricing strategies that can make way into your business plan. However, you still need to decide which one is the most suitable for your business and how you can implement it. Let’s help you with that with some easy-to-follow steps:

business plan pricing strategy example

Step 1: Secure your business goals

The first and most important step is to understand what your business needs. You need to discern what your pricing should depend on.

Is it increasing profitability, improving cash flow, extending your market share, beating a competitor, reaching out to a new audience, or introducing a new product?

Your entire pricing strategy will depend on these factors. Choose wisely.

Step 2: Undertake a thorough analysis of the market pricing

Ensure that your pricing strategy is suitable for both internal affairs and market conditions.

For instance, if the market you choose is saturated, you must gear up for competition and go for something on the lines of a competitive pricing approach. On the flip side, if it’s a new market, you can go for a value-based pricing approach.

Step 3: Understand your target audience

Why should your customers purchase your products? What will they buy and how should you provide it to them? Is it a premium customer base? Or are you targeting price-sensitive customers?

These are essential questions you need to find the answer to. It is only by knowing your target audience and your Ideal Customer persona that you can initiate and maintain your sales.

Opening a fine-dine restaurant in a Tier-2 city? Value-based or premium pricing can work. Opening another cafe in a metro city? You’re in for competitive or economy pricing.

Step 4: Analyze your competitors

Identify at least three direct competitors and analyze how they structure their pricing. Take a look at whether they break down their pricing into components and offer significant discounts. This gives you a solid idea of how to price your own products.

Check if they bundle products or solutions with others. Look into value-based pricing, where clients pay a percentage of the perceived return on investment. When considering substitutes, think about what options customers might use and their costs.

Remember, sometimes the best solution is the decision to do nothing. Consider self-solutions or choosing not to address the issue, along with alternatives from indirect vendors.

Step 5: Draft a pricing strategy and a plan to implement it

Now that you have gathered enough info to design and draft your pricing strategy, this is the stage where you finalize everything and move on to the implementation stage. Depending on the above metrics, you can choose one of the aforementioned strategies.

We have already discussed the different pricing strategies. Pick one after you have thoroughly analyzed your market, competitors, production costs, and overarching business goals.

Here’s a quick cheat sheet for choosing and implementing the right strategy for you:

  • Value pricing: Understand the value for your customers and their willingness to pay. Also, understand what alternatives they have.
  • Competitive pricing: Set the price equal to what your competitors are charging and win the service game.
  • Psychological pricing: Price products or services in a way that triggers action. For example, charging .99 instead of $1.00.
  • Promotional pricing: Discounts over a period of time or one-time deals.
  • Price skimming: Enter the market with a high price, but once your competitors follow, lower your cost and implement other pricing strategies.
  • Economy pricing: Everyday low price with a focus on low manufacturing/delivery costs.
  • Penetration pricing: Set a price artificially low to break into the market.

Step 6: Keep refining and be flexible with your approach

Don’t stress over finding the absolute perfect price. Instead, come up with a few options and give them a test run with your customers. You might be surprised to find that you can actually sell at a higher price than you thought with the right strategy.

But you won’t know until you try it out with potential customers. If the price doesn’t seem to work, take a look at any feedback you receive, tweak your pricing, and give it another shot

Tips to keep in mind:

  • Try to Communicate with and understand your target customers. Know how much they can pay, what they are interested in, and how you can give them the best value. A good way is to use feedback forms.
  • Always be flexible. If your pricing strategy doesn’t work, it’s time to research, experiment with different prices and adapt.

Bain and Company’s original research on pricing strategies also suggests useful tips. Make sure your sales staff is a part of your pricing and marketing strategy. If your pricing strategy is truly flexible that must also translate to better incentives for your sales team so they can sell more and sell better.

Get Started With Your Own Business Plan With Upmetrics

We just covered everything about pricing strategies. They are so critical to business planning as they help formulate your business goals, organize inventory plans, and increase your chances of achieving business goals.

However, there is so much more to a business plan than just pricing. If you want help creating a business plan from scratch, consider Upmetrics. It offers a collection of 400+ sample business plans for ideas and inspiration. Furthermore, AI assistance and automated financials make the process even easier for new users.

Interested? Try Upmetrics today!

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Frequently Asked Questions

A pricing strategy is a method used to determine the price of products or services, taking into account factors like market conditions, competition, production costs, and perceived value to customers.

How does a pricing strategy benefit you?

A pricing strategy helps in making profits, competing against competitors, optimizing conversion, and lead generation. It also draws in more customers, balances pricing, determines profitability, and assists in meeting customer expectations.

How should you choose the best strategy for your company?

To choose the best pricing strategy for your company, you should secure your business goals, analyze market pricing, understand your target audience, analyze competitors, draft a pricing strategy, and plan to implement it based on factors like value, competition, product positioning, and customer behavior.

About the Author

business plan pricing strategy example

Upmetrics Team

Upmetrics is the #1 business planning software that helps entrepreneurs and business owners create investment-ready business plans using AI. We regularly share business planning insights on our blog. Check out the Upmetrics blog for such interesting reads. Read more

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12 real-world pricing strategy examples.

12 Real-World Pricing Strategy Examples

Pricing your products and services is one of the most daunting yet most crucial parts of doing business. The goal of strategic pricing is to maximize your profit. It’s a lot more complicated than raising your prices or increasing your profit margins.

Every business is different. They have different products, different customers and different market share. It makes sense that there isn’t a one-size-fits-all pricing strategy. So how do you make the most out of your sales without alienating a potential customer? And how does your pricing align with the brand identity you want to convey?

Read on for our full guide on how to price your product or service. This includes 12 common pricing strategies and real-life examples you can learn from

In this article, we’ll cover:

What Is a Pricing Strategy/Pricing Model?

The four cs of pricing your product, the four main pricing strategies you should know, other kinds of pricing strategy, pricing strategy benefits, key takeaways.

Most marketing guides use pricing strategy and pricing model interchangeably. There are some key differences that you should keep in mind.

A pricing strategy is how the seller uses pricing to achieve a certain business objective. It deals with the psychological reaction that a consumer has towards certain kinds of prices.

A pricing model, on the other hand, is how the seller goes about implementing the pricing strategy. Pricing models are usually specific and quantitative in nature. Here are some of the most common pricing models:

  • Hourly: You charge an hourly rate (e.g., $40/hour) and then bill the client for the total number of hours worked.
  • Project-based: You charge a flat rate for the entirety of the project (e.g., $5,000 for a website).
  • Retainer: You charge a monthly fee for on-going deliverables (e.g., $300/month for search engine optimization).
  • Performance-based: You charge a rate based on the results you produce (e.g., $100 per key performance indicator reached).
  • Cost-plus pricing: You charge for the production costs (e.g., $10 to make a shirt) plus a profit markup (e.g., 100%, or total $20).

business plan pricing strategy example

Pricing strategies work best when they take into consideration the four major pillars of pricing. These are customers, current positioning, competitors and costs. Keep the four Cs in mind when choosing the best pricing approach for your business.

Who is your target market? What is your ideal customer’s disposable income range? How much would that customer be willing to pay for your products and service? Will pricing your products/services impact your customers’ purchasing behavior or attitude towards your brand? What kind of pricing strategy speaks to your target customer the best? How does it align with your brand image and what type of value does it communicate?

Current Positioning

What is your brand identity? Which parts of the market are you catering to with your marketing efforts? Are you known as a budget or low-cost alternative, or are you a luxury business with elite clients? Are you a relatively unknown startup, or does your company already have a hold on the market? Your products and services need to be priced accordingly. The more luxury your offerings (or the more established you are as a company), the more you can demand from your customers. This is not to say you should necessarily “price high.” Your product and pricing need to work together in order to create the image that you want.

Competitors

How much are your competitors charging? If your competitors raise or lower their prices, how would that affect your sales? Are your products/services comparable, or do you offer something special for the same cost? You can use your competitors’ prices as a benchmark. Always take note of any major differences that allow you to be more flexible on your price.

It’s simple math—you can’t profit if you’re spending more than you bring in. Always take into consideration production costs (how much it costs to produce a product or service) and fixed costs. (What you have to pay regardless of how many units you sell—e.g., marketing, rent, staffing, other operating expenses , etc.). A common method for this using cost plus pricing. Determine your costs, then determine how much additional you want to charge on top of that.

There are dozens of strategies in existence. There are four basic strategies that provide the foundations for more complex pricing. These are: economy pricing, penetration pricing, price skimming and premium pricing.

Pricing Strategy Examples: #1 Economy Pricing

Under the economy pricing strategy, your company charges as little as possible to entice the largest number of potential customers. This works by lowering operating and production costs as much as you can. Because your profit margins are usually lower, you also have to focus on volume.

This pricing approach is most commonly seen at dollar stores. It’s also common at chain supermarkets like Target or Walmart. However, if you’re a small business, this tactic is a bit tricky. You may not have the volume, market share, or brand awareness to set your products and services at the lowest possible price to reach that target customer.

Pricing Strategy Examples: #2 Penetration Pricing

If you’re a relatively new business, you may want to consider pricing for optimum market penetration. This means that you initially sell your product or service at a low introductory price. This will attract new customers. Then raise prices one you’ve secured your share in the market.

You can see this pricing strategy at work with telecommunications or cable companies. They’ll initially charge a lower-than-market rate for the first month or so. This will entice customers to sign up for their services. There are two potential downsides to this strategy. First, your profits will take a hit. Second, some customers may not buy into the higher price.

Pricing Strategy Examples: #3 Price Skimming

Think of price skimming as the opposite of penetration pricing strategy. You start with a higher initial cost, and then lower the price over time. This occurs as consumer demand falls and newer goods take over the market. This is a great way to cover production and marketing costs early. It also reinforces the idea that your brand is one of quality and luxury.

Price skimming is very common in the tech/electronics industry. Whenever a new flagship phone from Apple or Samsung comes out, prices are high. However, if a customer buys the same phone a year or even just a few months later, they could get it at a much lower price.

Pricing Strategy Examples: #4 Premium Pricing

It may seem counterintuitive to price your product at a premium price point. Customers can actually respond positively to higher prices. Because only a few people can afford them, expensive products create the illusion of exclusivity, status and quality.

You can opt for a premium price if your product or brand has a competitive advantage. The trade-off is that though your business will likely sell fewer units. The high profit margin should be able to make up for loss of volume. Premium pricing can be found in most industries. This includes restaurant and hospitality to automotive to fashion.

While economy, penetration, skimming and premium pricing are the most common pricing strategies, they’re not the only ones you can use. Below are eight more approaches that could benefit your business.

Psychological Pricing

Also known as charm pricing, psychological pricing takes advantage of the fact that humans are emotional by nature. We respond to things emotionally and impulsively rather than logically.

The biggest example of this is when sellers mark their prices as $0.99 or $0.75. This is rather than rounding up to the nearest whole number—like when an item costs $99.99 instead of $100. This is because we see and react to the first set of numbers. We immediately think it is cheaper, even though there’s a negligible difference in cost.

Bundle/Product Line Pricing

If you have a range of products or services that complement each other, you can bundle together products.  This may allow you to charge a lower price than if customers bought them individually. This is called bundle pricing. This is a great way to get rid of stock, move products and encourage more spending.

Retail brands will bundle together related items. Service providers have package deals if you get multiple services at one time. The tricky part of product line pricing is that you have to make sure that your profit loss doesn’t outweigh how much you earn by pushing multiple products at the same time.

Promotional Pricing

Promotional pricing is also known as discount pricing. You sell your products or services at a discounted rate for a short period of time. This could involve slashing off a percentage of the price. This provides vouchers or coupons, launching two-for-one deals or giving away free items with every purchase.

Promo pricing follows the idea that some profit is better than no profit. We recommend using this strategy on high-volume periods (e.g., the holidays). It also works at the end of the season when moving products out of inventory is a higher priority than pure profit.

Geographical Pricing

If you are a local business, then geographical pricing isn’t for you. But if you’re an international company that sells all over the world, then this pricing approach is very relevant.

With geographical pricing, you price your goods and services according to geographical factors such as cost of living, average income, legislation, taxes, and of course, supply and demand. For example, gas stations in a busy urban area are likely to have different prices than similar stations in a rural town.

Captive Product Pricing

This pricing strategy works best if customers have to keep buying from you to continue using your products. Examples of this are shaving products and subscription services like the Dollar Shave Club. Once you buy a razor from a particular brand, the customer will have to keep buying blades and other accessories from you since other brands won’t be compatible.

You can charge a low price for the initial buy-in (e.g., razor handles, printers), and then make up for any profit loss through the renewables (e.g., blades, printer ink).

Optional Product Pricing

You might be familiar with optional product pricing through another term: upselling. With upselling, you can tack on extra services or products for a slightly higher cost. You see airlines using this strategy all of the time, with extra charges for optional services such as baggage, priority check-in, in-flight meals and exit row seats. The idea behind this is that it’s easier and more profitable to convince a current customer to spend more than it is to try and attract a new customer.

business plan pricing strategy example

Value Pricing

Value-based pricing means basing your prices off how much value your customers feel they are getting when they buy your product or service, instead of deciding prices based on how much a product or service costs to make. The idea behind this is that customers are willing to spend more money on something that they feel is worth it and provides them with value.

For example, a T-shirt may cost just $5 or $10 to produce. But because there’s some value attached to the style and brand, some companies may charge as much as hundreds or even thousands of dollars for it.

Dynamic Pricing

Dynamic pricing is a pricing strategy that’s variable instead of fixed. This means that, depending on the time or other external factors, prices can and will fluctuate. You see this often in the tourism industry—hotels and airlines usually charge higher rates during peak season and will lower their rates when there is less consumer demand.

Flexible pricing systems often use technology to generate the best rates depending on market factors. While this makes it easier to maximize profits, gathering the data necessary to implement dynamic pricing may be too time-consuming or expensive for small businesses.

There are several benefits to using pricing strategies like the ones above. Some of these benefits include:

  • Allowing for increased margins on higher priced items. In the case where your margins are based on the initial sale only, using a pricing strategy that encourages recurring purchases will yield higher profits.
  • Increasing competitiveness. When everyone else in your industry is jacking up prices and cutting discounts to maximize short-term profits, it might be time to rethink your approach. Using a pricing strategy that entices customers to keep buying from you will make your business more competitive and increase customer loyalty.
  • Price flexibility. By using geographical pricing, captive product pricing and dynamic/flexible pricing, you can charge customers different prices based on certain criteria.
  • Simplifying your marketing messaging. If your marketing message focuses on value and benefits rather than price, you can make it easier for customers to understand and trust your brand.
  • Reducing customer price resistance. When your customers feel that they’re getting a good deal, they’ll be more likely to trust and buy from you.

There are many benefits to having a good pricing strategy. By using one or more of the pricing strategies discussed above, you can increase your revenue and grow your business.

The right pricing strategy will help you get more customers and increase your profits. But what works for one company may not necessarily work for you—even if they’re in the same industry. It’s important to take a look at your specific marketing strategy and circumstances before choosing the most effective price strategy. Check out our resource hub for more information!

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business plan pricing strategy example

9 Popular Pricing Strategies to Maximize Revenue Growth

  • Table of contents

Pricing is one of the most crucial and influential levers in driving revenue for your company. Unfortunately, many organizations take a “set and forget” approach to pricing and fail to develop a comprehensive, research-backed strategy to determine appropriate price points.

This mistake leaves a significant revenue opportunity on the table and is responsible for as much as 18% of startup failures .

It seems obvious, optimize your pricing strategy to maximize revenue from each customer. This leads to improved growth and higher profit.

However, many SaaS revenue leaders fail to put this simple idea into effective practice.

This guide will dive deep into 9 of the most powerful pricing strategies and outline how to choose the optimal approach based on the type of company you operate.

What Is Pricing, and Why Is It Important to Get Your Pricing Right?

Simply put, pricing is the process of determining what you’re going to charge for your company’s products or services.

The operative term in this definition is “process.” Setting your price must not be an arbitrary decision based loosely on market norms and competitor price points (though these factors should be taken into account).

That “process” (which we’ll discuss in more detail in subsequent sections) is informed by your pricing strategy — the theory and principles behind your product pricing.

So, why is it so crucial to get pricing correct?

The main reason is that pricing optimization leads to increased profits. Studies show that a pricing increase of just 1% can induce profit growth of more than 11%.

Of course, by setting prices too high, you’ll alienate certain market segments and risk pricing yourself out of the market. You need to find the right price, or prices, to maximize market penetration.

More than that, a company’s pricing contains inherent indicators of value and how customers should perceive that product. 

At a basic level, higher-priced items are perceived as being of higher quality (a psychological phenomenon known as premium or prestige pricing ) and vice versa. 

business plan pricing strategy example

How, then, do you determine the optimal price point for your product or service? First, you need to determine the pricing strategy that best fits your revenue and organizational goals.

What Are Pricing Strategies? 

Your pricing strategy is your methodology, concept, or theory behind your product pricing. 

Pricing strategies allow you to make informed decisions on pricing changes and to understand how those changes will be impactful and appeal to your target audience.

Let’s take two common pricing strategies to illustrate: price skimming and cost-plus pricing (both of which we’ll discuss in more detail shortly).

Price skimming is a strategy where you start by setting high prices — as high as the market can tolerate (capturing maximum revenue per unit early on) — and then gradually lower prices to reach a wider audience as demand reduces.

business plan pricing strategy example

Cost-plus pricing is a strategy that takes your total production cost and adds a margin on top of it (typically a percentage).

A startup entering the CRM market, for example, might perform research and determine that the maximum they can charge for their product right now is $80 per user (using the price skimming strategy). They’ll capture some high-value clients upfront and then slowly reduce their price over time to widen the pool of potential customers.

If they choose to use a cost-plus pricing strategy, however, with a margin of 50%, they may calculate the total cost of production to $30 per user and so decide to set their price at $45 per user.

Why Are Pricing Strategies Important? 

Without an effective pricing strategy, you’re essentially throwing darts in the dark — there’s a chance you’ll hit the bullseye, but you’re more likely to miss the board altogether.

Several things go wrong when the price of a product is not informed by a sound strategy:

You fail to meet market expectations

You fail to capture as much revenue as you could

You risk losing business to competitors whose pricing more accurately reflects market sentiment

You fail to communicate the real value of your product

Your marketing strategy misses the mark

To illustrate, let’s examine the opposite scenario. 

You’re releasing a new product, and it’s time to nail down pricing and get it to market. Because you aren’t using a specific pricing strategy, you’re just going to make your best guess at what the price should be and see how things pan out.

One of two things will happen:

1. Your price is too high. Most of the market isn’t going to buy from you. If you’re really good at selling value, you might capture a few upmarket buyers, though they’ll likely churn once they realize the value you sold isn’t reflective of the actual product, and they’ll move to a competitor that offers the same value for a lower price.

2. Your price is too low. The majority of the market sees your product as cheap, inferior, and altogether not worth purchasing, as the price point you’ve selected doesn’t indicate the product’s true value. You’ll close a few frugal customers, but you won’t generate much revenue from them. If you’re not careful, you may even fail to set the price high enough to cover your production costs. Then, when you realize you’ve gone too low, you’ll increase your pricing and lose the majority of those buyers who only purchased your product — because the price was the most important factor to them. 

The latter is more likely, statistically speaking, as the majority of startups underprice their products and gradually increase total deal size as they grow.

business plan pricing strategy example

But it’s not as simple as continuing to bump up your product’s price point. Inevitably you’ll reach a glass ceiling, and you’ll experience diminishing returns. Once you exceed a certain pricing threshold, you’ll narrow your addressable market, close fewer deals, and risk actually reducing total revenue.

So, neither of the above scenarios is ideal, but the problem runs deeper.

Because you don’t have a well-developed pricing strategy in place, pricing across your product range is likely to be disconnected, particularly when you have different leaders in charge of each.

And, as you continue to adjust to the market and learn more about how your pricing fits (and the fact that you got it wrong to begin with), you’re going to keep changing it, which is a sure way to confuse and alienate your existing customer base.

Pricing strategies are crucial because they help you to:

Communicate the value of your product and create expectations you can actually make

Target the right customers to increase average deal size and minimize churn

Differentiate your offering from competitors — a good pricing strategy can be a competitive advantage

What Are The Top 9 Types of Pricing Strategies ?

There are a number of pricing strategies that SaaS companies adopt to communicate value to their target audience and drive revenue.

Before settling on a singular strategy for your own company, take time to consider these nine approaches and how they might impact your own profitability. 

1. Value-Based Pricing

Value-based pricing is the most common approach for SaaS and subscription businesses . With the value-based pricing strategy, you’re setting pricing based on what your customers believe the value of your product to be.

That is, you charge as much as your customers are willing to pay.

It doesn’t take into account cost factors, as the assumption is that if the cost of producing that product exceeds what customers would be willing to pay, then the business model isn’t viable and not worth venturing into.

Many B2B SaaS organizations use this strategy. Take Asana, for example.

business plan pricing strategy example

Asana uses a freemium model (more on that later), with two paid pricing tiers: Premium and Business.

Note that the Business plan costs twice as much as the Premium plan. That’s because, with the features included in this plan, Asana can demonstrate how they’ll create significant value for their Business customers, and so they’ve priced this plan based on that value.

Value-based pricing is the most suitable strategy for the majority of subscription businesses for a few reasons.

First of all, determining the cost of production (in order to use a strategy like cost-plus pricing) is more well-suited to physical goods than virtual goods like software platforms. With software, once a product is built, it’s built, and so the cost is less relevant to pricing than it would be for, say, a smartphone.

Secondly, it’s the best way to maximize your revenue. Charging based on value allows you to find the optimal balance between revenue per user and the number of users in total.

Thirdly, it puts the customer at the center of your pricing decisions. 

This ensures an alignment between the product and its pricing (as both are designed around the end-user) and puts upward pressure on your company to provide more value. If you can deliver more value than your competitors, you can justify charging a higher price and prevent engaging in a race to the bottom (a competitive situation that occurs when companies compete solely on price).

However, there is one drawback of using the value-based pricing strategy: it’s a reasonably time-consuming process.

Where strategies like competitive pricing are easy to implement (you monitor what your competitors are charging and adjust when they do), value-based pricing requires a deep understanding of your target audience, their needs, and the benefits your product provides. 

It can also be hard to satisfy different segments, like price-sensitive small businesses and big-budget enterprises, with the same offering.

That said, you should get to know your target market and different segments in-depth anyway if you want to effectively market your product, so it’s not the most concerning drawback.

Value-based pricing is a fairly dynamic approach. It involves testing different pricing points (whether actively in the market or by conducting surveys) as well as performing customer research and interviews.

And, of course, each time you release a new update or feature, your value changes, so you’ll need to reassess how that impacts your pricing.

While the value-based pricing strategy is best implemented through a combination of testing and research, a simple formula called the 10x rule can be used to get you into the ballpark:

Value-based price = Value you provide to client (monetarily) / 10

That is, the value you provide in monetary terms — either the additional revenue you help to create for a customer or the amount of money your product saves them — should be 10x your price.

If your product costs $499 per month, for instance, then you should be saving or creating $4999 of value per month for the customer — a premium price needs to line up with your product’s perceived value in your customer’s mind.

2. Competitive Pricing

Competitive pricing is a fairly straightforward strategy. You’re simply setting your prices in accordance with what your competitors are charging.

It’s not a particularly sophisticated strategy, but it’s an easy one and one that can help you find a decent pricing range fairly quickly, assuming your product or service is very similar to the companies you’re competing with.

A company using the competitive pricing strategy would assess the competitive landscape and the various pricing models used and then determine whether they want to sit slightly above, slightly below, or on par with the market.  

If you’re new to a market that has a few established businesses, then competition-based pricing can be a reasonable approach (though it should really only be used as a starting point).

Let’s say you’ve developed a new CRM for sales reps. You’re entering a pretty well-established (and fairly saturated) market, so there’s plenty of competition to base your pricing on.

First, you check out Pipedrive.

business plan pricing strategy example

Then, Copper.

business plan pricing strategy example

And a third for good measure: Zoho CRM.

business plan pricing strategy example

Now we’ve got some good ballpark figures to work from. If you’re planning on offering three different plans, you should start your pricing in these ranges:

Tier 1 - $15-20 

Tier 2 - $40-50

Tier 3 - $60-90

Remember: use these figures as a starting point only. You should test and optimize from there, and ideally move toward a value-based pricing strategy once you’re able to establish and demonstrate the value your product delivers

If your product or service differs significantly from what your competitors offer, then competitive pricing might not be a suitable strategy, as you’re not comparing apples with apples, despite competing in the same market segment.

The other downside of the competition-based pricing model is that you’re relying on someone else’s research, and as we know, that research isn’t always applicable to your business. 

In some instances, it might even be non-existent, and so you’re setting your prices based on a competitor with a price point that isn’t backed by data.

All things considered, paying attention to your competition is still an important aspect of pricing, regardless of your chosen strategy.

Charge much more than your competitors (without being able to communicate additional value), and you’ll likely alienate a large segment of the market. Charge much less, and customers are likely to make the assumption that your product is somehow inferior.

3. Price Skimming

The price skimming strategy is all about squeezing as much revenue out of each customer as possible, focusing initially on those who are willing to pay the most.

With the price skimming strategy (also known as the high-low pricing strategy), you start by setting your price as high as the market will tolerate. You’ll capture revenue from buyers who have the most need and demand for your product or service, but be priced out of the market for the majority.

As time progresses, you’ll gradually lower your price to capture more of the market.

This is a pretty common approach in the electronic goods market, with console producers like Sony and Microsoft using the price skimming strategy for their PlayStation and Xbox product lines.

business plan pricing strategy example

This pricing strategy works best for products that are able to be positioned as premium (iPhones, for example) and for one-off purchase items such as electronic goods (the intersection of these two product types is ideal).

It’s not so well-suited to subscription products or services because your intention with this style of business is to grow revenue over time. But if you continue to lower your prices, you’ll reduce your revenue from each existing customer and ruin your Customer Lifetime Value (LTV) .

But many of today’s consumers are aware of this pricing strategy, and they understand that prices for certain goods are likely to come down with time. Many will even wait for price reductions before purchasing. So inevitably, you won’t capture the full market demand in the short term, slowing down your cash flow.

4. Cost-Plus Pricing

Cost-plus pricing is an incredibly simple pricing strategy — it’s your costs plus your markup.

To set prices for a new product, you take the total cost of producing it, then add a percentage on top to determine your price.

business plan pricing strategy example

It’s easy to calculate but not really suitable for anything other than physical products, where your production costs align reasonably closely with an increase in the number of units produced.

With software products, however, the majority of the production costs happen up front. The cost to develop the product is the cost to develop the product; that doesn’t change each time you land a new customer.

As such, cost-plus pricing is generally unsuitable for subscription-based businesses.

On the other hand, the major benefit of using this pricing strategy is that it guarantees your profit margin and provides some security as far as profitability is concerned. If you build a 50% margin into your pricing, then you’ll always maintain a healthy profit margin.

5. Penetration Pricing

Penetration pricing is a strategy commonly used by new companies looking to break into an existing market and generate a solid customer base that they can then leverage to create social proof and move upmarket.

With the penetration pricing strategy, you set your prices far below what your competitors are charging but provide the same (or similar) value.

The idea here is that customers will switch over to your company from a competitor, and you’ll be able to gain a foothold, despite making less revenue and profit per customer than you could if you charged more. In some cases, companies using penetration pricing actually make a loss but offset this against future gains.

There are, of course, a few drawbacks to this strategy:

You’ll need to close a lot more customers to make decent revenue

There’s a significant risk that as you increase pricing, you’ll lose existing customers

You risk setting a low pricing expectation in the market, which could prevent you from lifting prices later on

There’s always a risk that you’ll be unable to survive the phase of unprofitability while prices are set so low

New Relic, an observability platform for developers, is a great example of a company using penetration pricing to gain some ground in the market.

Competing with existing industry standards like Datadog and Dynatrace, New Relic offers a similar feature set but charges significantly less than its competitors.

business plan pricing strategy example

It’s worth bearing in mind that some customers may be wary of newcomers who are charging significantly less. Pricing has a major psychological impact on how customers perceive your value, so penetration pricing does put you at risk of customers thinking your product is inferior.

New Relic does a fantastic job of overcoming this objection by providing a breakdown of the features they offer (and how they charge for them) in comparison to competitors, demonstrating that they can offer the same value at a fraction of the price.

business plan pricing strategy example

The penetration pricing strategy is best utilized by companies in markets where consumer demand is reasonably elastic (demand is significantly influenced by price).

6. Economy Pricing

Economy pricing is all about sales volume.

With the economy pricing strategy, you aim to produce a product with lower production costs than your competitors (which often means you create an inferior product) and sell it at a lower price. The idea is to sell the product at a higher volume and thereby generate the same profit as you would if you sold a lower volume at a greater price.

This is the pricing strategy that generic soda brands use to compete with established and recognizable brand names like Coca-Cola and Pepsi.

However, it’s not a great fit for subscription and SaaS businesses, as it limits your revenue potential and generates downward pressure on market pricing.

Plus, it incentivizes producing an inferior product, which is not a strategy that’s suitable for delivering long-term growth in SaaS, where customer relationships are everything.

7. Dynamic Pricing

Dynamic pricing is a pricing strategy that involves rapid changes to your pricing in response to either market demand or costs of production.

Depending on the approach you take, you set your initial price (based on current conditions) and then continue to alter it upward or downward based on cost or demand.

As you can imagine, this isn’t a very suitable pricing strategy for subscription businesses, but it does have a place in certain markets and is more common than you might expect.

Entities like Shell and Mobil, for example, use a dynamic pricing strategy to set pricing for their fuel. In this case, their dynamic pricing is informed by the cost of crude oil.

On the demand side, we can look to Uber for an example of the dynamic pricing model in action.

When immediate demand for Uber’s service is high, the company imposes “Surge Pricing,” an inflated pricing differential designed to capitalize on the fact that a high number of users in the area are seeking to access Uber’s driver network.

business plan pricing strategy example

8. Geographic Pricing

The geographic pricing strategy involves setting different prices based on your customers’ geographic location.

Market demand differs from country to country, which has a major impact on local pricing expectations. As such, it may be appropriate to use different pricing structures in different markets.

This approach ensures you’re capturing maximum revenue in markets where demand and price expectations are high and meeting the largest market possible in markets where the opposite is true.

Most global enterprises follow this strategy. Consider Netflix’s pricing in different regions.

In India, the cost of a Netflix subscription starts as low as ₹149 ($1.95).

business plan pricing strategy example

In Denmark, customers are paying 10x that price, with a Netflix subscription topping $12 a month.

business plan pricing strategy example

Of course, the geographic pricing strategy can be combined with any of the other strategies we’ve covered here. For example, you could use an economy pricing strategy as your general approach but then use market insights to determine what pricing level is appropriate in each country.

9. Bundle Pricing

Bundle pricing is a strategy employed to create the appearance of greater value while simultaneously maximizing the throughput of product lines that might otherwise be purchased less frequently.

With bundle pricing, you sell multiple similar products as a package (i.e., a bundle) rather than separately.

The bundle pricing strategy is prevalent in the fast-food industry, with companies such as McDonald’s regularly promoting products together.

There are three factors that make this such an effective pricing model for a company like McDonald’s. 

Firstly, meal deal combos include a main, a side, and a drink; a fairly standard combination, meaning they’re appealing to existing demand.

Secondly, the difference in the cost of the bundle and the price of the items individually is significant (it’s much cheaper), so it creates the illusion of greater value. We say illusion because, in reality, very few people purchase the items individually.

Thirdly, the addition of extra items like fries and, in particular, a drink comes at a minimal cost increase to McDonald’s, especially compared to the price increase. The difference in price between the burger on its own and the bundle might be a couple of dollars, but the cost increase to McDonald’s is mere cents.

This pricing strategy has an application in the SaaS and subscription industries as well.

Mailchimp, for example, offers blocks of email credits for purchase individually.

business plan pricing strategy example

Alternatively, customers can sign up for a bundle plan which includes a designated number of email sends (based on the size of your contact base), as well as access to their other tools such as landing page builders, automation, and A/B testing.

business plan pricing strategy example

Pipedrive , for example, offers “add-ons” for customers subscribing to their CRM who need additional capability.

business plan pricing strategy example

A pricing manager at Pipedrive could experiment with bundle pricing by creating a package that includes the standard CRM as well as all four available add-ons.

How to Choose the Right Pricing Strategy for Your Business?

Having a knowledge of the different pricing strategies available to you is important, but knowing how to apply that knowledge and choose the ideal strategy for your business is even more crucial.

We’re going to look here at six key steps to take in choosing the ideal strategy. When following these steps, bear in mind that the initial idea is to determine the broad range your product fits into. Is it a $10 product? A $50 product? A $500 product?

We don’t want to waste time here arguing over the difference between $45 and $49. We’ll optimize for that down the line. The important component here is understanding the broad category you’ll fit into.

1. Conduct Target Market Research

We know that a thorough understanding of our customers’ challenges, goals, and demographics is important for marketing a product, but we need some technical details in order to land on an appropriate pricing strategy.

This template , for example, demonstrates how granular you need to get to understand a customer profile in relation to pricing strategies.

business plan pricing strategy example

In particular, the data that will guide pricing strategy choice includes:

Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC), Customer Lifetime Value (LTV), and Average Revenue per User (ARPU) by customer profile/market segment

Acceptable pricing range and “indifference” price point

Compelling value props

Feature preferences 

2. Assess Your Competitors’ Pricing

While you don’t want to base your product pricing entirely on competitors (unless you’re using a competition-based strategy), this information is still necessary for certain strategies.

Consider Pipedrive’s pricing tiers:

And then look at those of Copper, a close competitor to Pipedrive.

business plan pricing strategy example

These two products are fairly similar as far as pricing goes. Imagine, then, that you’re in charge of pricing at ActiveCampaign, and you want to use a penetration pricing model to break into the CRM market.

You’d need to know what these two competitors are charging, so you can position your most basic product package at a much lower price point.

business plan pricing strategy example

3. Consider Your Revenue Model

Your revenue model has a significant impact on the appropriateness of different pricing strategies.

If you’re primarily generating recurring revenue, for example, then the price skimming strategy might not be the most appropriate approach. However, it might be a suitable method for those selling high-value goods such as electronics and vehicles.

Similarly, economy pricing often isn’t the best strategy for SaaS and subscription businesses, though it’s great for many FMCG (fast-moving consumer goods) companies. 

Perhaps, though, your revenue model is a partial subscription model , with the remainder of your revenue made up of services. 

Bench, for example, uses this model.

business plan pricing strategy example

They have a proprietary software platform and offer services over and above this.

In this instance, it may be suitable to use an economy pricing model for the platform itself (acting as a sort of loss leader to attract new clients) and generate the majority of its revenue using a value-based pricing strategy for service.

4. Get Absolute Clarity on Your Costs

Even if you aren’t going to use a cost-based strategy (such as cost-plus pricing), it’s imperative that you understand the total expense of production.

This will help you to ensure your pricing more than covers that cost and will be crucial in conducting analyses such as calculating your breakeven point .

business plan pricing strategy example

5. Evaluate Your Company’s Strengths and Weaknesses

What is your company great at, and in what areas are you not so strong?

If, for example, you have a great marketing team with strong storytelling skills, you know you’ll be able to get more leverage out of a value-based pricing strategy.

If, on the other hand, you’re really good at cost reduction and maximizing production, an economy pricing strategy might prove appropriate. 

6. Ensure Your Pricing Strategy Aligns with Your USP

What is your company’s unique selling point? Is it convenience? Financial savings? Customer revenue growth?

Your USP needs to align with the strategy you choose to determine pricing.

For example, if your value props demonstrate your ability to generate the customer thousands of dollars in new revenue, a penetration pricing model where you charge relatively little for your product probably doesn’t align.

Pricing Strategy for Different Industries 

In general, the most appropriate pricing strategy for SaaS and subscription businesses is the value-based pricing strategy.

This pricing strategy:

Maximizes your revenue per user

Allows you to increase pricing as the value your product offers improves

Mitigates the effect of competition that uses penetration or economy pricing models 

2. Ecommerce

For ecommerce companies, the ideal pricing strategy to use depends quite heavily on the industry you’re in, the stage your company is at, and the kinds of products you’re selling.

Value-based pricing is always a good move, and competitive pricing can be a good place to start if you’re unsure about what customers are willing to pay. Both can also be valuable strategies for ecommerce companies moving over to a subscription model.

If you’re selling discount goods at volume, economy pricing can be a viable solution.

3. E-learning

E-learning companies can follow similar advice to SaaS companies (value-based being the ideal strategy), assuming they’re operating on a subscription model.

For e-learning businesses selling using a perpetual license model, penetration pricing can be a viable alternative for market newcomers looking to gain market share, though value-based will win out in the long term.

4. Publishing

Value-based and competitive pricing strategies will be best for subscription-based publishing companies , though price skimming may be suitable if you’re able to position yourself as a premium product.

5. OTT and Video

OTT and video businesses should follow suit with SaaS companies and adopt a value-based approach. 

Competition should be analyzed, but given content varies significantly from platform to platform, a strictly competition-based approach shouldn’t be followed.

Difference Between Pricing Strategy and Pricing Model 

Many revenue leaders confuse pricing strategies and pricing modes, and they’re often used as synonyms, despite this being incorrect.

Your pricing strategy is the theory behind your product pricing. It tells you how you set your price and what data you need to pay attention to when calculating that figure.

Your pricing model, on the other hand, is the way you display, package, and communicate your product pricing to your customer.

Examples of pricing models include seat-based or user-based pricing (common in SaaS, for example, $49 per month, per user), perpetual license (a one-off purchase), and usage-based (such as your monthly utility bills).

When determining product pricing, you’ll need to decide on both. You’ll use a pricing strategy to determine how you’ll set the price, then decide on a pricing method to determine how you’ll communicate and invoice that price.

Types of Pricing Models 

So far, we’ve laid out the most common pricing strategies and discussed what distinguishes these strategies from pricing models.

Here, we’ll examine eight common pricing models, which you can combine with the overall strategy you’ve chosen for your company. 

1. Freemium

Freemium is an extremely common approach to pricing and involves offering a free version of your product with the goal of converting users to a paid plan at a later point.

monday.com, for example, makes use of the freemium pricing model .

business plan pricing strategy example

With freemium, the idea is to design a stripped-back version of your product, so you retain some leverage to bring users up to a paid plan.

It’s important, however, that you still provide enough value in the free version to make it worthwhile to the user. 

In monday.com’s case, the free plan allows for unlimited boards and access to over 200 templates to get started immediately. 

business plan pricing strategy example

However, users on the free plan are limited to just two team members, meaning monday.com has built growth right into its pricing (if the free user gets significant value out of monday.com, their team will grow beyond two members, and they’ll need to upgrade to a paid plan).

2. Per Seat

With the per-seat pricing model (also known as the per-user model), your customers pay based on the number of employees that are using the product.

GitHub, for example, uses the per-seat pricing model:

business plan pricing strategy example

Note, like with both GitHub and monday.com, the per-seat model can be combined with the freemium model.

The per-user model has a few important advantages:

Revenue growth is built-in — as the customer’s company grows in size, they’ll add more users (depending on the need your product serves)

Pricing is easy to digest, and customers can budget accordingly

Customers have immediate access to all features (that are included in their plans)

However, it has some drawbacks as well:

Users can often share passwords to avoid paying for extra seats

Total costs can get expensive for customers when they expand, so they can be reluctant to upgrade

Getting customers from one user to many users can be a challenge

High-usage customers can be a drain on your resources relative to the revenue you’re receiving from them

Low-usage customers may feel they aren’t getting a lot of value out of your product

Most subscription businesses use the tiered approach. With a tiered pricing model , you’ll create different ‘plans’ (generally between three and five) at different pricing points.

ActiveCampaign, for example, uses the tiered model:

With tiered pricing, each subsequent plan gives users access to more features or higher usage volumes.

business plan pricing strategy example

This is a powerful method for attracting revenue growth from SME customers. When new customers in this segment sign up, they’re more likely to opt for a more affordable plan.

As the company grows, you’ll continue to demonstrate value through the results your product generates, as well as any marketing and sales activities you engage in to increase your annual contract value.

It can also be an effective way to take advantage of price anchoring, a technique where the lowest and/or highest pricing tiers help to establish the middle tier as better value. 

GitHub’s pricing model demonstrates price anchoring in action, where their “Team” plan appears as higher in value when compared with the much higher cost of the “Enterprise” option. 

business plan pricing strategy example

4. Flat-rate

Flat-rate pricing takes the opposite approach to the tiered pricing model.

With a flat-rate pricing model, you charge one price for access to all of your product features. Basecamp, for example, uses the flat-rate pricing model, which is unusual in SaaS.

business plan pricing strategy example

Flat-rate pricing models can be considered a form of penetration pricing, where companies compete with industry leaders who charge on a per-user model.

Consider, for example, a company with 30 users comparing Basecamp’s pricing with monday.com’s pricing.

Even at monday.com’s lowest pricing tier ( $8 per month ), that’s a cost of $240 per month vs. $99 at Basecamp.

The primary benefit of running a flat-rate pricing model is this competition. Plus, it makes your pricing much more digestible, as potential customers don’t need to waste time figuring out the differences between your various plans.

It does come with a major drawback though: the inability to grow revenue from existing accounts. 

When you use a tiered pricing model, you’ve got revenue growth built in, as you always have the ability to upsell lower-tier accounts. And if you’re charging per user, you’ll continue adding revenue as your customers scale.

There is a workaround for this problem. Note that Basecamp’s flat-rate pricing model includes unlimited users. It’s also possible to combine the flat-rate model with a per-user pricing model, where you offer only one plan at a flat rate but charge extra per additional seat.

5. Usage-Based

Usage-based pricing is a pricing model where customers pay based on what they use in a given month.

You’ll find this model used across the majority of utility companies.

In the B2B world, usage-based pricing is often used for cloud computing and web infrastructure services. Entrepreneurs and business owners often prefer this model because of the transparency — you pay for what you get.

Amazon Web Services (AWS), for example, uses this pricing model.

Some companies use a hybrid model, where usage-based and per-seat pricing models are combined to provide a set monthly rate with usage ceilings.

Auth0, for instance, takes this approach.

It makes the most sense for high-volume plans — sending an extra invoice for each new user is not feasible.

6. Pay as You Go

The pay-as-you-go pricing model is a variation of the usage-based model in that customers pay only for what they use.

The difference, however, is that they pay in each instance they use the product rather than receiving an invoice at the beginning of the month for the last period’s total usage.

Ride-sharing apps like Uber and Lyft are good examples of the pay-as-you-go model. Customers pay based on usage (longer distances cost more) and are changed at the point of use.

Twilio is an example of a B2B SaaS company who charges using the pay-as-you-go model for certain features.

7. À La Carte

The a la carte pricing model allows customers to pick and choose features or modules, essentially building their own customized solution.

This is beneficial when you offer a large range of features and want to ensure customers are getting maximum value for their dollar. Rather than having to upgrade to a more comprehensive plan to access a single feature, they can simply add it on.

This does, however, have implications for revenue. 

With a tiered approach, customers who need a more advanced feature must upgrade to a more expensive plan. With a la carte pricing, they can simply add on the new feature they need, which typically costs less than the difference between tiered plans, meaning your ability to grow revenue from upsells is limited.

Because of this risk, a la carte is less common as a SaaS pricing model, though some companies, such as Pipedrive, incorporate a la carte into their tiered approach.

8. Perpetual License

The perpetual license is, for lack of a better term, the “old” software model.

Before SaaS was the most common approach, customers would need to purchase the software outright (now known as a perpetual license).

With the perpetual license pricing model, customers pay a one-off fee and have access to the product in perpetuity. Depending on your structure, that might include all future updates, or they may need to pay a crossgrade/upgrade fee in the future.

Microsoft, for example, still sells Word on a perpetual license (though you’ll see that they’re trying to push customers toward a subscription model).

Making the Most of Pricing: Tips and Best Practices

Not sure how to start optimizing your prices? Here are a few tips and best practices.

1. Adopt a Localized Pricing Model

While the USD may be a pseudo-universal currency, failing to display localized pricing inevitably creates friction in the buying process.

Buyers in regions that also use the term “dollar” (Australia, New Zealand, and Singapore), for example, may misinterpret how you’re displaying prices, resulting in an unwelcome surprise when it comes time to enter their credit details (often resulting in cart abandonment).

Moreover, charging exclusively in one currency means customers incur foreign currency fees, and due to fluctuations in exchange rates, your consistent monthly cost is no longer all that consistent.

A simple way to get around this is to install a plugin on your site that detects the visitors’ region and calculates local pricing automatically. There are two drawbacks here, however:

The nature of exchange rates means that prices are displayed differently each time the customer visits. So unappealing price points ($43.67, say) limit your ability to take advantage of psychological pricing.

You’re not truly localizing pricing.

Localized pricing must reflect the demands and expectations of the geography you’re selling into, and this is not always the same as a simple exchange rate calculation.

Zoho, for example, makes it clear to Australian visitors that they’re charging in AUD, and uses localized pricing to set digestible, round numbers for each of their pricing tiers. You also need to consider the buying power of your target market in each country.

business plan pricing strategy example

2. Messaging Matters

Though the price points you choose do influence how customers perceive the value your product offers, they’re far from the only lever you can pull.

The messaging around your pricing, and the value propositions you use to communicate the benefits your customers can expect to receive, can influence buyers’ willingness to pay by as much as 20% .

business plan pricing strategy example

Testing is the best (and really only) way to nail your messaging with 100% confidence. The problem is, testing messaging on a live audience can be time consuming, and presents a risk to revenue growth, because testing ineffective messaging on real customers means you’ll convert less than you could.

To maximize impact (and minimize time spent in A/B testing in a real-life scenario where revenue is on the line), use a message testing service like Wynter to gather in-depth feedback from relevant B2B audiences.

business plan pricing strategy example

Start by testing internally before investing in professional message testing. Perform Voice of Customer research by interviewing your current buyers and questions about the challenges they faced previously and how your product impacts their lives today.

Pull important quotes and insights from these interviews to use as fuel for your product messaging. Develop several messaging options, and ask for feedback from internal stakeholders (marketing, sales, and customer service).

Use this feedback to refine your message and draft the final landing page copy, then submit it for testing, and use the feedback from that professional process to polish, finalize, and publish.

3. Test Psychological Pricing

Psychological pricing is somewhat of a misnomer — all pricing is psychological.

The term itself, however, refers to the concept of manipulating price points at the micro level to influence buyers’ perceptions of value.

The classic example, and one which you see nearly everywhere, is ending price points with a 9 (such as $19 instead of $20, or even better, $19,99).

Ending your pricing in 9s isn’t the only method, however. While this strategy does work for lower-value products (think FMCGs like those pictured above), it tends to be coupled psychologically with discount brands.

Pricing that ends in a 0, on the other hand, can establish the opposite; an appearance of luxury or premium quality.

The most important factor here is what works for your audience. Set up multivariate testing to establish whether 9, 0, or 5 (or any other number, for that matter) appeals most to your target customer.

4. Keep Pricing Packages Simple

Many studies support the notion that offering too many choices results in something known as “ analysis paralysis .” Buyers are too overwhelmed with the number of options they have and are less likely to make a decision than those given fewer options.

Limiting your selection to three to five packages tends to be the most effective approach. It is also enough space to incorporate a free plan and a custom enterprise plan on either side of the scale, like monday.com does.

business plan pricing strategy example

Pricing presented like this is extremely easy to digest, because most customers will fall into one of three categories:

Customers who are just getting started who know they want a free platform

Customers at the enterprise level who will gravitate automatically to the Enterprise plan

Customers that are anywhere in between, who’ll then only have three options to choose from

Plus, presenting three options makes it easy to take advantage of the center stage effect , the tendency for consumers to choose the middle option when presented with a row of pricing packages.

Note also how monday.com uses a subtle design cue (the “Most Popular” icon) to further influence this decision pathway with a bit of social proof.

5. Use Design to Impact Purchase Decisions

The design of your pricing page (in conjunction with the price points you set and the messaging you use to sell your value props) can have a significant impact on pricing decisions.

It’s fairly well-established that buyers more readily choose the middle option when presented with a selection of products or packages.

But, if, like many SaaS brands, you want to influence customers to choose a more extensive package with a higher price point, you can use subtle design cues to make one package stand out.

ActiveCampaign, for example, uses a couple of simple yet effective design tricks to make their Professional plan stand out, as well as a subtle “Most Popular” banner to influence choice based on social proof.

business plan pricing strategy example

Conclusion 

Your pricing strategy is one of the most crucial growth levers you have.

It helps you establish a price point that serves market expectations, and if you choose the appropriate strategy for your industry and company type, can build revenue growth right into your price tags.

Of course, determining pricing is just one small step on a very large journey towards revenue optimization. On the other side of that journey is a need to manage, influence, and grow subscription revenue , which is where a platform like Chargebee comes in.

Chargebee is a dedicated revenue management and subscription billing platform designed to help you streamline revenue operations and consistently improve profitability.

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Essential guide to pricing strategy: how to, types and examples

Mar 17th, 2022

business plan pricing strategy example

What is a pricing strategy?

Types of pricing strategies, how to create a pricing strategy .

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Pricing is one of the paramount challenges faced by companies. Prices should not only correspond to the existing market conditions but also cover the company’s expenses, take into account the competitors’ pricing and allow the organization to make a profit. A pricing strategy should also maintain balance while addressing customers’ needs and generating revenue. 

Moreover, when it comes to pricing, there is no one-size-fits-all solution. Instead, you need to continuously review the pricing strategy and adapt it to changing market conditions and competitive environment. Thankfully, a variety of pricing models and approaches will help you identify the best pricing that will help you find the sweet spot between your clients’ ability to pay and your financial goals. This article will describe the most common pricing strategies and provide examples of their successful implementation.

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Pricing strategy is a method of determining the most appropriate price for a product or service. This process takes into consideration market and consumer demand and focuses on maximizing profits and shareholder value. When developing a pricing strategy, businesses consider various factors, such as marketing goals, financial objectives, target customers, brand positioning , input costs, trade margins, and product characteristics. The external factors that affect pricing strategy include competitor pricing, economic and market trends.

When selling a product or service, a company may employ a range of pricing strategies. Before deciding on the most suitable pricing strategy, senior executives need to analyze the brand positioning with respect to its competitors and to the customers’ perspective, price segmentation or establishing different prices for the same products or services and competitive pricing response strategy or the way to respond to competitor price changes. It should also be noted that pricing strategy greatly depends on economic, cultural, and industrial conditions and varies from one organization to another.

Many articles on pricing use the terms pricing strategy and pricing model interchangeably. However, there are some notable differences. A pricing model deals with the implementation of a pricing strategy. Pricing models rely on quantitative data. Some of the most popular pricing models include hourly, project-based, retainer, and performance-based approaches. The retainer model, for example, is when a business owner charges a monthly fee for a specific amount of time spent on the task or deliverables. 

Pricing strategy, in contrast, is how the seller utilizes pricing to accomplish defined business goals. The term refers to a consumer’s reaction to particular prices. In this guide, we will review pricing strategies and the steps needed to create one. 

An effective pricing strategy allows you to strengthen your position in the market by gaining consumers’ trust and meeting your business objectives. The listed approaches will be based on various characteristics, such as product value, expenses you need to cover, the purchasing power of your target market, and competitors’ pricing. Let us compare different types of pricing strategies, their advantages and disadvantages. 

Penetration pricing strategy

The main idea of the penetration pricing strategy is to encourage potential buyers to purchase the product by offering a lower price during the initial release. This pricing strategy helps new businesses enter the market and attract customers. Penetration pricing utilizes low prices to raise awareness about a new product among a large number of clients. After some time, the company raises prices to maximize profits and demonstrate the increasing value of the product.

According to penetration strategy, a brand initially lowers prices to gain market share and build a customer base with the goal of keeping new clients once the prices go back to normal. Due to this reason, penetration pricing is usually applied for a limited time, and it is not suitable as a long-term strategy. Moreover, there is a considerable risk that the buyers may prefer the brand at first but then choose the competitor as prices rise. 

Landlocked Airlines employed a penetration pricing strategy to encourage customers to use its services during certain seasons. This approach proved to be effective for a small airline company. Landlocked Airlines promoted its services during the winter holidays. The company reduced prices for inter-state trips, which helped it earn a good reputation and attract many new customers who would book more expensive tickets in the future.

Competitive pricing strategy

A competitive pricing strategy is based on using competitors’ prices as a reference point to set your product prices. This strategy does not take into account consumer demand or product cost. The approach is suitable for an over-saturated market as slightly different prices can play a critical role for the customers while the characteristics of the products remain the same. 

There are three options for businesses that follow a competitive pricing strategy. The companies may set prices below the competition, at the competitors' level, or above the competition.

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If the company sets higher prices for the products than its competitors, it should justify the pricing by providing additional features or special payment terms. When the company is going to charge a price below the market, there is a chance of potential losses. The profits from the additional products can compensate for the expenses on the product priced below the market. If a business sets the same prices as its competitors for similar products, it may distinguish itself through outstanding product marketing .

Pepsi and Coca-Cola are perfect examples of competitive pricing strategy. This is because the brands are very similar in terms of the quality and characteristics of the products. However, Pepsi is usually slightly more expensive than Coca-Cola. So will typically have smaller total sales volumes with better profit margins, while Coke will usually achieve necessary overall profits through larger sales volumes.

Skimming (or high-low) pricing strategy

Skimming strategy is when a business sets the highest initial price for a new product and then cuts it once there is lower demand. The skimming pricing strategy is widely used in technology markets where companies aim to reimburse R&D costs. The tech companies producing devices like smartphones and video game consoles usually price their products according to this strategy as gadgets tend to lose relevance over time.

This approach targets early adopters or customers who have lower price sensitivity. It happens for several reasons: these people’s need for the product outweighs their desire to save money, they usually have higher income or better knowledge of the product’s value. Companies apply a skimming strategy for a limited period to recover their investments in product development. To obtain greater market share, businesses should use other approaches like penetration pricing strategy after some time. However, the skimming method may irritate consumers who purchased the product initially and attract competitors who notice the sudden decrease in prices.

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Apple uses a skimming pricing strategy to gain the highest profit in a short time instead of getting the maximum sales. The company also applies this strategy to differentiate itself from the competitors in the market. Furthermore, Apple made minor adjustments in the skimming pricing strategy. The company charges high prices for the new products and then justifies them by increasing the value of the products in future versions. 

Premium (or prestige) pricing strategy

Premium pricing strategy is also known as prestige pricing or luxury pricing. According to this strategy, companies artificially increase prices to create the perception that the products are exclusive, high-end, or luxurious. The strategy is based on consumers’ belief that expensive products have a solid reputation, are more trustworthy or attractive, and symbolize excellent quality and distinction. Premium pricing focuses more on the product’s perceived value than its actual value.

Customers of the brands sticking to the premium pricing strategy are typically not price-sensitive, so they are ready to pay more for the latest trends. Technology and fashion brands use this approach as they aim to provide value and status through their products. The drawback of the strategy is the difficulty of implementation. The success depends on the physical locations of the stores and target customers.

Starbucks is an example of a premium pricing strategy. The coffee company’s customers choose its lattes and signature coffee products over lower-priced competitors, such as Dunkin’ Donuts and smaller or local coffee chains.

Value-based pricing strategy

This strategy relies on determining the price of the product according to its value for the customer. A value-based pricing strategy is often used when the value of the product to the customer exceeds the cost of production. The businesses that use this strategy always target one specific customer segment or a single customer if it is a B2B company . The value-based approach is not applicable in the case of multiple segments as it would be difficult for marketers to determine the appropriate price for each one.

The strategy will not work well for the “blue ocean” products as this pricing method works if the product has a competitor’s alternative offer. First, the marketers have to use the competitor’s product as the criterion for establishing a value-based price. Then it is essential to determine the product’s unique features that distinguish it from the competing option. Finally, the marketers need to calculate the value of the differentiated features. 

Supreme , an American streetwear brand, differentiates itself from competitors by emphasizing the exclusivity of clothing while maintaining prices relatively cheap and affordable. The brand always keeps a minimal inventory and never produces a large number of items. You cannot buy Supreme clothing in large retail stores, their supply is restricted. Owning limited items sold by Supreme makes its owner a much more fashion-conscious person. This strategy creates a sense of originality of the products while increasing their desirability. As a result, the brand has a unique value that you cannot get from owning any other piece.

Dynamic pricing strategy

Dynamic pricing strategy, sometimes also known as time-based pricing, surge pricing, and demand pricing, establishes prices based on various factors, such as competitor pricing, customer demand, market, and supply. When implementing a dynamic pricing strategy, the companies use data collected from customers or react to changing market conditions. Then businesses adjust the prices for comparable goods to correspond to consumers’ capacity to pay. 

The companies that typically use dynamic pricing strategy are hotels, airline companies, and entertainment facilities. These organizations apply specific machine learning algorithms that analyze demand, competitor prices, and other factors to customize prices to current market conditions or customers’ willingness to pay. The dynamic method is also suitable for large businesses like eCommerce platforms and retail stores as implementing the strategy can be quite expensive.

Uber charges a price for a ride depending on the route, traffic, and rider-to-driver demand at the moment. The algorithm or service rules consider these factors when determining the prices. 

Cost-plus (or economy) pricing strategy

A cost-plus strategy is one of the easiest methods to set up the price for the product. The strategy takes into account only the cost of producing the product. Then you need to add the set markup percentage to the costs and sell the product for the total. Thus, to derive the price of the product, you need to add material costs, labor costs, shipping costs, marketing, and overhead costs to a markup percentage. 

Retailers who sell physical goods often use this method. The advantage of the cost-plus strategy is that it is easy to calculate. If all your production and labor costs are fixed, this pricing strategy can generate consistent profits. However, the method does not consider market factors, such as customer perceived value or competitors’ prices.

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Let us imagine the company that produces jellies and jams. The production cost of a jar of wild blueberry jelly is $1.50 per 250 ml. The company is going to add a markup of 40%. Thus, the price of the jelly in the shop will be $2.10.

Target pricing strategy

Target pricing strategy is a method used by companies to establish the product price on the basis of market prices. A target price is an expected price the potential buyers are willing to pay for a product. To set the price for the product, the company conducts market research and analyzes the prices for similar offers. Then the company determines the profit margin or the amount of profit it aims to gain from a product or service. After setting the profit margin, the business evaluates whether the cost of manufacturing the product is within the budget. 

This strategy can guarantee that the company gets reasonable profit as the business sells the product at a price that corresponds to market demand. Large companies like automobile manufacturers choose target pricing strategy as it is not related to product demand as they sell the complete stock volume. Furthermore, target pricing increases the profitability of the companies by lowering the cost of manufacturing the product while the selling price is fixed and determined beforehand. 

Toyota uses target pricing to save costs at the development stage and increases the quality of the products at the same time. The goal of the company is manufacturing costs reduction, so Toyota strives to meet the goal through design adjustments of the vehicles.

Discount (or low-cost) pricing strategy 

Discount pricing strategy is a method of reducing the prices for original products or services to increase traffic, move inventory and generate additional sales. Discount pricing creates a sense of urgency and a feeling that a customer is making a good deal, so this approach attracts many potential buyers. However, a discount pricing strategy is used very often by various brands and may create a reputation that your company is a bargain retailer. In addition, it may lead to a negative perception of your products’ quality. Discount pricing strategy, which is based on cost advantage can also be used as a barrier to entry for new businesses, coming to the market.

There are three common types of discount pricing: seasonal, clearance, and volume discounts. During the seasonal discounts, companies usually provide special discounts on seasonal products. Sometimes businesses apply seasonal discounts to out-of-season products to sell old inventory. Companies use the term “clearance” to denote that the products are available at exceptionally low prices and only for a limited time, like “buy two items and get one for free”. A volume discount is also known as bundling or selling goods in bulk.

Beardbrand , a company that produces brand care products, promotes discounted bundles of its goods. The bundles are different kinds of one product. They are less expensive if purchased as a set than purchased separately. Customers can test different product variations to choose the most favorite one.

Seasonal pricing strategy

The seasonal pricing strategy sets the prices for the products depending on the demand during the high season or low season. The goal is to balance the demand by attracting customers with low prices during less busy times and increasing income in peak periods by charging higher prices. The peak seasons typically include annual holiday periods like New Year and Christmas, public holidays, school holidays, and local events like festivals and concerts.

To implement the strategy, you need to adapt to fluctuations in customer demand by breaking the year into low, mid, and peak periods. Then, determine the minimum and maximum prices you are going to charge. Try different prices to ensure that seasonal discounts do not motivate people to wait until the end of the peak period. Thus, the extra fees would not drive away customers seeking greater value.

Hotels, online travel agencies, and booking systems like Airbnb and Booking.com adjust their pricing to meet consumer demands. In addition, some services utilize artificial intelligence and machine learning to determine seasonal prices with the help of the algorithm.

Psychological pricing strategy

Psychological pricing aims to create a positive psychological impact to increase sales. According to psychological studies , when customers make purchases, they experience pain or loss. Therefore, the sellers can reduce this effect, improving the chances that the customers will buy the product.

The companies employ psychological pricing strategy by setting prices ending in 9, such as $8.99 instead of $9. It looks like the seller reduced the price as much as possible, taking into account every cent. As a result, the customer perceives the price as if purchasing the product for $8 instead of $9. 

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Another way to use this strategy is to put more expensive items right next to the ones you are trying to sell in a physical shop or online. For example, suppose you use it in combination with discount pricing and offer a 50% discount when buying two products. In that case, customers will consider this a favorable situation to buy a product. 

McDonald's uses psychological pricing by selling combination meals that seem like a good deal compared to purchasing a single product. The brand encourages people to spend money on additional products they might not otherwise buy. 

Geographic pricing strategy

Geographic pricing is when a company sets different prices on its products or services depending on the market or geographical location. This strategy is suitable for multinational companies. The price for the product may be based on customers’ disposable income or the economic conditions of a particular country. 

Paid social media advertising makes it simple to market a product or service using a geographic pricing strategy. You can create your pricing model focusing on the city, region, or zip code of your target customers. If some clients travel and relocate permanently, it will not influence your overall strategy to a large extent.

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In 2019 Apple stores in China were selling the latest iPhones at discounts. Apple faces many challenges in the Chinese market as there are low-cost phone manufacturers like Huawei . Due to these obstacles, geographical pricing strategy allows the brand to compete effectively.

Map pricing strategy

Although MAP pricing might seem like a variation of the geographic pricing strategy, it is, in fact, something completely different. MAP is an acronym for Minimum Advertised Price. Some countries, for example, the United States, allow brands or manufacturers to establish MAP policies to define the lowest prices at which the retailers can promote their products. A MAP policy is a document that prevents price erosion which typically leads to lower seller margins and reduced value of the goods. In addition, MAP policy allows for identifying fraud and protects customers from purchasing fake goods. The minimum advertised price policy also specifies the consequences for companies that violate the established rules as well as the procedure for enforcing the policy.

There are MAP regulations for almost every product in the world. The policy is helpful for both manufacturers and retailers as it allows standardizing the prices and differentiating the product from the competition by focusing on its unique features like service and customer support. In addition, it helps small and mid-sized retailers compete against larger companies.

If a backpack manufacturer establishes a minimum advertised price of $50 for the best-selling item, all product resellers should advertise this product at $50 or more. However, if a reseller decides to promote the item at a $35 price, this will violate MAP regulations.

It might be challenging to develop a successful pricing strategy as it requires considering various characteristics of your business. True, creating a pricing strategy is a complicated task, so we broke the process into five steps.

1. Determine your business objectives. Your goals might include increasing profitability, introducing a new product, gaining more significant market share, or reaching a new market segment . Consider what you want your company to contribute to the economy and the world.

2. Perform a comprehensive market pricing analysis. Analyze the market in which your product or service is going to compete. If the market is over-saturated and you have many competitors offering similar products or services, the price will be your key to success. Try to reduce operational costs to maximize profit margins. If you produce a highly differentiated product, you can use premium pricing and focus on better customer service.

3. Make a list of your competitors. Competitors’ pricing strategies have a notable impact on yours. So, you need to identify several direct competitors and analyze their pricing. Then consider the alternatives that consumers may use to solve the problem instead of your product or service. Next, study the pricing of these substitute products. Finally, develop your pricing strategy based on all of the above.

4. Understand your target customers. At this stage, you need to determine why and how your target audience will use your product or service. The most important issue is the perceived value of the product. You need to understand the task your product or service solves for the customer, how it alleviates the pains related to this task, and what benefits the customer will get by using the product.

5. Set your prices and review them regularly. Finally, set the prices for your product or products based on your goals and the data you have collected. Set lower prices if you believe in market potential and want to quickly grab a larger share of it. Or set higher prices if the product you offer is superior to the competition. And make sure to review your results and update the prices if there is an opportunity to improve your results.

Now you have a better grasp of the most common pricing strategies. You can choose the most effective one for your business from the above-listed methods and then make adjustments to create more personalized experiences for your audience. It is time to offer the customers the best price for value!

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The Power of Pricing: How to Create a Pricing Strategy that Drives Profits (+Examples)

The Power of Pricing: How to Create a Pricing Strategy that Drives Profits (+Examples)

Pricing is one of the most important aspects of any business. After all, you won't make a profit if you don't charge enough for your product or service. On the other hand, if you charge too much, you may struggle to find customers. Enter: pricing strategies .

Finding the right pricing strategy is essential for every business. A thoughtful, well-constructed pricing strategy allows you to remain competitive while still being able to cover all of the costs that are involved with running your business.

There are several different pricing strategies--and no one-size-fits-all solution. Your pricing strategy can even become an integral part of your marketing strategy and contribute to bolstering your competitive advantage.

In this guide, we’ll explain 11 different pricing strategies and provide examples of how they work. This way, you’ll have a better understanding of the intricacies involved with pricing—and can determine which strategy makes the most sense for your business.

What is a Pricing Strategy (+ Why is it Important?)

A pricing strategy is a strategic plan for how you will price your products or services and earn a profit. The right pricing strategy considers costs, the perceived value of your offering, market research, and a competitive analysis

Let's say you're selling a unique product or service that has a high perceived value, like an enterprise software suite, you might be able to charge a premium price. If you're selling a commodity product that is more price-sensitive and can easily be replaced by competitors' offerings, you might need to focus on competitive effective pricing to win market share.

Businesses should continually monitor and adapt their pricing strategy as economic and competitive landscapes evolve. In fact, according to Profitwell , most successful companies review their prices quarterly and make adjustments every six months .

Why does pricing strategy matter? It's not just about profits. (Though that is part of it!) Here's a few other reasons why pricing strategy matters:

  • Gain a Competitive Advantage : In a highly competitive market, your pricing strategy can be key to gaining a competitive advantage. Companies can use a strategic pricing strategy to attract a new customer base or retain current customers.
  • Attract Your Target Audience : Pricing strategy can impact consumer behavior. For example, a low price might attract price-sensitive customers in SMBs, while a higher pricing plan can signal quality and attract enterprise customers .
  • Support Brand Image : The right pricing strategy can also bolster your brand image. For example, Rolex’s higher pricing strategy supports its image as a luxury brand.

Whatever pricing strategy you choose, it's important to have a clear plan backed by market research. But be ready to adapt if needed.

11 Types of Pricing Strategies with Real Examples

Now that we've covered the importance of having a pricing strategy in place, let's go over 11 common pricing strategy examples you can use as inspiration for your own pricing strategy.

1. Competitive Pricing Strategy

Many business owners use the competitive pricing strategy to attract customers and increase market share. Essentially, this involves doing a comprehensive competitive landscape analysis and setting prices at or below the level of their competitors’ prices.

This can be a useful strategy if the competitor is a large company with significant overhead and cannot reduce its prices much further. By offering a lower price, small businesses can compete without sacrificing profitability.

However, there are also risks associated with this strategy. If the competitor can lower its prices, the smaller company may be forced to follow suit and risk losing money.

In addition, if customers perceive the quality of a lower-priced offering is also lower, they may be reluctant to purchase it even at a lower price.

Competitive Pricing Strategy Example

Competitive pricing is often be seen in e-commerce. Take, for example, Apple’s AirPods vs a competitor’s “Earbuds.” As you can see below, AirPods cost $329, which Apple can justify thanks to their brand recognition and the quality of their products.

If you go to Amazon and find a similar product from a smaller competitor, you’ll see that these earbuds are just $39.99. They’re similar in style, and they may or may not be similar in quality, but they’re definitely cheaper.

Although nobody knows this brand, they can still compete with big players. This is thanks to the massive discount they’re offering for a product that does more or less the same thing.

Other examples of competitive pricing include bundle pricing, where companies group similar items together and offer a discount.

With competitive pricing, a company may rely more on sales volume than profit margin. With a high enough sales volume, a company can make up for low profit margins with sheer numbers.

2. Price Skimming

Price skimming is a strategy in which a company charges a high price for a new product or service at first, and then gradually lowers the price over time. The goal of price skimming is to generate the highest possible revenue in the shortest amount of time.

To do this, companies typically target early adopters willing to pay a premium for new products or services. The high price also helps to recoup the costs of developing and marketing the new product or service.

Once the early adopters have been captured, the company lowers the price to appeal to a wider range of consumers. This pricing strategy can be very effective in market conditions where there is a lot of consumer demand for new products or services. However, it can also backfire if the company cannot sustain high prices for long enough to make a profit.

Price Skimming Pricing Strategy Example

Gaming consoles are the perfect example of price skimming. Every time a new gaming console hits the market, the price is much higher than what it will be a few years later.

For example, take the Xbox 360. When it was launched in 2005, Microsoft was charging $400 for the console . Now, you can get an Xbox 360 from Walmart for just $183.59.

Due to the novelty of a brand-new product, Microsoft was able to take advantage of the price skimming strategy and maximize its profits in the beginning.

3. Penetration Pricing Strategy

Penetration pricing can be a great way to quickly gain market share. The basic idea is to set the initial price of a product or service low to entice customers. Once customers are hooked, the price increases to a more profitable level.

Of course, this strategy only works if the quality of the product is high enough to justify the higher price. But when done correctly, penetration pricing can be a powerful tool for driving growth.

Penetration Pricing Strategy Example

Jasper.ai is an AI writing software that uses machine learning to produce content. However, now they’re extending their feature set and introducing a new product called Jasper Art.

This tool uses AI and can produce art based on the inputs you give it. It’s a brand-new product, and they’re using penetration pricing to quickly onboard new customers. Here is a screenshot from their product launch post on Facebook.

The post states that their pricing will start at $20/user/month but will likely change (i.e. increase) in the future. A brand new feature combined with an enticing initial price is the perfect combination to get their target audience excited about using their new product, and simultaneously helps them test market demand.

4. Premium Pricing

Premium pricing involves setting a high price for a product or service to convey quality and prestige. This strategy can be particularly effective for luxury goods or products that are higher quality.

There are a few potential drawbacks to premium pricing, however. For one thing, it can alienate potential customers who don't perceive the product as worth the high price tag. In addition, it leaves little room for discounts or promotions, which can be important tools for boosting conversions.

Premium Pricing Example

What better example is there to use for premium pricing than Rolex? Although made with superior craftsmanship, Rolex watches are the epitome of premium pricing. Rolex as a company doesn’t want everyone to own a Rolex. They want to make customers feel like they are purchasing something rare and valuable.

Rolex watches often cost multiple 5-figures and sometimes even 6-figures.

Although the Rolex watches are priced at a premium, it gives their customers a sense of status. This pricing method certainly doesn’t work for everyone (especially new businesses), but it can be a powerful pricing strategy with the right business model, sales strategies , and product offering.

5. Cost-Plus Pricing Strategy

Cost-plus pricing is a popular pricing strategy in which a company sets its prices by adding a fixed markup to the total production costs of its goods or services.

Because cost-plus pricing takes all costs into account, it can help to ensure that a company is making a profit on each sale. However, it can also lead to higher prices for consumers, which can limit demand. In addition, cost-plus pricing can encourage companies to cut corners to provide lower-cost products, which can subsequently lead to lower-quality products.

Cost-Plus Pricing Strategy Example

Cost-Plus pricing is difficult to show as an example as it’s merely a formula:

Cost of goods sold x fixed markup percentage = final price

Cost-Plus pricing is oftentimes used with the sale of alcohol . If a bar is charged on a per liter basis from their supplier, they can then set a markup percentage and pass that fee onto their final customer to make their profit margin.

6. Economy Pricing

Economy pricing is a strategy in which products are priced at a low, competitive rate. The goal of economy pricing is to attract customers looking for a good deal in a competitive market .

This pricing strategy is often used for essential items in high demand, such as food and clothing. Economy pricing can also be used as a loss leader, to attract customers to a store with the hope that they will purchase other, more profitable items as well.

While economy pricing can be an effective way to attract customers, it is important to make sure the low price does not come at the expense of quality. Otherwise, customers may not return in the future.

Economy Pricing Example

For an example of economy pricing, just check your local grocery store’s flyer every week. Grocery stores typically add their best-priced items on the first page to entice people to come shop at their store.

Take, for example, the Big Y flyer below. The weekly sales items are prominently featured, using larger images and attractive pricing.

Grocery stores aren’t worried about making a small margin on their sale items because they know, more often than not, you’ll pick up additional (larger margin) items while you're shopping.

7. Discovery Call Pricing

Discovery call pricing is used by businesses to provide potential customers with an estimate for services. Under this pricing model, customers are required to book a consultation with the business to discuss their needs.

Based on the information gathered during the consultation, the business will provide the customer with a price for their services.

While discovery call pricing can be beneficial for businesses, it is important to note that it can also be frustrating for customers who are not given a clear price upfront.

Discovery Call Pricing Example

Parakeeto for example, a company that helps agencies become more profitable, requires that you fill out an application form and jumping on a call before pricing is disclosed.

This type of strategy can work well for businesses that offer more custom services because it allows you to better understand the customer’s needs before putting together a proposal.

8. Value-Based Pricing Strategies

Value-based pricing is an ideal pricing strategy for SaaS companies that takes into account the perceived value of your offering. This can be based on factors like brand recognition, quality, or even customer service .

When setting prices using this method, businesses typically start with their costs and then add a markup that reflects the perceived value of their product or service. While this approach can help you to attract customers who are willing to pay more for a high-quality product, it's important to remember that perception is often subjective.

Value-based pricing is not an exact science, and there is always some risk involved. Nevertheless, when done correctly, value-based pricing can be an effective way to boost your profits.

Value-Based Pricing Strategy Example

Starbucks is a great example of value-based pricing. They can charge a large markup mainly due to the perceived value of their brand. Even more shocking is that lower-priced competitors, like Dunkin’ Donuts, scored higher in a blind taste test .

A small Dunkin’ Donuts coffee (10 oz) is priced at $1.69. Compare that to a Short Starbucks coffee (8 oz), and you’re paying $2.55, that’s a whopping 41 percent price increase (for less coffee.)

Are you curious about value-based selling and how it can improve your sales performance? Check out this article to discover the benefits and best practices.

9. Dynamic Pricing Strategies

The basic idea of dynamic pricing is to charge customers different prices based on factors, such as time of day, demand, and even the weather.

For example, a business might charge higher prices during peak times, or when demand is high, and lower prices when demand is low. Dynamic pricing can be a very effective way to increase revenue, but it can also be controversial. Some customers feel like they are being charged more than others, based on factors that they cannot control.

As a result, businesses need to be careful when implementing dynamic pricing strategies. But when done correctly, dynamic pricing can be a very effective tool for increasing profits.

Dynamic Pricing Example

Ride-sharing companies like Uber and Lyft take advantage of dynamic pricing. This allows their prices to fluctuate based on the current demand.

Try to find an Uber after a stadium concert, while it’s raining. You’ll pay a lot more for that ride than you would on a sunny Sunday morning when half of local businesses are closed.

10. Psychological Pricing Strategies

Have you ever noticed that some prices end in .99? That’s because businesses are using a pricing strategy called psychological pricing.

Studies show consumers perceive prices ending in .99 as being significantly lower than prices that round up to the next dollar. Businesses can increase their profits by using this seemingly small change in pricing. In addition to prices ending in .99, businesses also use a variety of other pricing strategies to manipulate consumer behavior.

For example, SaaS companies may use anchoring to make a high-priced package seem more reasonable by offering a premium package that costs even more. Or they may use loss aversion to encourage people to buy now by stressing the potential loss of a sale price.

Whether we realize it or not, businesses constantly use pricing strategies to influence our behavior.

Psychological Pricing Strategy Example

You’re likely very aware of what psychological pricing looks like. We see it daily, both online and in physical stores. Just do a quick search on Amazon for any product, and you’ll probably see some form of psychological pricing at play.

Take the example above. Whether products are priced at .99 or .95, they’re all using psychology to trick our brains into thinking prices are lower than they are.

11. Freemium Pricing Strategy

With freemium pricing, businesses offer a basic version of their product for free, with the option to upgrade to a premium version for a fee. This can be an appealing option for customers who are undecided about whether they want to commit to a paid subscription. And it can be a great way for businesses to generate interest in their products.

If you're considering using freemium pricing for your business, you should keep a few things in mind. First, make sure the free version of your product is still useful and enjoyable to use. Otherwise, customers will have no incentive to upgrade to the paid version.

Second, consider what features you will include in the premium version. You want to strike a balance between offering enough value to justify the price tag, but not so much that there are no compelling reasons for customers to continue using the free version.

Finally, be prepared for an influx of users when you launch your freemium pricing strategy. If your dedicated servers can't handle the increased demand, customers will be turned off and may never come back. If you can manage the pitfalls successfully, freemium pricing can be a great way to grow your business.

Freemium Pricing Strategy Example

Dropbox and Google Drive are great examples of the freemium model at work.

Dropbox, for example, offers a free basic account with 2GB of storage. If you need more storage, you can upgrade to a paid plan.

This provides new users with the ability to try out a service, and as they find more value in it, they can upgrade to a paid account. Freemium pricing is typically found in software service-based businesses due to the low marginal costs of providing additional service to customers.

How to Create a Pricing Strategy for Your Business in 5 Steps

Every business needs to have a pricing strategy to remain competitive and profitable. But how do you create a pricing strategy? It's not as difficult as it might seem. Here are five steps to follow.

1. Determine Your Pricing Objectives

The first step is to determine your pricing objectives. What are you trying to achieve with your pricing? Do you want to maximize profits? Or are you more focused on getting market share? Once you know your objectives , you can start to develop a pricing strategy that will help you achieve them.

2. Understand Your Customers

The second step is to understand your customers. Who are they, and what are they willing to pay for your product or service? If you don't understand your customers, it will be very difficult to price your products correctly. Take the time to create your ideal customer profile and get to know what they want.

3. Research Your Competition

Third, research your competition. How are they pricing their products or services? What strategies are they using? You need to be aware of what other businesses in your industry are doing so that you can stay competitive.

4. Find Your Value Proposition

The fourth step is finding your value proposition . What makes your product or service better than the competition? Why should someone pay more for what you're offering? What’s the customer value? If you can't answer these questions, then it's going to be difficult to justify a higher price point. An effective pricing strategy starts with knowing the real value of your product.

5. Collect Data and Modify If Necessary

The fifth and final step is collecting data and modifying it if necessary. Once you've launched your pricing strategy, it's important to monitor how it's working and make changes if necessary. Don't be afraid to experiment a bit and see what works best for your business.

Pricing Strategy FAQs (Frequently Asked Questions)

What are the best pricing strategies for a new product.

When it comes to pricing a new product, there are several different strategies that businesses can use. However, two strategies that work well for new products are price skimming and penetration pricing .

With price skimming, businesses charge a high price for the initial release of the product to capitalize on early adopters who are willing to pay a premium. This strategy is typically used for products with no close substitutes.

Penetration pricing, on the other hand, involves setting a low introductory price to attract customers and gain market share. This strategy is often used for products that face intense competition.

What is the best pricing strategy for SaaS companies?

While many factors can impact the right pricing strategy for a company, most SaaS companies use either freemium pricing or psychological pricing strategies to drive user adoption and target customers in their ideal customer market.

How can pricing strategies be improved?

There are a few general tips that can help to improve your pricing strategy. First, make sure that your selling prices are in line with the competition. If you are too high, you will lose customers; if you are too low, you will struggle to make a profit.

Second, don't be afraid to experiment. Try different price points and see how your customers respond. Finally, keep an eye on your bottom line. At the end of the day, your goal should be to maximize profits, not just sales. These are simple ways to find the right price for your product without decreasing the customer life cycle.

Final Thoughts on Developing Pricing Strategies

Pricing is a critical part of your business and, if done correctly, can be the deciding factor between you and your competition.

By understanding the different pricing strategies and how to create your own strategy amongst the sea of advice floating around, you'll be able to put yourself in a much better position to increase profits, grow your business, and keep your customers happy.

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Pricing Strategy Plan Template

Pricing Strategy Plan Template

What is a Pricing Strategy Plan?

A pricing strategy plan outlines the steps required to set and execute pricing strategies in order to achieve business goals. It is a comprehensive plan that covers the entire process of setting, monitoring, and adjusting pricing strategies in order to optimize revenue, profitability, and customer retention. The plan should include a clear outline of the focus areas, objectives, measurable targets (KPIs), related projects, and implementation timelines.

What's included in this Pricing Strategy Plan template?

  • 3 focus areas
  • 6 objectives

Each focus area has its own objectives, projects, and KPIs to ensure that the strategy is comprehensive and effective.

Who is the Pricing Strategy Plan template for?

This pricing strategy plan template is for marketing and sales leaders, managers, and teams of all sizes and industries. The template provides a comprehensive framework to create a plan to set pricing strategies that are tailored to their unique business goals and objectives. With this plan, teams can build and improve pricing strategies that maximize revenue, profitability, and customer retention.

1. Define clear examples of your focus areas

Focus areas are the broader topics that the pricing strategy plan will address. These areas should be specific enough to provide direction to the team, while being broad enough to accommodate an array of objectives. Examples of focus areas could include Establish Pricing Strategies, Monitor Pricing Performance, and Evaluate Pricing Strategies.

2. Think about the objectives that could fall under that focus area

Objectives are the goals that the team is aiming to achieve. Objectives should be measurable and achievable, and should be closely related to the focus area. Examples of objectives could include Maximize Revenue, Increase Profitability, and Track Pricing Performance.

3. Set measurable targets (KPIs) to tackle the objective

KPIs (Key Performance Indicators) are the measurable targets that teams can use to track the progress of their pricing strategy. Examples of KPIs could include Increase Average Revenue per unit, Increase Profit Margin, and Increase Average Sales.

4. Implement related projects to achieve the KPIs

Projects (or Actions) are the individual activities that the team will carry out in order to achieve the KPIs. Examples of projects could include Develop pricing strategies, Adjust pricing strategies, Monitor pricing adjustments, and Analyze pricing performance.

5. Utilize Cascade Strategy Execution Platform to see faster results from your strategy

Cascade Strategy Execution Platform helps teams create and execute pricing strategies faster than ever with its easy-to-use interface and powerful analytics capabilities. With Cascade, teams can quickly identify areas of opportunity, develop pricing strategies, monitor performance, and analyze the results to maximize revenue and profitability.

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Home » Blog » Tips » 5 Pricing Strategy Examples For Different Businesses

5 Pricing Strategy Examples For Different Businesses

by Erin Ollila | Oct 14, 2015 | Tips | 0 comments

5 Pricing Strategy Examples For Different Businesses

5 pricing strategy examples that will boost your profits and put your business ahead of the competition

For infant businesses, mapping out a price plan will give you a clear vision of what road you’re preparing to travel through.

A pricing strategy is what a business uses to label the cost of their products (or services) so they can gain as much profit from their sales as possible.

Sometimes it means pricing things at an expensive rate to gain profit, other instances require businesses to lower prices so that customers will flock towards them. Whether your business is a start-up, or you’re an established company that’s offering a new product or service, you’ll benefit tremendously from price plans.

Think about what customers search for during the shopping process.

All shoppers look for the best possible bargain–but do some think that an expensive product or service means the quality is better than a competitors? Or if you implement a fair and affordable increase in a popular product, will customers be accepting of this change?

~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~

Let us help you put these pricing strategies to work.    Sign up with Blitz today for a 30-day free trial  of our lead management software and use our sales follow up system to turn more leads into customers.

5 pricing strategy examples that will help you create your own

1. Discounted pricing

This is probably difficult to do if you’re a newborn company; but if it’s executed properly, the benefits will far exceed your expectations. The basic idea behind a discount promotional strategy is to lower your prices in order to gain new customer, but not gain a large profit.

The products you sell are at a price that’ll generate enough funds so you can break even and maintain your business, but you’ll appeal to a large pool of customers. For example, this is one of the pricing strategy examples that works best for businesses like a grocery or convenient store that offers a variety of products at an inexpensive rate. Combining discounted products and regular-priced products in one location will draw customers into the business for a discount, but indirectly encourages impulse purchasing on regular-priced products.

2. Premium pricing plans

On the flip side, a premium pricing plan will attract an exclusive pool of customers because products and services are given at an expensive rate. Think of Apple, who never discounts or has sales. They maintain their status as a premium product this way. Using premium pricing plans limits your potential buyer pool, but offers a larger profit margin, and the ability to produce a higher quality product. Psychologically, higher-priced products have a higher perceived value by customers.

3. Inverted strategy

A list of pricing strategy examples without an inverted strategy would be incomplete, even though it can be problematic for many companies. What this price plan does, is take a product or service of high quality and put it at a low (say, $1 for the first six months), or free price. Although it seems like you’re devaluing the cost of your product, the inverted strategy is a great marketing tool–especially for new businesses who simply need to build a list of customers to market to. Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) businesses can most easily use this strategy, because it costs almost as much to have 100 customers as it does to have 1.

4. Competitor’s strategy

Like all of the above mentioned price plans, the value you put on your product or service has to be the best fit for your customers. When you have steep competition, some businesses concentrate on pricing your business services at the lowest possible rate. That’s not to say it will be inexpensive, but you want to beat your competitors. You’ve probably seen this strategy at gas stations that are across the street from one another. This strategy isn’t the easiest for most small business who need to profit to survive, however, if you’re a bigger business with many competitors, give your customers and leads a reason to step onto your turf.

With this strategy, if you’re selling the same exact product as the competition, there’s a great chance that they’ll ask why your prices are different. Make an effort to understand and break the pricing down for them, and show why your company is worth it. On the other hand, you could offer the same exact pricing as your competitor rather than driving down prices and perceived value in your industry, a common issue in creative service industries like design and photography.

5.  Internal pricing plan

Of all the pricing strategy examples, this one is the only price plan that is competing with itself. With the internal strategy, you’ll have to check out your inventory and see what products are similar to each other. Say you own a shoe store and hold two types of shoes that (essentially) are identical. You’ll have to price them differently so they sell. Maybe they’re the same shoe from the same designer, but one pair has rhinestones on it and the other doesn’t. Offer the shoe with the rhinestones at a higher price and leave the modest one as it was intended to cost. By comparison, the shoe without the studs on it will seem reasonably priced for people looking for an affordable shoe. If both shoes are priced individually, they’ll be more appealing to your customers.

Are there any pricing strategy examples that you use for your business? Share your answers in the comments!

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Nine of the best pricing strategies for smes.

A customer happily pays for a coffee with her phone. The price strategy left her satisfied. She's sitting outside next to a man and she's smiling as she taps her phone to a card reader.

Your pricing strategy says a lot more about your company than just how much your product or service costs. It   determin es what type of customers you can attract, whether they’ll come back , what your competitors think about you , and ultimat ely, how much profi t you’ll make .  

That’s because prices signal value. Customers don’t always want the lowest price. They want a price that accurately reflects the value of what they need.  

Say you want to buy a pen. If you see one for 30p and one for £3, you’ll likely choose the £3 one because you’ll think the 30p pen is cheaply made. Built into the higher price of the pen is the assumption of its higher value. If you’re a luxury shopper, you may be willing to spend £30 or even £300 on a top-of-the-range pen.  

So, the right price should accurately reflect the value of your product or service.  

business plan pricing strategy example

There’s a fine line between undervaluing yourself (losing profit) and overvaluing yourself (losing sales). Larger businesses have big budgets to conduct extensive market research, calculate demand, and adjust prices quickly. Smaller and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) don’t have the same level of resources, so they need to choose their own pricing that keeps them competitive.  

This blog will help you determine which pricing strategy is the best for your business to help you reflect the value of your offering, attract customers and achieve returns.

The most popular pricing strategies for SMEs  

Your commercial goals should guide your pricing decisions, whether you want to ensure consistent profits, retain customers, or win new ones. Below are nine of the most popular methods for achieving these goals, along with examples demonstrating how they work.  

1. Cost-plus pricing

This means pricing something at the cost it took to produce, plus a markup. Whatever amount you set as the markup will be your profit.  

Example: a bakery.

Goal: to make a profit on every item sold.  

Strategy: they mark up their products by 25%. Production costs (ingredients + packaging + labour) + 25% markup = price.  

This method ensures you cover your costs and profit from every sale. To accurately measure your production costs per item, you should consider the cost of running your business (including rent, marketing, transport, etc.). 

However, this pricing strategy doesn’t consider competitors’ pricing, so you could unknowingly undervalue or overvalue your products.   

Similar to this method is keystone pricing, which sets the retail price at double the wholesale cost paid for a product. This strategy is easy to implement, but it can result in prices so high customers are unwilling to pay.  

2. Competitive pricing

This strategy involves setting your price just below your direct competitors’ price to attract a higher market share.  

Example: a nail salon.

Goal: to win over their local competition’s customers. 

Strategy: their neighbour charges £45 per manicure, so this salon charges £40. 

Lower prices, of course, mean lower profit margins, but hopefully, you’ll gain more sales overall. This works best in markets where customers can easily compare products or services, and the only real differentiator is the price.   

However, the moment you undercut your competition, they’re likely to undercut you back. This is called a price war, which eventually causes you both to cut your margins so that your business becomes unaffordable to operate.  

Competitive pricing also doesn’t highlight your business’s unique value. What makes you better than your competitors? Can you communicate that added value to your customers to justify higher prices?   

3. Premium pricing

This strategy takes the opposite approach to competitive pricing. It involves pricing products higher than your competitors to give the impression that yours is of higher quality or more luxurious.  

Example: a nail salon. 

Goal: to stand out from the competition to justify higher prices. 

Strategy: they advertise their business’s expert-level skilled technicians. Their neighbour charges £45 per manicure, so this salon charges £60. 

This gives your business the potential for higher profit margins and, hopefully, a higher volume of sales.   

You just have to find the right customers who will value your unique selling point (USP) and be willing to pay more for it. This will likely require marketing efforts to raise awareness of your key differentiator.  

4. Price skimming

This is when you charge the highest initial price customers are willing to pay, then lower it over time as market competition rises or demand decreases. This strategy works best for new, innovative products with no direct competition.  

Example: a boutique designer. 

Goal: to be an exclusive luxury brand and generate revenue quickly through an enthusiastic customer base.  

Strategy: they price their new limited-edition suit collection at £700 per suit for the first 3 months. Then £600 for the following three months. Then £500 on sale once the buzz dies down and they’re ready to release a new collection. 

business plan pricing strategy example

This method allows you to maximise profit from early enthusiasts who want to be the first to access your offering. These customers are usually willing to pay more for an exclusive experience. This can also help you recoup your development costs quickly. High-in-demand, low-supply products can be priced higher, and as demand drops, the price drops too.   

If your product remains popular, it will eventually attract competitors who can afford to copy and sell it at a lower rate. Also, dropping prices too quickly or too much can leave a negative impression on your early adopters.  

5. Penetration pricing

This is the opposite of price skimming. It’s when you penetrate the market with an initial low price to attract customers and gain a market share, then gradually increase your prices once your customers are established and loyal.  

Example: a new café. 

Goal: to get exposure to new customers to win them over in a saturated market. 

Strategy: they offer coffee at a discount price of £2 during their first month of trading. During the second month, prices are brought up to £3, then during the third, they set their price of £4. 

Heavy discounts can attract a lot attention from those who wouldn’t have otherwise tried your product. It will result in lower profit margins initially, but it will help you quickly establish a presence in a new market and gain the trust of new customers.  

Just make sure you have a solid and transparent plan for raising prices, which will help you retain customers and ensure long-term stability.  

6. Anchor pricing

Anchor pricing is where you display a lower price next to a higher price to show how much money a consumer could save.  

Example: a car dealer. 

Goal: to sell more units of cars in its seasonal sale. 

Strategy: they cross out a car’s original £15,000 sticker price and place a larger sticker showing its new £12,000 discounted price. 

Satisfied customer at a car dealership buying a new car. She's smiling and shaking the sales representative's hand.

A satisfied customer buying a car at a discounted rate during a seasonal sale.

Discounts next to original prices can pique consumers’ curiosity, tapping into their cognitive bias that they’re getting a good deal. Another way to use this principle is to place more expensive items next to cheaper ones on shelves and on your e-commerce website to indicate the cheaper items’ good value.  

Remember, consumers can check prices with comparison websites, so make sure the original price listed is realistic and not overly inflated.  

If this tactic is used too often, it can give you more of a bargain-retailer reputation, limiting your customer base to price-conscious consumers. You could also deter consumers from purchasing products at their regular price if they always believe a discount is around the corner.   

7. Loss-leader pricing

This involves selling an item for a loss to get people in the door to upsell more items.  

Example: a jewellery shop. 

Goal: to increase overall sales. 

Strategy: they price bracelets at a loss, hoping to attract customers who then buy accompanying charms at a premium price.  

Encouraging shoppers to buy multiple items in a single transaction can cover your losses from cutting the original product’s price. It could also familiarise customers with your brand and make them more willing to return.  

business plan pricing strategy example

However, your business model will become unsustainable if customers only buy the item you’re selling for a loss. Plan appropriately if you’re considering adopting this strategy – for example, limit your loss-making product to one per customer, and cap the supply to avoid being taken advantage of.  

8. Subscription pricing

This is where customers pay a regular recurring fee for access to a product or service.  

Example: a print and digital magazine.  

Goal: for customers to purchase their new issue every week. 

Strategy: they introduce a subscription service so customers don’t need to make repeated purchases online or in-store. They get access to the magazine online as soon as it’s published, and delivered to their door the same day. 

This model can generate predictable recurring revenue and long-term customer relationships, but you need to be a business that can deliver ongoing value to retain customers.  

Obvious examples include apps and publishing services, but even car washes and hairdressers can benefit from subscription pricing. Retail products, too, if people need them frequently, like cat food or toilet paper.  

People won’t want to continue paying regularly for items they don’t use often, so they will unsubscribe, and your revenue will become less predictable.  

9. Use-based pricing

This method involves pricing your product or service according to how much a customer uses it.   

Example: a personal shopper. 

Goal: to gain repeat customers who value the service. 

Strategy: rather than charging a fee for an appointment, they charge customers a fee for the items they take home. Though the personal shopper may have picked out 20 or more items for a client, if the client only wants to keep two of them, they will only pay for two. 

This way, customers are left satisfied as they get tangible value—they only pay for how much they’ve used your service. This may make them more likely to return instead of paying an hourly rate or a fee for an appointment they might not have found worthwhile.  

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That being said, depending on your business, it can be difficult to quantify how much a customer uses your product or service. Consider charging customers per unit, like a warehouse offering £10 per square foot of storage space or a freelance graphic designer charging £300 per design.  

The main drawback for small enterprises with niche services, like the personal shopper we mentioned, is that they might spend a lot of time on customers who ultimately buy nothing. This is an inevitable risk, so you must calculate your fee accordingly.  

Key takeaways on choosing the right pricing strategy  

Here’s what you need to remember to help you find the right pricing strategy for your business:  

  • Define your commercial goal:  Is it to become an exclusive luxury product? Is it to gain the largest market share? Is it to entice new customers? Choose the strategy that best aligns with this goal.  
  • Know your minimum price:  Calculate the cost of running your business to determine the amount you need to charge to maintain your business.  
  • Know your target market:  How much can they afford to pay? How much will they be willing to pay?  
  • Look at your competition:  What do they charge? And how is their offering different to yours?  
  • Rely on your USP: This is what will make customers want to choose you over other businesses and what you can lean on to know your price is worthwhile.  

Keep experimenting to find the right price that aligns with your brand, covers your costs, and, most importantly, resonates with your customers.  

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Author:  Giorgia Rose

Giorgia is Senior Content Writer at 1st Formations, responsible for delivering quality and informative content that readers and customers find helpful and insightful. Giorgia is motivated to improve environmental, social, and governance business policies and initiatives. She is backed by her qualifications in Business and Finance Journalism from the NCTJ and AI Journalism from the London School of Economics.

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What Is Tiered Pricing? Types and Best Practices

Tiered pricing can help you boost revenue by attracting new customers and retaining existing ones across various price points.

Five hanging red price tags increasing in size left to right: what is tiered pricing

Sometimes what you see is what you pay. If a velvet barstool costs $100, buying four sets you back $400, before tax. No bundled deals, no volume discounts. Just simple multiplication. However, companies are increasingly experimenting with pricing that plays on consumer psychology and provides more value.

A vegan meal subscription service might offer 10 meals at $7 each, then $5 per meal for those who order 20. A productivity app might present users with the option between a standard plan with core features and a premium plan with advanced tools like collaborative lists and calendar integration. In B2B retail, an ecommerce packaging supplier might charge 50¢ per box for the first 1,000 units, but drop the cost to 40¢ for each additional box, incentivizing larger orders with better value.

These are all examples of tiered pricing, where you incentivize larger purchases or greater usage while customers benefit from better value at higher tiers. Here are the benefits of tiered pricing and how to implement it.

What is tiered pricing?

Tiered pricing is a pricing strategy where you offer your products or services at different price points based on criteria like quantity, features, usage, or level of service. A tiered pricing strategy creates different pricing tiers that cater to different customer segments. Pricing tiers generally offer greater value or reduced costs as customers upgrade to higher tiers.

For businesses, a tiered pricing strategy can boost profitability by capturing more market share and encouraging customers to opt for higher-priced tiers. Customers get the flexibility of choosing the tier that best suits their budget and needs while gaining access to premium features or bulk discounts not available in a standard pricing model.

Tiered pricing vs. volume pricing: What’s the difference?

Tiered pricing offers different rates based on quantity or usage. Customers pay a set price per unit within each tier, with prices typically decreasing as they reach higher tiers. This incentivizes customers to purchase more to reach better price points, while still accommodating smaller purchases at higher per-unit costs.

Volume pricing applies a single price to the entire order based on the total quantity purchased. Unlike tiered pricing, which assigns different rates to portions of the order, volume pricing offers one consistent rate once a volume threshold is met. This can lead to substantial discounts for bulk orders but may be less flexible for customers.

Let’s say a B2B glass bottle manufacturer catering to perfumiers sells its bottles at the following prices:

1-1,000 bottles 20¢
1,001-5,000 18¢
5,001+ 15¢

Here’s how much an order of 6,000 bottles would cost a perfumery, based on each model of pricing:

Tiered pricing

(1,000 × 20¢) + (4,000 × 18¢) + (1,000 × 15¢) = $1,070

This model breaks the order down into tiers, applying the respective price for each tier. The first 1,000 bottles cost 20¢ each, the highest price. The next 4,000 fall in the middle tier, 18¢, and the final 1,000 are at the lowest price, 15¢ each.

Volume pricing

6,000 × .15¢ = $900

With volume pricing, the entire order qualifies for the lowest price tier, so all 6,000 bottles cost 15¢ each, resulting in a lower total cost for the customer.

Choose the right price

Determine your markups and profit margin to set the perfect price and increase your bottom line with our product pricing calculator.

Tiered pricing models

Feature-based pricing, subscription-based pricing, usage-based pricing.

Whether you’re selling artisanal soaps to boutique hotels or offering specialty chocolate subscriptions to cocoa enthusiasts, you can probably experiment with tiered pricing. But not every company applies this strategy the same way. Your ideal approach depends on your product, market, and business goals .

Here are three different types of tiered pricing models to explore (plus, a few tiered pricing examples for your consideration): 

Feature-based pricing categorizes products or services into different tiers, each with distinct features at varying price points. This approach caters to various customer needs and budgets, like a customer relationship management (CRM) tool offering basic, pro, and enterprise levels, or a refrigerator line with basic, premium, and luxury versions.

Raycon is an audio tech brand that offers headphones with different features at different price points. The product lineup includes the Everyday Headphones for general use with active noise cancellation (ANC), the Fitness Headphones with sweat-proof design and interchangeable ear cushions, and the Everyday Headphones Pro with premium comfort and the longest battery life.

Product category page Raycon headphones with different features at different price points.

Subscription-based pricing offers different levels of service levels or product quantities at recurring intervals (e.g., monthly or quarterly). This approach lets you segment customers based on their needs or desired features, with higher tiers often providing better value or additional perks.

For businesses, this model means more predictable, recurring revenue streams, even at lower price points, contributing to financial stability and improved resource planning, like hiring for customer service or executing a brand extension .

Chamberlain Coffee , founded by popular YouTube creator Emma Chamberlain, sells coffee, matcha, and tea products. A one-time purchase of sweet otter cake batter coffee costs $16, but customers can subscribe and save to receive recurring shipments for $14.40 per bag (10% off).

Product page for Chamberlain Coffee sweet otter cake batter coffee beans.

Usage-based pricing—or pay-as-you-go pricing—charges customers based on their product or service consumption. In tech, this might mean paying for cloud storage by gigabyte; in retail, it might be based on items purchased or service frequency.

This model is popular because it aligns costs with usage, offering fairness and flexibility that can increase consumption as customers see value in each additional unit.

Better Packaging , an eco-friendly packaging company, takes an unconventional approach to usage-based pricing. As customers order more mailers and envelopes, they unlock more value and customization options. For orders of less than 500 units, customers can select off-the-shelf options; orders of 500 or more include logo printing; and orders of 2,000 or more offer full customization and access to specialized eco-friendly products.

Tiered pricing best practices

Create buyer personas, communicate unique values, limit pricing tiers.

Implementing a tiered pricing model can boost revenue and attract customers. But when poorly executed, you might find customers gravitating toward one particular tier, or leaving for competitors when they reach certain thresholds. To avoid these pitfalls, consider the following best practices for adopting a tiered pricing structure:

Design your tiers with a specific customer archetype—or buyer persona —in mind. Consider who will select each category and willingly pay the associated price.

A camera company might design three tiers of cameras—beginner, intermediate, and expert—each with features tailored to its target user level. This approach helps customers easily find the option that best aligns with their needs and goals.

This exercise can also help you replace generic tier names with ones that reflect the user’s skill level, like “Novice Shooter,” “Skilled Photographer,” and “Professional Snapper.”

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Tiered pricing offers choice, but you need to guide customers toward the right option for them, so provide clear information. For feature-based pricing, make a comparison chart highlighting the unique benefits of each tier, focusing on the added value as customers move up. With subscription-based models, explain the long-term savings or exclusive perks that come with higher tiers or longer commitments. For usage-based pricing, provide calculators or case studies that prove cost-effectiveness as usage increases.

These pricing strategies inform customers but also demonstrate the value proposition of each tier, encouraging upgrades and maximizing customer satisfaction and revenue.

If you browse pricing pages of companies implementing tiered pricing, you might notice a trend: three distinct tiers for prospective customers to choose from, known as the “rule of three.” This makes it easy to capture different market segments —budget, mid-tier, and premium—by addressing varying price sensitivities and feature needs.

The rule of three also plays on the psychological principle that too many choices can overwhelm consumers, leading to analysis paralysis . It might be tempting to have more tiers, but too many options can lead to confusion and indecision—or worse, cart abandonment .

What is tiered pricing FAQ

What is the difference between tiered and volume pricing.

Tiered pricing applies different rates to specific quantity ranges within an order. Volume pricing applies a single rate to the entire order based on the total quantity purchased.

How do you calculate tiered pricing?

To calculate tiered pricing, multiply the number of units in each tier by that tier’s price, then sum the results for all tiers up to the total quantity ordered.

What is the difference between fixed and tiered pricing?

Fixed pricing maintains a constant price regardless of the quantity purchased. Tiered pricing offers different rates based on quantity ranges or usage levels, typically with decreasing prices for higher tiers.

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Why Do I Need a Business Plan?

Why Do I Need a Business Plan?

5 Small Business Ideas For 2024 - Startup Trends

5 Small Business Ideas For 2024 - Startup Trends

Defining Your Business's Core Problem: Crafting an Effective Problem Statement

Defining Your Business's Core Problem: Crafting an Effective Problem Statement

11 Business Models

11 Business Models

Choosing the right business model is a critical step for any entrepreneur aiming to build a successful company. The business model not only defines how you deliver value to your customers but also how you capture value for your business. In this comprehensive guide, we'll explore 11 innovative business models that are shaping industries today. We'll delve into how they work, key considerations for implementation, potential revenue streams, and real-world examples.

1. Consumer Products

Overview: This model involves creating and selling physical or digital products directly to consumers. Companies may also offer subscription services to provide ongoing value.

Key Considerations:

Product Differentiation: Standing out in a crowded market through innovation, design, or branding.

Supply Chain Management: Ensuring efficient production and distribution.

Customer Loyalty: Building a strong brand to encourage repeat purchases.

Revenue Streams:

Sales of individual units (one-time purchases).

Subscription models for recurring revenue.

Bundling products with services.

Apple: Offers consumer electronics with a focus on design and user experience.

Tesla: Sells electric vehicles with innovative technology.

Amazon (Echo, Kindle): Provides devices that integrate with its services.

2. Online Marketplaces

Overview: Online marketplaces connect buyers and sellers, facilitating transactions in a virtual environment. They often succeed by reducing friction in markets that previously faced trust or accessibility issues.

Network Effect: Success depends on achieving a critical mass of buyers and sellers.

Trust and Safety: Implementing measures to ensure secure and reliable transactions.

Competitive Landscape: May require significant investment to stand out among other marketplaces.

Transaction fees or commissions on sales.

Listing fees for sellers.

Premium services for enhanced visibility.

Airbnb: Connects travelers with hosts offering accommodations.

Uber: Links riders with drivers for transportation services.

eBay: Facilitates auctions and sales between individuals and businesses.

3. Software as a Service (SaaS) - Vertical

Overview: Vertical SaaS focuses on delivering software solutions tailored to the specific needs of a particular industry or sector. By addressing unique pain points, these services optimize workflows, reduce errors, and drive efficiency.

Market Saturation: Established industries may already have dominant software providers.

Differentiation: It's crucial to offer unique features or better user experiences to stand out.

Customization vs. Scalability: Balancing bespoke solutions with the ability to scale without becoming a service-heavy business.

Subscription fees based on user seats or features accessed.

Procore: Construction management software streamlining project workflows.

Toast: Restaurant management platform integrating ordering, payroll, and analytics.

Mindbody: Provides management solutions for the wellness industry.

4. SaaS - Freemium

Overview: Freemium SaaS offers a basic version of a software product for free, with the option to upgrade to a paid version that includes additional features or benefits. The goal is to attract a wide user base and convert a portion into paying customers.

Feature Delineation: Deciding which features to offer for free and which to reserve for paid tiers is critical.

User Conversion: Requires strategies to encourage free users to upgrade.

Cost Management: Must balance the costs of supporting free users with revenue from paid users.

Subscription fees for premium features.

Advertising within the free version.

Slack: Offers free messaging with limits; paid plans unlock more features.

Dropbox: Provides free cloud storage with options for more space and features at a cost.

Zoom: Free video conferencing with time and participant limitations; paid plans remove these restrictions.

5. Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS)

Overview: IaaS companies provide essential computing resources like storage, networking, and processing power on a pay-as-you-go basis. They cater to businesses needing scalable and flexible IT infrastructure without the overhead of maintaining physical hardware.

Capital Intensive: Requires significant investment in data centers and technology infrastructure.

Technical Expertise: Necessitates a top-tier development team to ensure reliability and scalability.

Competitive Edge: Success often depends on being cost-effective and offering superior performance.

Metered billing based on usage (e.g., per hour of computing power, per gigabyte of storage).

Amazon Web Services (AWS): Provides a wide range of cloud services to businesses globally.

Twilio: Offers communication APIs for messaging, voice, and video.

Stripe: Delivers payment processing infrastructure for online businesses.

6. Social Networking Platforms

Overview: Social networks enable users to create profiles, share content, and interact with others. They can focus on broad connections or target specific interests and demographics.

User Engagement: Keeping users active and engaged is essential for longevity.

Content Moderation: Balancing freedom of expression with the need to prevent harmful content.

Regulatory Compliance: Navigating laws related to privacy, data protection, and online behavior.

Advertising targeted based on user data.

Premium features or subscriptions for enhanced experiences.

Facebook: Global platform for connecting and sharing with others.

Instagram: Visual content sharing focused on photos and videos.

LinkedIn: Professional networking site for career development and opportunities.

7. Business-to-Business (B2B) Services

Overview: B2B service companies offer specialized services to other businesses, such as consulting, marketing, or outsourcing complex tasks. They often provide expertise that companies lack internally.

Expertise and Reputation: Success relies on specialized knowledge and a strong track record.

Relationship Management: Building and maintaining client relationships is crucial.

Competition: Must continually innovate to stay ahead of competitors and disruptive technologies.

Project-based fees.

Retainer agreements for ongoing services.

McKinsey & Company: Global management consulting firm.

PwC (PricewaterhouseCoopers): Offers assurance, tax, and consulting services.

Accenture: Provides professional services in strategy, consulting, and digital transformation.

8. Entertainment Services

Overview: Entertainment services provide content designed to captivate audiences, including streaming media, music, gaming, and live events. Success often comes from delivering high-quality content that encourages repeat engagement.

Content Acquisition: Securing rights to popular content or producing original works.

Changing Consumer Preferences: Staying ahead of trends and adapting to new consumption habits.

Technological Advances: Embracing new technologies like virtual reality or interactive media.

Subscription fees for access to content libraries.

Pay-per-view or rental fees for individual titles.

Advertising in ad-supported models.

Netflix: Streaming service offering a vast array of movies and TV shows.

Spotify: Music streaming platform with free and premium tiers.

Disney+: Provides access to Disney's extensive content catalog.

9. Aggregator Platforms

Overview: Aggregator platforms compile information, reviews, or tutorials to attract a specific audience. They monetize by directing users to partner vendors or marketplaces, earning commissions or fees per transaction.

Content Quality: Must provide valuable and trustworthy information to retain users.

SEO Dependency: Reliant on search engine algorithms for traffic; changes can significantly impact visibility.

Competition: High competition requires strategies to differentiate and become the preferred destination.

Advertising revenue from displayed ads.

Affiliate commissions from referred sales.

Premium listings for vendors.

Zillow: Aggregates real estate listings and information.

TripAdvisor: Provides travel reviews and booking options.

Reddit: Hosts communities and discussions, monetizing through ads and premium features.

10. Developer Tools

Overview: Developer tools are specialized software solutions designed to assist developers in coding, testing, and deploying applications. This niche within SaaS targets a highly technical audience, often incorporating open-source elements.

High Expectations: Developers demand robust, efficient, and reliable tools.

Community Engagement: Active participation and contribution to developer communities are vital.

Open Source Norms: Offering open-source options can be essential to gain trust and adoption.

Freemium models with paid premium features.

Subscriptions for enterprise-level support or additional capabilities.

Usage-based billing for API calls or resources consumed.

GitHub: A platform for version control and collaboration with paid private repositories.

HashiCorp: Provides infrastructure automation tools with open-source and enterprise versions.

Hugging Face: Offers NLP tools and models with options for premium services.

11. Government Solutions

Overview: Businesses in this model provide specialized products or services to government agencies, including defense, law enforcement, and public administration sectors.

Complex Sales Cycles: Navigating government procurement processes requires patience and expertise.

Regulatory Compliance: Must adhere to strict regulations and security standards.

Relationship Building: Establishing credibility and trust is essential for long-term contracts.

Subscription-based services.

Project-based fees for specific initiatives.

Anduril Industries: Develops advanced defense technology solutions.

SpaceX: Contracts with government agencies for space exploration and satellite launches.

Understanding these diverse business models can help entrepreneurs identify the best approach for their startups. Whether you're leveraging open-source communities, providing specialized SaaS solutions, or creating the next big social network, aligning your business model with your product and target market is crucial for success.

At Plannit AI, we're committed to supporting entrepreneurs at every stage of their journey. Our AI-driven business planning tools can help you refine your business model, create professional plans, and connect with a community of like-minded individuals.

Need help choosing the right business model for your startup? Contact us or try our AI-powered business planning tool today!

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Bucking the odds: An investor approach to portfolio pricing

This is a pivotal year for pricing strategy. All those engaged in long-term contracts may want to consider reshaping their pricing approaches or risk seeing their profitability erode.

Big booms and big drops in core and semi-commodity pricing are now the norm, and everyone, from chemical manufacturers to producers of metal and mining players—is feeling the pinch. Take the example of polyethylene. Commercial teams who signed long-term contracts in 2020 using fixed index-based pricing were squeezed as prices soared by 50 percent. And buyers of this material who entered long-term purchasing contracts in 2021 quickly found themselves in upside-down arrangements after prices tumbled by nearly a third in the months that followed.

Similar trajectories have played out in many other categories across industries (Exhibit 1). As a result, pricing estimates have been way off the mark for many manufacturers, triggering earnings fluctuations and an uncertain revenue outlook. With turbulence expected to remain persistent, many recognize that traditional reliance on index-based data is no longer sustainable.

Instead, a more effective and sustainable solution can be to take a portfolio approach to pricing. McKinsey research has shown that applying predictive scenario modeling and optimizing for risk-adjusted returns can help manufacturers smooth earnings significantly. Some companies that have adopted this method have seen their return on sales grow by an average of 2 to 4 percent.

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Manufacturers are in a pricing predicament.

Producers of commodities and near-commodities face pricing challenges in two main areas: getting the wide-angle view they need to hit their targets and getting the integrated insights they need to respond to changing market conditions.

A key reason is structural. It’s common for commercial teams to take a myopic, transaction-level approach to sales, negotiating terms on an individual-customer basis. The roots of this practice make sense as a means of accommodating for specific account and segment dynamics. But this approach may drive unforeseen complexity and reduce cross-transaction portfolio opportunities. A chemical producer, for example, had scores of product contracts, each with its own prices and terms. But the company was operating largely at the mercy of market forces because it didn’t have a way to assess potential risks or opportunities.

External data on demand drivers, trade flows, and materials cost trends, coupled with nonlinear modeling capabilities, would allow commodity producers to combine macro- and transaction-level data to price products for specific customers. But many companies lack these data assets and skills. A large packaging company, for example, tried to account for volatility by linking prices to three to five major market indices. But the indices didn’t adjust quickly enough for rising inflation, and contracts grew out of sync with the company’s higher production costs. This put significant pressure on profitability.

In addition, while options and derivatives can be used to hedge risk in publicly traded commodities such as corn and oil, these hedges may often not work in industry, because the financial instruments available in the market today cover limited products, often cost too much, and include terms that generally favor the issuer.

To gain better predictability, manufacturers may want to consider approaching pricing the way leading investors do: through a portfolio lens.

Five ways to ADAPT pricing to inflation

Five ways to ADAPT pricing to inflation

Price like a portfolio manager.

Starting with their overall risk-and-returns objectives, many top investment firms traditionally construct their portfolios to match, taking on investments that reduce exposure in some areas and add it in others. The objective is to achieve a set of portfolios with maximum returns for a given risk profile, known as an efficient frontier. As markets change, firms can shift their portfolio composition and underlying assets dynamically. This portfolio orientation allows investors to allocate resources in areas where they can win.

Manufacturers can consider taking a similar approach—constructing balanced portfolios that satisfy their strategic priorities and setting individual contract terms based on their target risk-and-returns threshold.

Predictive modeling underlies this method. Using advanced multivariate models that can identify nonlinear relationships between market drivers, commercial teams test multiple market scenarios, pulling in data from internal and external sources to enrich their analyses. Once they discern which target portfolio performs best across a range of likely conditions, teams use optimization models to construct specific contract terms. These tools are adaptive, and most are automatable, which may make it easier for commercial teams to adjust recommendations and update contract negotiations in near-real time. These tools can also help leaders identify when contracts dip into noncompliance, enabling them to suggest potential remedies and engage proactively with customers.

For example, a North American chemicals producer set up a pricing center of excellence, staffed with data scientists, data engineers, and other technologists, to develop advanced decision-support tools for commercial teams. One of the first instruments they created was a portfolio simulation model. Testing it with one business revealed that shifting to market-driven prices instead of the cost-plus contracts they had been using had the potential to improve margin run rates by 4 to 5 percent without changing the company’s risk profile. Those insights shaped an action plan for an upcoming round of negotiations with customers. Within two months, the business unit’s earnings increased by 1 percent.

Improvements like these don’t need to involve a multiyear transformation. Instead, organizations we have worked with have been able to capture 2 to 4 percent upside, on average, by shifting to a balanced-portfolio approach, focusing first on the basics, then refining and expanding from there (Exhibit 2).

Five steps to consider

Becoming a data-driven commercial organization is a journey, but there are a few elements that manufacturers may consider putting in place to get started:

  • Evaluate and consider revamp of existing contracts. Manufacturers that have a material portion of sales volume tied up in long-term contracts (longer than six months) may consider recrafting those agreements based on their organization’s goals for growing earnings, improving competitiveness, and optimizing profitability.
  • Get in on AI/ML . Companies may have challenges gaining the pricing intelligence they need without robust data-and-analytics capabilities. leading data scientist teams can develop these models and data pipelines from scratch, and external models are also available for use across industry situations and technology environments.
  • Integrate existing processes. Consider cutting slow-moving steps. Commercial teams at one petrochemical company, for example, used to have to run a gauntlet of meetings involving hundreds of slides to come up with pricing. By integrating insights into user-friendly digital dashboards, the company has lowered pricing response time from days to hours.
  • Say yes to agile teaming . The most effective commercial teams pool expertise from across the business, bringing pricing, analytics, and product specialists together to improve the speed and quality of decision making.
  • Upskill for the future . Portfolio modeling is a data- and analytics-intensive exercise. Many manufacturers may want to augment their capabilities in this area. Manufacturers can inventory their talent pool to find out where reskilling can close the skills gap and where new hires may be needed.

While slower movers may be more at the mercy of market forces, manufacturers that create dynamic portfolios aligned with their risk-and-returns objectives may better set themselves on a path to optimal performance. These are the companies that may find themselves going from playing the odds to turning them in their favor.

Jeff Hart is a senior partner in McKinsey’s Houston office, where RS Mallya Perdur is a partner; Soenke Lehmitz is a senior partner in the Stamford office, and Vaibhav Srivastava is an expert in the Chicago office.

The authors wish to thank Mehmet Baser, Rui Cao, Warren Davis, Kun Lueck, Nicolas Magnette, Wilson McCrory, and Steve Reis for their contributions to this article.

Any action the reader takes in this area may relate to conduct in the marketplace and may, therefore, be governed by antitrust and competition laws of the jurisdictions where the reader’s organization operates. The identified options and our analyses in no way are meant to imply that any steps should be taken contrary to any applicable laws and expect that the reader will undertake its own antitrust analysis to ensure compliance with all applicable laws. McKinsey does not render legal advice; if you have any legal questions relating to the work product we provide, we recommend that you seek legal advice prior to taking action. We emphasize that statements of expectation, forecasts and projections relate to future events and are based on assumptions that may not remain valid for the whole of the relevant period. Consequently, they cannot be relied upon, and we express no opinion as to how closely the actual results achieved will correspond to any statements of expectation, forecasts or projections.

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Pricing during inflation: Active management can preserve sustainable value

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  1. How to write a pricing strategy for my business plan?

    However, here is a list of 9 pricing strategies that you can use for your business plan. Cost-plus pricing. Competitive pricing. Key-Value item pricing. Dynamic pricing. Premium pricing. Hourly based pricing. Customer-value based pricing. Psychological pricing.

  2. Pricing strategy guide: 7 types, examples, & how to choose

    Step 1: Determine your value metric. A " value metric " is essentially what you charge for. For example: per seat, per 1,000 visits, per CPA, per GB used, per transaction, etc. If you get everything else wrong in pricing, but you get your value metric right, you'll do ok. It's that important.

  3. The Ultimate Guide to Pricing Strategies & Models

    Pricing models can be hard to visualize. Below, we've pulled together a list of examples of pricing strategies as they've been applied to everyday situations or businesses. 1. Dynamic Pricing Strategy: Chicago Cubs. I live in Chicago, five blocks away from Wrigley Field, and my friends and I love going to Cubs games.

  4. 5 Most Common Pricing Strategy Examples

    5. Value-based pricing. With this strategy, companies set a price based on what customers are willing to pay for their products or services — in other words, what they perceive as valuable. You can see value-based pricing in luxury products such as leather handbags, automobiles, and high-end makeup brands.

  5. 14 pricing strategies and examples

    Psychological pricing example: Setting the price of a watch at $199 is likely to attract more new customers than setting it at $200, even though the actual price difference is quite small. 6. Bundle pricing. Best for: businesses that make a profit while offering a lower price than competitors.

  6. 16 pricing strategies + examples

    Here's a guide to creating a pricing strategy that will keep your profits moving up and to the right. Table of contents: Why is it important to pick a pricing strategy? 16 common pricing strategies. 4 pricing strategy examples that work. Factors to consider when pricing a product. Tips for setting a pricing strategy that sells. Sell more with ...

  7. Pricing Strategy in a Business Plan: Deep Dive

    Premium Pricing: Setting the price of a product or service higher than the competitors. This strategy is used to signal superior quality or exclusivity to justify the higher cost. Dynamic Pricing: Adjusting prices in real-time based on market demand, competition, and other factors. Common in industries like hospitality and airlines.

  8. Pricing Strategies and Models Explained

    Adjusting prices based on location or region. Example: A software product priced differently for the U.S. versus India. 3. Dynamic pricing model. Prices change based on real-time factors. Example: Uber's surge pricing during high demand. 4. Tiered pricing model. Different prices for varying levels of product features.

  9. 19 Most Common Pricing Strategies for Business in 2024 (with Examples

    Most Common Pricing Strategies: 1. Cost-plus pricing: This strategy involves setting the price of a product or service by adding a markup to the cost of producing it. Examples: A bakery adding a 20% markup to the cost of ingredients when selling a loaf of bread.

  10. How to Write Pricing Strategy for Your Business Plan

    Step 2: Undertake a thorough analysis of the market pricing. Ensure that your pricing strategy is suitable for both internal affairs and market conditions. For instance, if the market you choose is saturated, you must gear up for competition and go for something on the lines of a competitive pricing approach.

  11. 12 Real-World Pricing Strategy Examples

    A pricing strategy is how the seller uses pricing to achieve a certain business objective. It deals with the psychological reaction that a consumer has towards certain kinds of prices. A pricing model, on the other hand, is how the seller goes about implementing the pricing strategy. Pricing models are usually specific and quantitative in nature.

  12. 9 Top pricing strategies with examples and how to choose it?

    Here, we'll examine eight common pricing models, which you can combine with the overall strategy you've chosen for your company. 1. Freemium. Freemium is an extremely common approach to pricing and involves offering a free version of your product with the goal of converting users to a paid plan at a later point.

  13. How To Price A Product: 5-Step Pricing Strategy + Examples

    How To Price A Product In 5 Steps. There are five essential steps to crafting a strong pricing strategy: Step One: Use the most valuable attribute of your product — your value metric — to help define how you scale your price. Step Two: Assess your customer's willingness to pay for the product.; Step Three: Ensure your pricing and packaging strategy will drive growth and revenue.

  14. 19 Pricing Strategies (+ Pricing Strategy Examples)

    1. Keystone Pricing. Keystone pricing is a strategy in which the asking price is double the product's wholesale cost, or close to a 50% profit margin. It's the default pricing strategy across both retail and ecommerce due to its simple application and ability to yield profits.

  15. Essential guide to pricing strategy: how to, types and examples

    Some of the most popular pricing models include hourly, project-based, retainer, and performance-based approaches. The retainer model, for example, is when a business owner charges a monthly fee for a specific amount of time spent on the task or deliverables. Pricing strategy, in contrast, is how the seller utilizes pricing to accomplish ...

  16. Pricing Strategy Examples

    10. Bundle pricing. Bundle pricing is a pricing strategy where a business offers a package deal that includes multiple products or services at a reduced price. The benefits of bundle pricing are that it increases sales and customer loyalty, and it offers more value to consumers.

  17. 11 Pricing strategy examples to increase your profits

    Pricing strategy is not a one-size-fits-all concept; it's a dynamic approach to setting the price of your products or services to achieve specific business goals. Here are the 11 most common pricing strategies: 1. High-low pricing. High-low pricing is a common pricing practice and is also known as price skimming.

  18. Pricing Strategy: Definitions, Types, Examples, & Tactics

    Loss Leader Pricing Strategy. Loss leader pricing is a marketing strategy where one or more retail goods are chosen and sold below cost - at a loss to the retailer - to entice customers. Loss leads are items offered at deeply discounted rates to draw customers into the business. 5. Penetration Pricing Strategy.

  19. The Power of Pricing: How to Create a Pricing Strategy that ...

    A pricing strategy is a strategic plan for how you will price your products or services and earn a profit. The right pricing strategy considers costs, the perceived value of your offering, market research, and a competitive analysis ... If you can manage the pitfalls successfully, freemium pricing can be a great way to grow your business ...

  20. Pricing Strategy Template

    This pricing strategy template is designed to help businesses of all sizes and industries optimize their pricing strategy. By following the step-by-step process outlined in the template, businesses can create a comprehensive and effective plan to their pricing architecture and ensure it is successfuly executed. 1.

  21. Pricing Strategy Plan Template

    The template provides a comprehensive framework to create a plan to set pricing strategies that are tailored to their unique business goals and objectives. With this plan, teams can build and improve pricing strategies that maximize revenue, profitability, and customer retention. 1. Define clear examples of your focus areas.

  22. 5 Pricing Strategy Examples For Different Businesses

    Learn how to use discounted, premium, inverted, competitor and internal pricing strategies to boost your profits and attract customers. See examples of how different businesses apply these strategies and how they affect your perceived value and market position.

  23. Building a Good Pricing Strategy

    A business pricing strategy is a plan that helps companies decide how much to charge for their products or services. This plan affects sales, profits, and customer satisfaction. Different methods exist for setting prices, each with its own advantages and challenges. ... For example, a business offering high-quality items might set higher prices ...

  24. Nine of the best pricing strategies for SMEs

    2. Competitive pricing. This strategy involves setting your price just below your direct competitors' price to attract a higher market share. Example: a nail salon. Goal: to win over their local competition's customers. Strategy: their neighbour charges £45 per manicure, so this salon charges £40.

  25. What Is Tiered Pricing? Types and Best Practices

    Business plan template. Link in bio tool. QR code generator. What's new. Changelog. Your source for recent updates. Summer '24 Edition. The latest 100+ product updates. ... For businesses, a tiered pricing strategy can boost profitability by capturing more market share and encouraging customers to opt for higher-priced tiers. Customers get ...

  26. 11 Business Models

    Choosing the right business model is a critical step for any entrepreneur aiming to build a successful company. The business model not only defines how you deliver value to your customers but also how you capture value for your business. In this comprehensive guide, we'll explore 11 innovative business models that are shaping industries today.

  27. Bucking the odds: An investor approach to portfolio pricing

    Big booms and big drops in core and semi-commodity pricing are now the norm, and everyone, from chemical manufacturers to producers of metal and mining players—is feeling the pinch. Take the example of polyethylene. Commercial teams who signed long-term contracts in 2020 using fixed index-based pricing were squeezed as prices soared by 50 ...