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Why You Should Never Discount Your Prices

Article Description:
====================

It seems like such an easy fix: "25% off!" "Buy now and I'll reduce the price 
by $100!" Discounting as a selling tactic seems as natural and easy as all 
get-out.  Which is why you should never, ever discount.  Discounting is a 
cancer in business, that eats at your heart, and at the heart of your customers.


Additional Article Information:
===============================

875 Words; formatted to 65 Characters per Line
Distribution Date and Time: 2008-04-23 11:36:00

Written By:     Mark Silver
Copyright:      2006-2008
Contact Email:  mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]



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Why You Should Never Discount Your Prices
Copyright (c) 2006-2008 Mark Silver
Heart Of Business
http://www.heartofbusiness.com/



It seems like such an easy fix: "25% off!" "Buy now and I'll
reduce the price by $100!" Discounting as a selling tactic seems
as natural and easy as all get-out.

Which is why you should never, ever discount.

Discounting is a cancer in business, that eats at your heart, and
at the heart of your customers. It is smoke and mirrors.

"Good ol' Wal-Mart. That multi-billion dollar global company,
which is the discounter of all discounters. They started with
good in their heart. Sam Walton looked around him and saw lots of
great things he thought 'the little guy' should have. Why
should only the rich have luxuries, now that our great industrial
society can produce so much so easily?"

It's a good intention. Unfortunately, this focus on low prices
has done incalculable damage to our economies, to our health
care, and to the way we use resources. 'Inexpensive' has come
to mean 'cheap' which has come to mean 'disposable.'

Which has come to mean huge landfills and global warming, among
other things.

Is discounting really that much of a demon? Surely, just taking
some money off the top of your prices doesn't mean you're
contributing to the environmental, economic and political
collapse of the globe?

Not exactly. But let's look at what discounting means, and what
it does.

Discounting assumes that:

1. The difference in price between your 'regular' price and the
discounted price is what is stopping your customer from buying;

2. It's worth it to acquire a customer whose most important
consideration is how cheap your offer is.

Customers hesitate for a number of reasons, which all boil down
to: does this offer really work, and will it get me the results
that I need?

Discounting your prices means that instead of addressing this
question head-on, you are trying to cover up with smoke and
mirrors. 'Sure it works... but don't look too closely, and
I'll take some money off the top for you.'

You may not be doing this consciously, and certainly not with any
ill intent, but all the same this is the set up.

What you are really trying to do: help someone get help sooner
rather than later.

Your offer helps someone with a struggle they have. The sooner
the right people get your product, the sooner their struggle is
over. Understanding that your intention is to get what you offer
to the right people sooner, in order to alleviate suffering,
well, that's a good intention, isn't it?

Now it's not about smoke and mirrors, but about urgency. One of
the ways to help someone purchase sooner rather than later is to
offer them a good deal. But not by discounting.

People love a good deal. Is there any way to offer a good deal
without discounting?


Keys to the Offer They Can't Refuse

* Understand the difference between a discount and a good deal.

A discount is when you lower the price for the sole purpose of
trying to increase sales. It's a strong-arm tactic that often
signals desperation- and as such, it actually decreases trust
between you and your customer.

There are good reasons to have a lower price. For instance, one
company I buy from every month gives me a discount once a year on
the anniversary of my first purchase, equivalent to the number of
years I've been a customer times 10%. After ten years I'll get
that month's purchase free. But that's not a discount in order
to get me to buy- it's a thank you and appreciation given to me
after a buy. A subtle, but important difference.

* You can announce price rises in advance.

Early-bird and early registration pricing, where you offer a
lower price up until a certain date, is not a discount, because
you aren't just giving away money, but there is an advantage to
you. For me, having classes fill several weeks in advance before
the start date means that I have much less to do at the last
minute. That's worth charging a lower price. I charge more after
the early-registration deadline because it represents more work
for me.

This is similar to a pre-launch price. Someone who buys your
products before they exist is showing a great deal of trust and
faith in you, and you benefit in many ways by having someone
purchase ahead of time. That's makes the lower price worth it.

* Cheese, please. Offer bonuses.

You may think bonuses are a cheesy thing to offer, but what if
your favorite cafe offered you a free cookie with each fancy
coffee drink you bought? Would that help you to choose their cafe
over someone else's? If I liked the coffee and the cookie, it
would get me nearly every time.

Bonuses work because they show generosity, because they can
enhance the experience of the original product, and because you
can offer them at very little cost to your business. A good bonus
can be a simple thing, as long as it's valuable.

Have fun creating a great offer that's also a good deal for your
customers. But don't discount, or you'll be giving away the
trust you've been working so hard to build with them.

My very best to you and your business,

Mark Silver




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Mark Silver is the author of Unveiling the Heart of Your 
Business: How Money, Marketing and Sales can Deepen Your 
Heart, Heal the World, and Still Add to Your Bottom Line. 
He has helped hundreds of small business owners around 
the globe succeed in business without losing their 
hearts. Get three free chapters of the book online: 
http://www.heartofbusiness.com



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