Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

.00 or .95 or .99 pricing

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

    .00 or .95 or .99 pricing



    ------=_NextPart_000_0284_01C3E684.0298DD70
    Content-Type: text/plain;
    charset="us-ascii"
    Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

    Any thoughts on whether having prices ending in .99 vs rounding to the
    nearest dollar actually makes a difference to consumers?
    When something is $19.99, any reason not to make it an even $20?


    ------=_NextPart_000_0284_01C3E684.0298DD70--

    #2
    .00 or .95 or .99 pricing



    Actually I heard the story as a marketing ploy. They could advertise
    "Under $10.00" and have the item listed as $9.99 or $9.95 etc.
    Supposedly, some marketing genius believed it is a subconscious thing
    that a consumer is less likely to buy the same item at $10.00, than at
    $9.99 or $9.95 - as the logic goes "its less than 10 bucks"...so its not
    as expensive.

    I think there is actually some validity to that.

    Vic Vega
    WolfPaw Computers
    Miva Merchant Hosting Specialists
    "Put the power of the pack to work for you!"(sm)
    Ph: 1 (866) WOLFPAW
    www.wpcomp.com


    -----Original Message-----
    From: [email protected]
    [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Adam
    Sent: Thursday, January 29, 2004 8:18 PM
    To: [email protected]
    Subject: Re: [mru] .00 or .95 or .99 pricing


    A lot of people wonder why the price of things is always xx.99 or xx.95
    instead of just an even amount.

    The story I once heard goes that in times past (and prior to sales tax)
    when everyone paid for things in cash, store owners did this
    deliberately
    so that cashiers would be required to take a customer's money, open the
    register and make change as opposed to simply accepting an exact dollar
    amount and being able to quietly slip it in their pocket. Anyone else
    ever
    heard of this? It's possible I dreamed it.

    Then eventually having things priced that way became so commonplace that
    to
    do it any other way just seemed odd no matter the medium or payment
    method. I think seeing round numbers just kind of freaks people out.
    When
    Mt. Everest had it's height calculated for the first time using the old
    methods, they found the height to be exactly 29,000 feet. The first
    measuring party figured no one would believe that they'd actually gone
    and
    measured it if they presented such a figure so they deliberately lowered
    it
    by 4 feet to 28,996. Later tests showed it to actually be a couple
    dozen
    feet taller.

    A. <~~ bottomless trivia abyss

    At 01/29/2004, you wrote:
    >Any thoughts on whether having prices ending in .99 vs rounding to the
    >nearest dollar actually makes a difference to consumers? When something

    >is $19.99, any reason not to make it an even $20?
    >


    Comment


      #3
      .00 or .95 or .99 pricing



      I have all my prices ending in .95 , maybe I should raise it 4 cents.
      Had I done that in December, I would have made an extra $32

      -----Original Message-----
      From: [email protected]
      [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of WolfPaw Computers -
      Miva List
      Sent: Thursday, January 29, 2004 5:46 PM
      To: 'Adam'; [email protected]
      Subject: RE: [mru] .00 or .95 or .99 pricing


      Actually I heard the story as a marketing ploy. They could advertise
      "Under $10.00" and have the item listed as $9.99 or $9.95 etc.
      Supposedly, some marketing genius believed it is a subconscious thing
      that a consumer is less likely to buy the same item at $10.00, than at
      $9.99 or $9.95 - as the logic goes "its less than 10 bucks"...so its not
      as expensive.

      I think there is actually some validity to that.

      Vic Vega
      WolfPaw Computers
      Miva Merchant Hosting Specialists
      "Put the power of the pack to work for you!"(sm)
      Ph: 1 (866) WOLFPAW
      www.wpcomp.com


      -----Original Message-----
      From: [email protected]
      [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Adam
      Sent: Thursday, January 29, 2004 8:18 PM
      To: [email protected]
      Subject: Re: [mru] .00 or .95 or .99 pricing


      A lot of people wonder why the price of things is always xx.99 or xx.95
      instead of just an even amount.

      The story I once heard goes that in times past (and prior to sales tax)
      when everyone paid for things in cash, store owners did this
      deliberately
      so that cashiers would be required to take a customer's money, open the
      register and make change as opposed to simply accepting an exact dollar
      amount and being able to quietly slip it in their pocket. Anyone else
      ever
      heard of this? It's possible I dreamed it.

      Then eventually having things priced that way became so commonplace that
      to
      do it any other way just seemed odd no matter the medium or payment
      method. I think seeing round numbers just kind of freaks people out.
      When
      Mt. Everest had it's height calculated for the first time using the old
      methods, they found the height to be exactly 29,000 feet. The first
      measuring party figured no one would believe that they'd actually gone
      and
      measured it if they presented such a figure so they deliberately lowered
      it
      by 4 feet to 28,996. Later tests showed it to actually be a couple
      dozen
      feet taller.

      A. <~~ bottomless trivia abyss

      At 01/29/2004, you wrote:
      >Any thoughts on whether having prices ending in .99 vs rounding to the
      >nearest dollar actually makes a difference to consumers? When something

      >is $19.99, any reason not to make it an even $20?
      >


      Comment


        #4
        .00 or .95 or .99 pricing



        Here's a link to a very interesting study done by Ohio State University, on
        people's perceptions when choosing a .99 or .00 cost item.
        <A HREF ="http://www.beesource.com/news/article/99or00.htm">http://www.beesource.com/news/article/99or00.htm</A>

        Allan

        ----------------------------------------------------
        - Merchant 4 Training Videos -
        Pixel Composer Productions
        <A HREF ="http://www.pixelcomposer.com">http://www.pixelcomposer.com</A>
        Merchant 4 Videos on CD-ROM
        Graphics Paks and Miva Themes
        ----------------------------------------------------

        At 04:21 PM 01/29/2004 -0800, mandeep janda wrote:
        >Any thoughts on whether having prices ending in .99 vs rounding to the
        >nearest dollar actually makes a difference to consumers?
        >When something is $19.99, any reason not to make it an even $20?
        >


        Comment


          #5
          .00 or .95 or .99 pricing



          A lot of people wonder why the price of things is always xx.99 or xx.95
          instead of just an even amount.

          The story I once heard goes that in times past (and prior to sales tax)
          when everyone paid for things in cash, store owners did this deliberately
          so that cashiers would be required to take a customer's money, open the
          register and make change as opposed to simply accepting an exact dollar
          amount and being able to quietly slip it in their pocket. Anyone else ever
          heard of this? It's possible I dreamed it.

          Then eventually having things priced that way became so commonplace that to
          do it any other way just seemed odd no matter the medium or payment
          method. I think seeing round numbers just kind of freaks people out. When
          Mt. Everest had it's height calculated for the first time using the old
          methods, they found the height to be exactly 29,000 feet. The first
          measuring party figured no one would believe that they'd actually gone and
          measured it if they presented such a figure so they deliberately lowered it
          by 4 feet to 28,996. Later tests showed it to actually be a couple dozen
          feet taller.

          A. <~~ bottomless trivia abyss

          At 01/29/2004, you wrote:
          >Any thoughts on whether having prices ending in .99 vs rounding to the
          >nearest dollar actually makes a difference to consumers?
          >When something is $19.99, any reason not to make it an even $20?
          >


          Comment


            #6
            .00 or .95 or .99 pricing



            There was also a study done by the Harvard Business Review (sorry, its paid for content)
            that basically concluded that .99 prices where definitely effective...go figure.

            -Bruce
            ......................................
            PHOSPHOR Media
            Featuring: StoreMan - A smarter way to manage Miva Merchant(tm) Store Content.
            Download a hassle-free demo today
            <A HREF ="http://www.phosphormedia.com/go.mv?ID=listsm">http://www.phosphormedia.com/go.mv?ID=listsm</A>
            ......................................


            > -----Original Message-----
            > From: [email protected]
            > [mailto:[email protected]]On Behalf Of PixelComposer
            > Productions
            > Sent: Thursday, January 29, 2004 6:03 PM
            > To: mandeep janda; [email protected]
            > Subject: Re: [mru] .00 or .95 or .99 pricing
            >
            >
            > Here's a link to a very interesting study done by Ohio State University, on
            > people's perceptions when choosing a .99 or .00 cost item.
            > <A HREF ="http://www.beesource.com/news/article/99or00.htm">http://www.beesource.com/news/article/99or00.htm</A>
            >
            > Allan
            >
            > ----------------------------------------------------
            > - Merchant 4 Training Videos -
            > Pixel Composer Productions
            > <A HREF ="http://www.pixelcomposer.com">http://www.pixelcomposer.com</A>
            > Merchant 4 Videos on CD-ROM
            > Graphics Paks and Miva Themes
            > ----------------------------------------------------
            >
            > At 04:21 PM 01/29/2004 -0800, mandeep janda wrote:
            > >Any thoughts on whether having prices ending in .99 vs rounding to the
            > >nearest dollar actually makes a difference to consumers?
            > >When something is $19.99, any reason not to make it an even $20?
            > >
            >
            >

            Comment


              #7
              PAY PER CLICK TRACKING - make a module please!



              I've resorted to ridiculous measures to accurately track payperclik. I wish
              someone would come out with a module and let me beta test it, or come out
              with a package that really tracks things in the way that is needed to track
              this stuff, clickthrough, buythrough, etc.

              Just to give you an idea, we spend thousands a month in PPC ads, and we use
              all of the major services, Google, overture, kanoodle, ah-ha, findwhat,
              looksmart, etc.

              I am still using a combination of Copernicus's tracking, urchin, hand
              monitoring, and now Affiliate manager. Each of them has their own problems.
              I can't get an accurate sort or filter by certain date periods of activity.
              Or I can't get a true clickthrough on a specific source= or page hit
              scenario. Or I have to wait until the end of the month to find out if it
              worked properly, and they all have too large of variances for me to believe
              that they do.

              The cost on this module has to be justified by a month rate that it takes me
              to put together a report, not by a percentage of what I spend. I spent $80
              on the Affiliate Manager, and don't mind the output there. My point is, none
              of these things have something that *reports* or exports so that I can
              analyze the information alongside my budget.

              I'm tired of buying modules, and the Qwtracker is too expenisive at this
              point to try it out and find out it has the same problems. A trial would be
              nice, or any of the module developers that I listed maybe you want some
              input into more features for effective tracking.
              Thanks for listening to my frustrated rants.


              Comment


                #8
                .00 or .95 or .99 pricing





                okay, but is there any difference between, say, 49.95, 49.98, and 49.99? And
                don't say "yeah, a few pennies..." :-)





                > -----Original Message-----
                > From: [email protected]
                > [mailto:[email protected]]On Behalf Of PixelComposer
                > Productions
                > Sent: Thursday, January 29, 2004 9:03 PM
                > To: mandeep janda; [email protected]
                > Subject: Re: [mru] .00 or .95 or .99 pricing
                >
                >
                > Here's a link to a very interesting study done by Ohio State
                > University, on
                > people's perceptions when choosing a .99 or .00 cost item.
                > <A HREF ="http://www.beesource.com/news/article/99or00.htm">http://www.beesource.com/news/article/99or00.htm</A>
                >
                > Allan
                >
                > ----------------------------------------------------
                > - Merchant 4 Training Videos -
                > Pixel Composer Productions
                > <A HREF ="http://www.pixelcomposer.com">http://www.pixelcomposer.com</A>
                > Merchant 4 Videos on CD-ROM
                > Graphics Paks and Miva Themes
                > ----------------------------------------------------
                >
                > At 04:21 PM 01/29/2004 -0800, mandeep janda wrote:
                > >Any thoughts on whether having prices ending in .99 vs rounding to the
                > >nearest dollar actually makes a difference to consumers?
                > >When something is $19.99, any reason not to make it an even $20?
                > >
                >
                >

                Comment


                  #9
                  .00 or .95 or .99 pricing



                  I think so... I prefer to buy gasoline at service stations that sell gas at a
                  price ending in 9. I think it's something like $1.529 per gallon right now. :)
                  :)

                  Tom

                  > -----Original Message-----
                  > From: [email protected]
                  > [mailto:[email protected]]On Behalf Of WolfPaw Computers -
                  > Miva List
                  > Sent: Thursday, January 29, 2004 7:46 PM
                  > To: 'Adam'; [email protected]
                  > Subject: RE: [mru] .00 or .95 or .99 pricing
                  >
                  >
                  > Actually I heard the story as a marketing ploy. They could advertise
                  > "Under $10.00" and have the item listed as $9.99 or $9.95 etc.
                  > Supposedly, some marketing genius believed it is a subconscious thing
                  > that a consumer is less likely to buy the same item at $10.00, than at
                  > $9.99 or $9.95 - as the logic goes "its less than 10 bucks"...so its not
                  > as expensive.
                  >
                  > I think there is actually some validity to that.
                  >
                  > Vic Vega
                  > WolfPaw Computers
                  > Miva Merchant Hosting Specialists
                  > "Put the power of the pack to work for you!"(sm)
                  > Ph: 1 (866) WOLFPAW
                  > www.wpcomp.com
                  >
                  >
                  > -----Original Message-----
                  > From: [email protected]
                  > [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Adam
                  > Sent: Thursday, January 29, 2004 8:18 PM
                  > To: [email protected]
                  > Subject: Re: [mru] .00 or .95 or .99 pricing
                  >
                  >
                  > A lot of people wonder why the price of things is always xx.99 or xx.95
                  > instead of just an even amount.
                  >
                  > The story I once heard goes that in times past (and prior to sales tax)
                  > when everyone paid for things in cash, store owners did this
                  > deliberately
                  > so that cashiers would be required to take a customer's money, open the
                  > register and make change as opposed to simply accepting an exact dollar
                  > amount and being able to quietly slip it in their pocket. Anyone else
                  > ever
                  > heard of this? It's possible I dreamed it.
                  >
                  > Then eventually having things priced that way became so commonplace that
                  > to
                  > do it any other way just seemed odd no matter the medium or payment
                  > method. I think seeing round numbers just kind of freaks people out.
                  > When
                  > Mt. Everest had it's height calculated for the first time using the old
                  > methods, they found the height to be exactly 29,000 feet. The first
                  > measuring party figured no one would believe that they'd actually gone
                  > and
                  > measured it if they presented such a figure so they deliberately lowered
                  > it
                  > by 4 feet to 28,996. Later tests showed it to actually be a couple
                  > dozen
                  > feet taller.
                  >
                  > A. <~~ bottomless trivia abyss
                  >
                  > At 01/29/2004, you wrote:
                  > >Any thoughts on whether having prices ending in .99 vs rounding to the
                  > >nearest dollar actually makes a difference to consumers? When something
                  >
                  > >is $19.99, any reason not to make it an even $20?
                  > >
                  >
                  >

                  Comment


                    #10
                    .00 or .95 or .99 pricing



                    At the company I used to work for, we used to adjust the prices for
                    internal use and use them as codes. For example, all the products ended
                    in .99 but if it ended in .98, we knew it was "on sale" (we did those
                    by hand and didn't use a module). Keep in mind that you can search for
                    prices in the MIVA admin, so if you type in .98 in the search in the
                    product admin, then we would see anything we discounted.

                    --
                    Kevin P Murphy
                    Web Designer
                    Stubborn Donkey Productions
                    <A HREF ="http://www.stubborndonkey.com">http://www.stubborndonkey.com</A>

                    On Jan 29, 2004, at 6:29 PM, Bruce - PHOSPHOR Media wrote:

                    > There was also a study done by the Harvard Business Review (sorry, its
                    > paid for content)
                    > that basically concluded that .99 prices where definitely
                    > effective...go figure.
                    >
                    > -Bruce
                    > ......................................
                    > PHOSPHOR Media
                    > Featuring: StoreMan - A smarter way to manage Miva Merchant(tm) Store
                    > Content.
                    > Download a hassle-free demo today
                    > <A HREF ="http://www.phosphormedia.com/go.mv?ID=listsm">http://www.phosphormedia.com/go.mv?ID=listsm</A>
                    > ......................................
                    >
                    >
                    >> -----Original Message-----
                    >> From: [email protected]
                    >> [mailto:[email protected]]On Behalf Of PixelComposer
                    >> Productions
                    >> Sent: Thursday, January 29, 2004 6:03 PM
                    >> To: mandeep janda; [email protected]
                    >> Subject: Re: [mru] .00 or .95 or .99 pricing
                    >>
                    >>
                    >> Here's a link to a very interesting study done by Ohio State
                    >> University, on
                    >> people's perceptions when choosing a .99 or .00 cost item.
                    >> <A HREF ="http://www.beesource.com/news/article/99or00.htm">http://www.beesource.com/news/article/99or00.htm</A>
                    >>
                    >> Allan
                    >>
                    >> ----------------------------------------------------
                    >> - Merchant 4 Training Videos -
                    >> Pixel Composer Productions
                    >> <A HREF ="http://www.pixelcomposer.com">http://www.pixelcomposer.com</A>
                    >> Merchant 4 Videos on CD-ROM
                    >> Graphics Paks and Miva Themes
                    >> ----------------------------------------------------
                    >>
                    >> At 04:21 PM 01/29/2004 -0800, mandeep janda wrote:
                    >>> Any thoughts on whether having prices ending in .99 vs rounding to
                    >>> the
                    >>> nearest dollar actually makes a difference to consumers?
                    >>> When something is $19.99, any reason not to make it an even $20?
                    >>>
                    >>
                    >>

                    Comment


                      #11
                      PAY PER CLICK TRACKING - make a module please!



                      I have to agree.

                      I bought a couple of modules - one being Qwtracker - and have only used
                      it once.

                      Michelle
                      www.invitationhaven.com
                      We create your personalized photo announcement or invitation to be a
                      gift and become a lasting memory


                      -----Original Message-----
                      From: [email protected]
                      [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Slinky
                      Sent: Thursday, January 29, 2004 9:19 PM
                      To: [email protected]
                      Subject: [mru] PAY PER CLICK TRACKING - make a module please!

                      I've resorted to ridiculous measures to accurately track payperclik. I
                      wish
                      someone would come out with a module and let me beta test it, or come
                      out
                      with a package that really tracks things in the way that is needed to
                      track
                      this stuff, clickthrough, buythrough, etc.

                      Just to give you an idea, we spend thousands a month in PPC ads, and we
                      use
                      all of the major services, Google, overture, kanoodle, ah-ha, findwhat,
                      looksmart, etc.

                      I am still using a combination of Copernicus's tracking, urchin, hand
                      monitoring, and now Affiliate manager. Each of them has their own
                      problems.
                      I can't get an accurate sort or filter by certain date periods of
                      activity.
                      Or I can't get a true clickthrough on a specific source= or page hit
                      scenario. Or I have to wait until the end of the month to find out if it
                      worked properly, and they all have too large of variances for me to
                      believe
                      that they do.

                      The cost on this module has to be justified by a month rate that it
                      takes me
                      to put together a report, not by a percentage of what I spend. I spent
                      $80
                      on the Affiliate Manager, and don't mind the output there. My point is,
                      none
                      of these things have something that *reports* or exports so that I can
                      analyze the information alongside my budget.

                      I'm tired of buying modules, and the Qwtracker is too expenisive at this
                      point to try it out and find out it has the same problems. A trial would
                      be
                      nice, or any of the module developers that I listed maybe you want some
                      input into more features for effective tracking.
                      Thanks for listening to my frustrated rants.


                      Comment


                        #12
                        .00 or .95 or .99 pricing



                        The .99 thing was intended to be a psychological thing that makes people
                        feel that the price is less than it really is. As Bruce indicated, there
                        still seem to be support for this in marketing research papers. Heck it
                        even works on most of us... Something for $9.95 is more likely to be
                        perceived as costing $9 and change than $10. If someone asks, you are
                        likely to say $9 or $9 and change or even $9.99 when it is just as easy to
                        say $10, and even more appropriate considering that the sales tax will make
                        it over $10.

                        The article that Allan sent in his post is quite supported by research as
                        well. The caveat is that restaurants are individualistic as in a burger
                        from one place is never regarded as a burger from another, let alone real
                        food. So this works nicely in the restaurant world to communicate quality.
                        It works also in naturally pricey places since the .99 can be perceived as
                        quite stupid. In industries that are less elastic, the psychological effect
                        of the $9.99 vs. $10 is very applicable. As Marv mentioned, there seem to
                        be a particular penny figure that fits well with your crowd, and that should
                        be experimented with and adjusted. One client found that pricing an item at
                        $72.86 made him the most money. It was an imported item and it was
                        perceived as the "accurate" price based on the exchange rate. Never mind
                        that the price was $72.86 for many years ;-)

                        FWIW, there are other benefits for the .99 outside of the powerful
                        psychological perception of value. Discounts and coupons are often created
                        with a full dollar amount as minimum. "20% off offer: $10 off $50" makes
                        the customer motivated to by the $59.97 item and get the $10 since the
                        $49.99 is not eligible. You end up selling a higher ticket item for a less
                        % discount.

                        =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
                        Miva HeLp! <A HREF ="http://www.mivahelp.com">http://www.mivahelp.com</A>
                        E-commerce for the rest of us; Tutorials, articles, and tips
                        Search available modules at http://mivahelp.mvcentral.com/
                        =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=


                        > Any thoughts on whether having prices ending in .99 vs rounding to the
                        > nearest dollar actually makes a difference to consumers?
                        > When something is $19.99, any reason not to make it an even $20?


                        Comment

                        Working...
                        X