I've moved my price around, from low to high, from high to low, and I've 
never gotten anyone complaining yet. I think a big plus to Android Market 
is actually that once a user has purchased an app, they can no longer see 
it's price :) So they can't come back later and bitch about it if you drop 
the price and they had just bought it at a higher price the day before. The 
guy that saw yours must have been watching for a while (didn't actually own 
the app yet).

-niko

On Monday, January 28, 2013 6:45:51 PM UTC-6, Nathan wrote:
>
> I often hear it said in certain forums: In choosing your price start high, 
> because you can easily lower your price, and you can't really raise it.
>
> While I do agree with the first two parts, I am not as sure about the 
> third. After all, no one is stopping you. 
>
> I have pondered the question whether there is a psychological barrier 
> between, say, $9.99 and $10.99. 
> I tried that last week. I have no way to truly isolate the change, of 
> course, so I cannot say whether it has made a difference. Revenue seems 
> fine. 
>
> Has anyone noticed? Well, just one user felt the need to send me a note: 
> *Nice price raise. Was about to buy but no thanks now :shady:*
>
> If I take his word for it, this person makes more in a week than I make in 
> a year ( no, I don't know how he got access to my tax returns). 
> So in the opinion of one multimillionaire, changing a price is a shady 
> business practice. I resisted the urge to say "Well, you should have 
> grabbed while it was still on sale!"
>
> In IOS, more people might notice, since there are whole websites and 
> twitter accounts devoted to tracking price changes in the AppStore. 
>
> But chances are that this tycoon will be the only person who notices and 
> bothers to send me hate mail. And I can't stay in business planning for 
> everyone to like me, so I wasn't planning for this to deter me. 
>
> Two weeks from now, few if any people encountering the product for the 
> first time will ever know that it was priced at $9.99 for two and a half 
> years. 
>
> So I am really more focused on whether the price itself is right and not 
> so much on whether a price change is dangerous. Certainly users are not 
> rational when it comes to price, and a price that looks bigger. 
>
> I still think it is a good idea to start high ( I did) and ideal to never 
> change the price in either direction, but I am open to the possibility of 
> changes after the fact. Besides changing the base price, price moves 
> through in app purchases or related apps can be ways of bringing in more 
> revenue.  
>
> What's everyone else's thoughts?
>     
> This is an app that requires an ever increasing investment and not one 
> that we finished a long time ago and never touch.  
>
> Nathan 
>
>

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