By Sharon Lee
Good branding enables you
to charge more for your product.
The fundamental rule of pricing tells us that the price charged for a product must match the value consumers perceive they are getting from that product. Great branding enables businesses to sell their products at premium prices.
Why? Because buyers
will pay a high price tag when they perceive the product to be
worth it.
If all brands were new and they all launched
new products on the same day, all of those products would have the same
value perception in buyers’ minds—there hasn’t been time to build brand
value perceptions.
Of course, each brand has its own unique tangible differentiators, but the intangible ones that lead consumers to become emotionally connected to brands take time to communicate and demonstrate consistently and persistently.
With that said, it’s easy for brands to price products according to tangible differentiators. For example, a n 8K television will have a higher price tag than a television with lesser UHD capabilities.
These types of
tangible differentiators can cause price differences across different
brands in the same category as well as across different products under
the same brand umbrella if that brand has launched extensions within the
same category. For example, an iPad with 5G connectivity can sell at a higher price than an iPad with narrower bandwidth connectivity.
Think of pricing strategy as it pertains to brand value in terms of buyer “reference prices”—each consumer views a brand and its associated price tag in comparison to other brands and products available to them.
Those other brands and products create a frame of reference for the buyer, and the buyer tries to fit each brand into a comfortable position in their mind, based on that frame of reference.
Brands and
products with pricing that doesn’t fit well into that frame of reference
are typically not even considered when it comes time for the consumer
to make a purchase because they don’t make sense.
When
creating a frame of reference for brands in a specific category, buyers
consider a variety of factors to fit each brand into a position such as
competitor prices, past experiences with brands in the category, past
pricing experiences in the category, tangible differentiators (such as
features), and perception—it’s the perceptions part of reference prices
that gives brands the opportunities to set prices based on intangible
differentiators. In other words, buyer perceptions enable brands to
compete on more than price alone.
Let’s face it, if price were the only factor that mattered in purchase decisions, everything we buy would be a lot cheaper and everyone would buy the same brands and products.
Price is just one part of brand value and purchase decisions. The challenge for marketers is finding the right price point to achieve maximum sales without damaging buyers’ perceptions of the brand’s overall value.
Any brand can compete on
price. Successful brands don’t rely on pricing alone, but that doesn’t
mean pricing strategy isn’t important. On the contrary, striking the
right balance between profits, brand value, and consumer perceptions of
the brand is an ongoing process.
Thanks for reading—I hope you enjoyed this post.
If so, please leave me a comment and let me know why.
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