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Casual Articles - Price Perception - How to Focus on Value Not on Price
Stop Whining and Ask For What You Want! y on, and also how much they spend.When you want something, the best way to get it is to make your request in a straightforward and positive way. You should not expect your boss or co-workers to read your mind and know what your expectations and desires are. Nor should you brood about the fact that someone else has not recognized what you think is obvious to everyone.If it is important to you and you really want it, then bring it to your boss’ attention. Here are 8 steps you can take to get your requests granted at work.How to Succeed at Getting What You Want at Work< Consider a top cosmetic dentist who routinely gives prospective patients estimates of ?20,000 to ?40,000 for work they want to have done. He enjoys an 80%+ conversion rate. Ok, so he's renowned as a very good dentist, but is he 400% better than his competitor down the street ... even though his fees are 400% higher? This difference between intrinsic value and perceived value exists in every business sector. There's always somebody successfully selling a product or service at a price that's dramatically higher than everyone else's... even though the quality being delivered may actually be only slightly (if at all) better. You can do it too. No matter what your product or service is intrinsically worth, your prospect will pay a premium for it if he perceives it to be worth more than all the others he can choose from. The question is...how Creating an Interactive Resume 1. Price is Elastic.Natural Progression Towards Web-Based R?sum?s The r?sum? and employment service industry has been transformed because of the Internet. Companies such as Monster.com, Hotjobs.com, CareerBuilder.com, and others have driven the masses to look online for their r?sum? and career resources. Most job seekers create multiple version of the same r?sum? to place within these websites, using plain generic text with no formatting or stylization capabilities. These systems are designed to fit all candidates into a mold and not to allow candidates to use th Believe it or not: Only a small percentage of buyers (of any product) base their buying decisions solely on getting the lowest price. If most did, we'd all be driving around in the cheapest cars on the market. Needless to say, we don't! How about the business owner (consultant) who raised the fee for his service from ? 220 to ? 2, 295 in one leap - and the same percentage of prospects continued to buy. They "stretched" with the price. If you had an identical product in three different price perceived retail locations (such as say Harrods, BHS and a Car Boot Sale), then you would see a marked difference in what people were prepared to pay for this identical product. Sometimes it's just a variation in the target market -i.e. as our price changes, our target market may change, which brings me onto... 2. Different People Buy at Different Price Levels. Yes, there is an Asda customer - probably in every category of retail sales. But there is also a Harrods customer. You can get a meal at Asda and you can get a meal at Harrods. You can sleep at a Travel Lodge or at a Hilton. In other words, there are many customers for whom price is low on their agenda for different services. It's up to you to pick your target market entry level. 3. Business Owners that Compete on Price. If you can't be THE cheapest, there's no benefit in being almost the cheapest. Find another way to compete. Sell on Value not on Price. Consider a gourmet pizza take-away and delivery shop in America competing with 127 other pizza outlets - yes that's right 127! (we all have competition don't we?). They have the highest prices of all of them, they don't do deals (such as 2 for 1) - and yet they doubled their sales and more than doubled their profits last year. Key word: Gourmet. What key words can you use in your business? 4. Business Owners that Pay too much Attention to ‘Their' Industry. A lot of businesspeople look at what others are charging in ‘their' industry sector, and pick something between the high and the low. The problem here is that everybody else has arrived at their prices by going through the same process - and it gets worse over time. Understand that most selling occurs in a vacuum. If yours doesn't, consider altering your entire approach. How you set your pricing is critical to your business success. There's "price," and then there's "presentation of price" How can you package and deliver what you sell differently from the way everybody else does it? How can you price it differently and make direct comparison impossible? 5. The Business owner living in fear. Any business decision made out of fear is a bad decision. Out of fear, most business owners needlessly under price their service and raise prices too little too late. It's one of the most common problems I find when working with a business initially. They miss the opportunities to sell premium-priced versions of their products and services. As mentioned earlier: Price paid is a result of your target market selected. It's also based around the perceived value, the presented value, your salesmanship, your credibility and many other factors. It actually has very little to do with the product intrinsic value. If it did, why would diamonds command any more value than glass or coal? Hence why not try approaching your price courageously and creatively? Increase your awareness of the goods and services your prospects spend money on, and also how much they spend. Consider a top cosmetic dentist who routinely gives prospective patients estimates of ?20,000 to ?40,000 for work they want to have done. He enjoys an 80%+ conversion rate. Ok, so he's renowned as a very good dentist, but is he 400% better than his competitor down the street ... even though his fees are 400% higher? This difference between intrinsic value and perceived value exists in every business sector. There's always somebody successfully selling a product or service at a price that's dramatically higher than everyone else's... even though the quality being delivered may actually be only slightly (if at all) better. You can do it too. No matter what your product or service is intrinsically worth, your prospect will pay a premium for it if he perceives it to be worth more than all the others he can choose from. The question is...how w Pizza Talk: Sign Synergy, How Your Window Sign and Web Site Work Together to Bring in New Business at Different Price Levels. Once upon a time, sign writers would fold a piece of paper into a small rectangular cup called a sign writer's cup. They would fill this with paint before clambering up ladders and scaffolding with brushes and cup in hand to create advertising signs.Signs have been around a long time. Even today they are a key component of a successful local business. They become even more important if your local business has a website.Why? Because with a window sign that boldly and clearly gives your website address, and includes a tantalizing reas Yes, there is an Asda customer - probably in every category of retail sales. But there is also a Harrods customer. You can get a meal at Asda and you can get a meal at Harrods. You can sleep at a Travel Lodge or at a Hilton. In other words, there are many customers for whom price is low on their agenda for different services. It's up to you to pick your target market entry level. 3. Business Owners that Compete on Price. If you can't be THE cheapest, there's no benefit in being almost the cheapest. Find another way to compete. Sell on Value not on Price. Consider a gourmet pizza take-away and delivery shop in America competing with 127 other pizza outlets - yes that's right 127! (we all have competition don't we?). They have the highest prices of all of them, they don't do deals (such as 2 for 1) - and yet they doubled their sales and more than doubled their profits last year. Key word: Gourmet. What key words can you use in your business? 4. Business Owners that Pay too much Attention to ‘Their' Industry. A lot of businesspeople look at what others are charging in ‘their' industry sector, and pick something between the high and the low. The problem here is that everybody else has arrived at their prices by going through the same process - and it gets worse over time. Understand that most selling occurs in a vacuum. If yours doesn't, consider altering your entire approach. How you set your pricing is critical to your business success. There's "price," and then there's "presentation of price" How can you package and deliver what you sell differently from the way everybody else does it? How can you price it differently and make direct comparison impossible? 5. The Business owner living in fear. Any business decision made out of fear is a bad decision. Out of fear, most business owners needlessly under price their service and raise prices too little too late. It's one of the most common problems I find when working with a business initially. They miss the opportunities to sell premium-priced versions of their products and services. As mentioned earlier: Price paid is a result of your target market selected. It's also based around the perceived value, the presented value, your salesmanship, your credibility and many other factors. It actually has very little to do with the product intrinsic value. If it did, why would diamonds command any more value than glass or coal? Hence why not try approaching your price courageously and creatively? Increase your awareness of the goods and services your prospects spend money on, and also how much they spend. Consider a top cosmetic dentist who routinely gives prospective patients estimates of ?20,000 to ?40,000 for work they want to have done. He enjoys an 80%+ conversion rate. Ok, so he's renowned as a very good dentist, but is he 400% better than his competitor down the street ... even though his fees are 400% higher? This difference between intrinsic value and perceived value exists in every business sector. There's always somebody successfully selling a product or service at a price that's dramatically higher than everyone else's... even though the quality being delivered may actually be only slightly (if at all) better. You can do it too. No matter what your product or service is intrinsically worth, your prospect will pay a premium for it if he perceives it to be worth more than all the others he can choose from. The question is...how Setting Up to Win: Easy-on-the-Feet Trade Show Exhibits they doubled their sales and more than doubled their profits last year. Key word: Gourmet. What key words can you use in your business?It's a four-day trade show. By the halfway point the booth staff is earnestly looking for any way to ease their aching feet. Staffing a trade show exhibit is invariably a trial of stamina and endurance. It is something of a marathon, but unlike a marathon, you aren’t allowed to show your discomfort and fatigue. Quite the opposite, in fact. From the moment the doors open each morning through whatever events run into the evenings, you must be meeting and greeting, cruising and schmoozing, focused on making sales and making connections.Dr. William Scholl of 4. Business Owners that Pay too much Attention to ‘Their' Industry. A lot of businesspeople look at what others are charging in ‘their' industry sector, and pick something between the high and the low. The problem here is that everybody else has arrived at their prices by going through the same process - and it gets worse over time. Understand that most selling occurs in a vacuum. If yours doesn't, consider altering your entire approach. How you set your pricing is critical to your business success. There's "price," and then there's "presentation of price" How can you package and deliver what you sell differently from the way everybody else does it? How can you price it differently and make direct comparison impossible? 5. The Business owner living in fear. Any business decision made out of fear is a bad decision. Out of fear, most business owners needlessly under price their service and raise prices too little too late. It's one of the most common problems I find when working with a business initially. They miss the opportunities to sell premium-priced versions of their products and services. As mentioned earlier: Price paid is a result of your target market selected. It's also based around the perceived value, the presented value, your salesmanship, your credibility and many other factors. It actually has very little to do with the product intrinsic value. If it did, why would diamonds command any more value than glass or coal? Hence why not try approaching your price courageously and creatively? Increase your awareness of the goods and services your prospects spend money on, and also how much they spend. Consider a top cosmetic dentist who routinely gives prospective patients estimates of ?20,000 to ?40,000 for work they want to have done. He enjoys an 80%+ conversion rate. Ok, so he's renowned as a very good dentist, but is he 400% better than his competitor down the street ... even though his fees are 400% higher? This difference between intrinsic value and perceived value exists in every business sector. There's always somebody successfully selling a product or service at a price that's dramatically higher than everyone else's... even though the quality being delivered may actually be only slightly (if at all) better. You can do it too. No matter what your product or service is intrinsically worth, your prospect will pay a premium for it if he perceives it to be worth more than all the others he can choose from. The question is...how Interview Success - the Importance of Mental Preparation >Ask any employer the biggest mistake candidates can make and you often get the same answer - not being fully prepared for the interview. Successful candidates use every conceivable means possible to prepare for the interview and to allow themselves ample time to prepare. They understand that interviewing is a skill and that preparation and practice will enhance their chances of success.It’s a fact that preparation can make the difference between successful offer, or disappointment and rejection. One easy method of preparation is to rehearse the interview 5. The Business owner living in fear. Any business decision made out of fear is a bad decision. Out of fear, most business owners needlessly under price their service and raise prices too little too late. It's one of the most common problems I find when working with a business initially. They miss the opportunities to sell premium-priced versions of their products and services. As mentioned earlier: Price paid is a result of your target market selected. It's also based around the perceived value, the presented value, your salesmanship, your credibility and many other factors. It actually has very little to do with the product intrinsic value. If it did, why would diamonds command any more value than glass or coal? Hence why not try approaching your price courageously and creatively? Increase your awareness of the goods and services your prospects spend money on, and also how much they spend. Consider a top cosmetic dentist who routinely gives prospective patients estimates of ?20,000 to ?40,000 for work they want to have done. He enjoys an 80%+ conversion rate. Ok, so he's renowned as a very good dentist, but is he 400% better than his competitor down the street ... even though his fees are 400% higher? This difference between intrinsic value and perceived value exists in every business sector. There's always somebody successfully selling a product or service at a price that's dramatically higher than everyone else's... even though the quality being delivered may actually be only slightly (if at all) better. You can do it too. No matter what your product or service is intrinsically worth, your prospect will pay a premium for it if he perceives it to be worth more than all the others he can choose from. The question is...how Makeup for HDTV: Looking Your Best on TV y on, and also how much they spend.The purpose for all makeup is to enhance your best features and minimize your flaws. Unlike television of old, high definition television does not require the thick pancake makeup, dark contouring or dramatic applications. Nor will everyday street makeup create flawless looking skin.A professional makeup artist, studied in HDTV, can tailor your approach guided by your coloring and bone structure. For personal application, the following is a guideline to the products and application techniques you will need before you appear on HDTV.Men and women a Consider a top cosmetic dentist who routinely gives prospective patients estimates of ?20,000 to ?40,000 for work they want to have done. He enjoys an 80%+ conversion rate. Ok, so he's renowned as a very good dentist, but is he 400% better than his competitor down the street ... even though his fees are 400% higher? This difference between intrinsic value and perceived value exists in every business sector. There's always somebody successfully selling a product or service at a price that's dramatically higher than everyone else's... even though the quality being delivered may actually be only slightly (if at all) better. You can do it too. No matter what your product or service is intrinsically worth, your prospect will pay a premium for it if he perceives it to be worth more than all the others he can choose from. The question is...how will you create perceived value in your business...?
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