Pricing High Tech Products
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Title: Pricing High Tech Products
Word Count: 876
Author: Phil Morettini
Email: pm@pjmconsult.com
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Pricing High Tech Products
Copyright 2006 PJM Consulting
Pricing is always an interesting topic, but even more so in
the High Tech and Software worlds. In the consumer products
business, if there is a package of frozen peas from Green
Giant that’s priced at $3.99, you’re not likely to see
someone else’s same-size package of peas priced at $14.99.
But in High Tech, things are different.
The pace of innovation in the High Tech world leads to
pricing that’s all over the map. It’s not unusual for a
brand new competitor to come out at a higher price than the
current established market leader—if their product is based
on market-changing advances in product functionality due to
a new technology. This is unheard of in most markets. Then
you have the PC business, where rapid technological
advancement over a long period of time has led to
continuously lower prices—with great benefit to consumers
but squeezing margin (and indeed many competitors) out of
the market. Things move fast in High Tech. Sometimes it’s a
high initial price to harvest profits while you have a
feature advantage, other times aggressive discounting based
upon your lower cost structure due to less expensive
technology. Whatever the case, you can often count on
pricing moves to be dramatic, and to have a profound effect
on High Tech market segment in the long-term.
So what’s the best way to price High Tech products? Is it
best to add up your fixed costs and, allocate them to a
forecasted number of units to ensure you are recovering
your investment? Or is it better to take your variable
product costs and use a standard multiplier derived from
history? Maybe you just set your pricing based on the
prices of your competitors. Or let your customers tell you
what they’re willing to pay. While all of these approaches
have merit and a place in pricing policy, none of them
should be the over-riding factor in your pricing strategy.
So what is the most important factor to consider in
Pricing? The most important thing to focus on in setting
prices is VALUE. What is the value of your product to your
customer as an economic, functional or emotional return?
And how does the customer value the benefits of your
product relative to your competitors?
So let’s talk about the nature of Value. Value is the
underlying need or want that drives a customer to purchase
a High Tech product. If the benefit that the product
provides closely fulfills that want or need at an
acceptable price, you have a sale! The most important
consideration in value-based pricing is to SEGMENT your
market properly prior to the pricing decision.
Segmentation, by definition, is the process of separating
the total addressable market into “buckets” or segments of
potential customers who have similar values, and therefore
will react similarly to a specific offer. What this means
is that once you have divided your marketplace into
appropriate market segments, you will be able to charge
individual segments different prices that are based upon
the perceived value the product provides them. Let's look
at an example of this segmentation approach, marketing a
security software product to Corporate IT departments.
Through your market research you have concluded that the
potential customers with the highest pain threshold for the
particular security problem you are solving are banks. By
adding only a few banking-specific features to build a
“fence” around this market segment, you may be able to
charge a price for a banking-specific version of your
product that far exceeds what other segments might pay. If
you extend this model to multiple segments and do it
properly, this approach will lead to far higher total
revenue than if you set just one price for the entire
market. The process of establishing value for each market
segment, pricing to full value and communicating that value
to the marketplace is the essence of Value-based pricing.
Finally it’s important also to remember that pricing
actions should not be done in a vacuum. Pricing is one of
the 4Ps of marketing, and all four are inter-related. You
cannot properly price a product without at the same time
considering the features and benefits of the product, as
well as how it will be promoted and distributed. The price
for an Internet-distributed software product will almost
certainly need to be in a lower range than one distributed
via a sophisticated direct sales force or VAR channel. And
if you aren’t going to have much of a promotional budget,
you most likely will need to be a price leader to have any
chance of being successful. If your product is at a
perceived value deficit, your price relative to the market
leader will probably need to be aggressive. I’m sure you
get the picture.
Pricing is a complex topic that many books have been
written about. This post is meant to be an introduction to
pricing in the High Tech world, and to get you thinking. I
hope it’s been helpful. So when your next new product comes
out, you’ll look a little harder before just pulling a
price out of the air.
About the Author:
Phil Morettini is President of PJM Consulting, a Managment
Consultancy to Software and High Tech Companies. PJM
Consulting executes special projects in General Management,
Product Marketing, M&A, Distribution Channels and Business
Development. You can contact Phil on the PJM Consulting
Website (www.pjmconsult.com/data/services.htm).
Additional articles available at
www.pjmconsult.com/philsblog.html
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