i'm disappointed this made it to the top of the front page yesterday with such little criticism. it feels like something written by an intelligent yet naïve marketing undergrad, not something on which to base pricing strategy.
> "You should avoid charging different prices based on past behavior, demographics, or any other factor besides natural supply and demand."
wow. what an incredibly stupid recommendation. based on this, every major grocery chain should terminate their loyalty card program, many luxury products/services should never see the light of day, and perhaps the rest of us should just start businesses in perfectly competitive markets with little hope of long-term economic profit.
an aside: searching for "you should avoid" led me to another incredibly naïve recommendation: "you shouldn’t A/B test your prices."
there are so many ways to test pricing it seems irresponsible to dissuade people from doing this, especially in the context of a gigantic list of pricing strategies.
here are just a few types of tests that come to mind:
* practically any promotional/limited offer pricing scheme could (and probably should) be tested.
* prices of users' shopping cart items saved for later (e.g. amazon)
- can a/b test same items in different users' shopping carts and measure purchase patterns
* grocery coupons for people in different zip codes
- most people don't get coupons for other neighborhoods so they won't see two prices
Thanks for the feedback. I don't mind the criticisms - I think a healthy debate is good. :) However, I just want to clarify something.
> "You should avoid charging different prices based on past behavior, demographics, or any other factor besides natural supply and demand."
That quote is taken out of context. Obviously you should determine prices based on those factors. That quote was referring to dynamic pricing and how you shouldn't charge different customers different prices based on those factors (e.g., I'll charge $200 to Customer X, but I'll charge $150 to Customer Y because I don't think he'd buy at $200).
> "You should avoid charging different prices based on past behavior, demographics, or any other factor besides natural supply and demand."
wow. what an incredibly stupid recommendation. based on this, every major grocery chain should terminate their loyalty card program, many luxury products/services should never see the light of day, and perhaps the rest of us should just start businesses in perfectly competitive markets with little hope of long-term economic profit.
an aside: searching for "you should avoid" led me to another incredibly naïve recommendation: "you shouldn’t A/B test your prices."
there are so many ways to test pricing it seems irresponsible to dissuade people from doing this, especially in the context of a gigantic list of pricing strategies.
here are just a few types of tests that come to mind:
* practically any promotional/limited offer pricing scheme could (and probably should) be tested.
* prices of users' shopping cart items saved for later (e.g. amazon) - can a/b test same items in different users' shopping carts and measure purchase patterns
* grocery coupons for people in different zip codes - most people don't get coupons for other neighborhoods so they won't see two prices
anyway. rant over :)