What's your pricing strategy? A look at high-low pricing

Posted by Ksenia Shuvakina on September 1, 2015
Ksenia Shuvakina
High-low pricing is a type of pricing strategy adopted by companies, usually small to medium sized retail firms. The basic type of customers for the firms adopting high-low price will not have a clear idea about what a product's price would typically be or have a strong belief that "discount sales = low price." Customers for firms adopting this type of strategy also have a strong preference in purchasing the products sold in this type or by this certain firm. They are loyal to a specific brand.

High-low pricing is the practice of setting the price of most products higher than the market rate, while offering a small number of products at below-market prices. By doing so, a retail or web store location hopes to attract customers with its low-price offerings, at which point they will also buy some of the high-price items. The seller hopes that the net effect of this strategy is to increase overall profitability, despite sometimes incurring losses on the few low-priced items. 

 

 

The low-price items are not usually set permanently at a lower price. Instead, coupons and other promotions are used to reduce prices to low levels for short periods of time. By doing so, management can shift low pricing among different products, which may attract different customers or attract the same customers to shop at the store multiple times. Thus, the use of low prices is an ongoing marketing technique.

 

Advantages:

  • Profit increase. When properly implemented, the high-low technique can yield substantial profits; but only if customers buy multiple additional items that are fully priced.
  • Marketing. The high-low method essentially becomes the marketing method for the business, since it must constantly advertise a selection of low-price items.

 

Disadvantages:

  • Risk of loss. If a business does not place its low-price items properly, or is dealing with price-sensitive shoppers, it may find that it loses money on its low-price promotions.
  • Customer loyalty. If customers become aware that the bulk of the products offered by a business are higher than the market rate, they will be more likely to shift their spending loyalties elsewhere.
  • Marketing cost. It can be expensive to run a perpetual series of marketing campaigns to tout the latest low prices.

 

The high-low pricing method is widely used, but discerning shoppers in the Internet era are more capable of spotting lower-priced items elsewhere, and so will only buy the low-price items and will avoid the high-price items. Also, a business that persistently offers high prices on the bulk of its products will not garner much customer loyalty. Competitors that use everyday low pricing for all of their products can compete effectively against this strategy.

 

Check out the other articles in this series:

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