3 Ways to Increase Margin
Marketers, behavioral economists, and psychologist all realize that consumers do not make logical purchase decisions. A variety of factors influence perception and can increase the conversion rate.
Below are three easy ways to increase conversions and margin.
1) Reorder
Rearranging the order of options on a product detail page can dramatically effect the purchase choice a customer makes.
I haven’t done any tests into why this works but I have run tests on e-commerce sites and have seen AOV take off.
I hypothesis that the reason it works is due to a) customer laziness to continue to compare options when they find a good deal and b) peoples reluctance to change their mind after they have made a purchase decision (imprinting).
On the test site, we change the order of the options from the least expensive first and the most expensive last to the most expensive first and the least expensive last.
Original
a. Buy One $79
b. Buy 2, Get One Free $158
c. Buy 3, Get Two Free $237
New Higher Order (w/ higher AOV)
a. Buy 3, Get Two Free $237
b. Buy 2, Get One Free $158
c. Buy One $79
Before, most people purchased the first option. After, most people purchased the second option. This leads us to our second technique….
2)The Middle Item
By arranging your second highest margin item to have a “middle” price, you encourage customers to choose this option.
This technique is mainly used by brick-n-mortar shops and I have not personally tested it.
Take three products with similar features and price your highest margin item to be in the middle of the other two. This technique is based on the relativity and the way people compare items.
The great thing about this technique is it allows the merchant to adjust the prices of the products up and down.
Example:
RCA 42 HDTV – $499
Sony 42 HDTV – $549
RCA 48 HDTV – $699
The bottom price sets the anchor of the product range. It is the floor that arbitrarily sets the price for the other items. However, price is not profit and the merchant should focus on margin when setting product prices.
3)The Decoy
This method uses product and price relativity to encourage the customer to purchase the product the merchant wants.
Example: Two product that are similar but have different attributes.
a. Chunky, Garden Style Spaghetti Sauce $2.59
b. Healthy, Organic Spaghetti Sauce $2.99
These two items are had to compare and the customer will make their choice based on preference.
However, if you include a product that is similar but inferior to one of the choices, it gives the customer an anchor and encourages them to buy the premium original product.
Example 1:
a. Chunky, Garden Style Spaghetti Sauce $2.59
b. Healthy, Organic Spaghetti Sauce $2.99
c. Generic, Organic Spaghetti Sauce $2.79
More people will purchase option b.
Example 2:
a. Chunky, Garden Style Spaghetti Sauce $2.59
b. Healthy, Organic Spaghetti Sauce $2.99
c. Generic, Garden Style Spaghetti Sauce $2.29
More people will purchase option a.







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