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For some service providers, they always want to call a first price that is very high and expect a long negotiation to come to a suitable price. This can backfire. In what ways do you think high first price can backfire?
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SignUp Now!In business, prices are like a fish trap. If you set them too high, you give customers the opportunity to reduce them to the price you want, but if you set them too low, they lower them even further until you find yourself selling at a loss. It's best to start with an average price that's neither too high nor too low. Or even better, ask them about their budget first so you know where you're playing. Business is about intelligence and timing, not just guessing. Every customer has their own style of negotiating prices, so you have to know what cards you're playing.It depends most times telling your customers a higher price often gives room for them to negotiate it to the actual price you want them to buy it, then starting with a lower price often leads them to price lower than the actual value. I think it would be better to be at the middle. Start with a reasonable price not too high and not too low, or you could simply ask them their budget first so you can know if to go high or low.
True, at the same time this can also backfire. There are cases where customers run away once they hear the price.In business, prices are like a fish trap. If you set them too high, you give customers the opportunity to reduce them to the price you want, but if you set them too low, they lower them even further until you find yourself selling at a loss. It's best to start with an average price that's neither too high nor too low. Or even better, ask them about their budget first so you know where you're playing. Business is about intelligence and timing, not just guessing. Every customer has their own style of negotiating prices, so you have to know what cards you're playing.