Pricing Traffic Generators, Basket Builders and Add-ons

For sophisticated retailers and eCommerce merchants, product pricing is a delicate tool used to both encourage customers to shop and generate profits.

Share:

While some businesses may prefer a one-size fits all pricing policy, with a set margin for all merchandise, that approach limits their ability to finesse sales and implement a real pricing strategy, while likely limiting profits on many items.

There are numerous ways to categorize products. One strategy we’ve seen used effectively, looks at the role that products play in a typical buyer journey and sets a pricing strategy for each of those roles. Traffic generators, which are used to get people to a store or website, may have one pricing strategy attached to it, while basket builders have a second pricing strategy, and product add-ons have a third strategy.

Pricing Your Traffic Generators

There are a few ways to view traffic generators, and different businesses will take their own approaches to these products. Simply put, these products grab the attention of your market, and drive them to your store. These may be new products, which offer consumers features they haven’t seen before, or items that are exclusively available at your store. In other businesses, low-priced well-known products may drive traffic as well.

These items require a special set of pricing rules and policies, because they are the ones that bring your traffic into the store. That doesn’t always mean that they need to be the lowest price on the market. Of course, if your trying to generate traffic with low prices, your traffic generators will have to be priced accordingly. However, if you sell unique merchandise, or offer features or services (such as training users how to use new features on their TV), you may choose a high-priced strategy to generate traffic.

Looking at Basket Builders

Basket builders are those products that keep retailers in business. When customers come to buy a camera, for example, basket builders would include accessories like camera case, tripod, lenses, memory cards or spare batteries. An art gallery might consider frames or accent lights that would bring out the colors in the picture as basket builders. Meanwhile, for a grocery it might be the household staples that families need to buy every week or two.

Businesses need their traffic generator products to bring in the customers, but they need their basket builders to generate cross-sell profitability. These items should be priced differently than the traffic generators. Depending on the type of merchandise being sold, as well as market forces, these items may be sold at higher or lower margins. Developing a second pricing strategy for these items can help increase sales and enhance basket profitability.

Throwing in Some Add-ons

Add-on products are unrelated merchandise that customers might pick up as an impulse purchase. Clothing stores might offer seasonal socks, a shirt to match a suit, or umbrellas during the rainy season. Meanwhile, a pet store might try to get consumers to buy a new rock for a fish tank, or a chewable toy for a dog.

These products need a third pricing strategy, as the impulse to purchase is based on price, accessibility, and attractiveness of the offer. While consumers may be more willing to compare prices for their primary and basket-building purchases, impulse buys are choices they make in the moment, without running to another site or store before making the purchase.

Setting Pricing Strategy

Every retailer needs to develop a pricing strategy that works for their market, line of business, and location. The better they are at identifying buyer’s motivation for purchases, and measuring supply and demand, the better off they will be in developing their price strategy.

Share

You might also like:

Pricing Optimization
Anat Oransky Lev, VP Marketing

Planning Your Pricing Strategy for the Holiday Season

The holiday season is a great time to boost your sales, but it also presents a unique challenge: how do you price your products differently when the demand for them is so high?

Price too high, and you miss sales and revenue. Price too low and your margins erode.

Read More »
Pricing Optimization
Pini Mandel, Co-Founder & CEO

Vertical: Dynamic pricing for DIY Retailers

DIY Retailers face fierce competition for sales and intense pressure to improve margins. While traditionally DIY retailers sell paints and tools, today they also compete in other categories selling anything from household goods to various types of electrical appliances.

Read More »
Pricing Optimization
Pini Mandel, Co-Founder & CEO

Vertical: Practices and Trends in Dynamic Pricing for Grocery Stores

Grocery stores today are under intense price pressure as a result of supply chain challenges, competition and rising costs. Knowing how to increase share of wallet among current customers and attract new customers has become critical to the survival of struggling grocery stores. A critical component of this process is instilling a favorable price-value image in the minds of consumers.

Read More »
Skip to content