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Archive for November 2nd, 2006

Another Cool Design Example

Thursday, November 2nd, 2006

Here’s another website, I thought you might like. The design is simple, yet attractive. It’s not very easy to read because of the dark background, but I’ve seen worse… This is actually a blog. So if you’ve thought that blog design isn’t as flexible as website’s then this one should change your mind. Colors are well mixed together. It doesn’t use more than 2. This is good thing, because combining more than 2 colors might get you in trouble if you’re not a pro.

What else I liked about this design is the pictures. Images, no matter how small or large they are, are put in frames, which in turn are attached to the endings of the posting area. Frankly I’m not sure how it’s done yet, but it looks good. Seems like the image fits into the whole blog design here. Looks professional.

If Else Design

You can check out the website at: Ifelse

Setting the Right Price

Thursday, November 2nd, 2006

One of the toughest things internet marketers face is to pick the right price for a product. If your price is too low, you’ll be losing money. If you set the price too high, no one will buy. Setting the right price is very important for any business.

Daniel Levis says in his newsletter that price is when you and your customer both make the maximum profit. When a customer sees the price, he automatically determines the price of the product. It’s called the perceived value. That bar between the offered price and the perceived value of the product in customer’s mind is his profit.

The higher the perceived value of the product, the more chances there are that they’ll buy your product. If you manage to set high price, yet offer double, triple that or maybe even 10 times more in quality bonuses to your customer, you can expect some great sales and great profits.

The better the product you have, the more money you can ask for it. If your product or service offers tons more features than the rest of the competitors, you can set much higher price. But again, not too high, cause if you overprice it, you won’t get any sales.

How to Set the Right Price?

  • Asking
    One of the ways is to ask. I’ve seen when marketers simply send a message to their list and say something like: “Hey dude, how much you’d be willing to pay if I offered you that kind of product?” And then they give several prices, $29, $49, $69, $99, or over $100. One thing here is that some might simply click on the lowest price. Others might actually think about it and honestly say that they’d be willing to pay no more than $99. Others might push the price as high as possible so less people could get their fingers on that “super duper product”. Not sure how this works, but it’s worth trying.
  • Testing
    Another, very widely used method is to test. Simply do a split testing. If the mailing list software allows that, you can send each other email with a different offer. Like prospect A gets – 1, B – 2, C -1, D -2, and so on… When you try different prices, you simply know what works. Lower price will bring more customers. Higher price will bring less, but the profit can be much higher. Sometimes even when you increase the price from $69 to $149, you’ll see no reduction in sales. If you don’t test, you never know what works. You might be leaving money on the table for years. Don’t let that happen. Always test.
  • Guess
    That’s the most stupid method ever, yet so many entrepreneurs do that. I mean offline world too. Some are so dumb as not to even look what are the prices on the market for similar products. Guessing is a surefire way to failure. Never allow yourself to guess. Research, ask, test, but never guess.