4 min

Charm Pricing: Why Over 60% of Prices End in the Number 9 Voice Marketing with Emily Binder

    • Marketing

The alluring thing about 99-cent pricing (known as charm pricing) is that it feels like a sale price. It's a game stores have played with us for decades. Learn about charm pricing, the anchor effect of a price ending in 9 or 99, and whether it's right for your product or service.
Topics:
Charm pricing: higher prices ending in a "9" will actually outperform lower prices – on the very same product (typically)Vanity pricing for considered purchases (HNW or luxury goods)5s are not good. $5000 is especially bad. #anecdotalHow to know if your brand aligns with charm pricing or vanity pricingHistoric marketing inspiration story: the successful marketing strategy that launched the Chicago Daily News for 1 cent in 1875 even though there weren't enough pennies in circulation
ThinkersOne videos:
Buy a personalized video greeting for your team or a Zoom drop-in or keynote on ThinkersOne:
https://thinkersone.com/collections/featured-though-leaders/products/emily-binder?variant=41990647480488
Rate / review / subscribe to this show as a podcast or Alexa Flash Briefing: emilybinder.com/podcast
Follow me/connect:
My website | LinkedIn | Twitter | Instagram | TikTok | YouTube | Get email updates


Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

The alluring thing about 99-cent pricing (known as charm pricing) is that it feels like a sale price. It's a game stores have played with us for decades. Learn about charm pricing, the anchor effect of a price ending in 9 or 99, and whether it's right for your product or service.
Topics:
Charm pricing: higher prices ending in a "9" will actually outperform lower prices – on the very same product (typically)Vanity pricing for considered purchases (HNW or luxury goods)5s are not good. $5000 is especially bad. #anecdotalHow to know if your brand aligns with charm pricing or vanity pricingHistoric marketing inspiration story: the successful marketing strategy that launched the Chicago Daily News for 1 cent in 1875 even though there weren't enough pennies in circulation
ThinkersOne videos:
Buy a personalized video greeting for your team or a Zoom drop-in or keynote on ThinkersOne:
https://thinkersone.com/collections/featured-though-leaders/products/emily-binder?variant=41990647480488
Rate / review / subscribe to this show as a podcast or Alexa Flash Briefing: emilybinder.com/podcast
Follow me/connect:
My website | LinkedIn | Twitter | Instagram | TikTok | YouTube | Get email updates


Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

4 min