//pragmatic leaders

Pricing Strategies: Skimming & Penetration Pricing

Reading time
7 min
Section
Pricing
7 min left0%
pricing strategies: skimming & penetration pricing0%
7 min left
Skimming strategy captures maximum revenue from early adopters willing to pay a premium, while penetration strategy sacrifices initial margin to build market share quickly.
Talvinder Singh, from a Pragmatic Leaders session on pricing strategy

Pricing is not just about covering your costs or matching competitors. It is about capturing the value your product delivers to customers — and doing so in a way that aligns with your business goals. The actual job is to set a price that reflects the perceived value your product provides, maximizes revenue, and positions your product strategically in the market.

Among the many pricing strategies, skimming and penetration pricing are two powerful but opposite approaches. Understanding when and how to use each can make the difference between a product that thrives and one that stalls.

Skimming pricing captures value from early adopters willing to pay a premium

Skimming strategy means launching your product at the highest possible price that the market can bear, then gradually lowering it over time. The goal is to "skim" the top layer of customers — those who have the greatest need or desire for your product and are willing to pay a premium. After this segment has bought in, you reduce the price to attract more price-sensitive customers.

Apple exemplifies this strategy. When it launches a new iPhone, the price is set high, targeting early adopters who value the latest technology and brand prestige. Over time, as new models come out, the price of older models drops, making them accessible to a broader audience.

This strategy works only in certain conditions:

  • There must be enough customers willing to pay a high price upfront.
  • High price should not invite immediate competition because the brand or product has a strong moat or cult following.
  • Lowering the price later should not reduce the perceived value of the product drastically.

The trap is that skimming only works for a limited time. If you delay reducing prices, price-sensitive customers may switch to competitors. Also, it’s less effective for follow-up products without strong differentiation.

For example, when the PlayStation 3 launched in the US, it started at a premium price and lowered over time, following a skimming approach. But if the price reduction is too slow or competitors offer better value, you lose market share.

Penetration pricing prioritizes rapid market share growth through low initial prices

Penetration pricing is the opposite. You launch your product at a low price to attract customers quickly and build market share. The rationale is simple: lower prices reduce the barrier to trial and adoption, generate buzz, and can discourage competitors from entering the space.

This approach works well when:

  • Your market is price-sensitive and volume-driven.
  • You expect economies of scale or network effects that will reduce costs over time.
  • You want to quickly establish a dominant position before competitors respond.

The risk is that you may sacrifice initial margins and train customers to expect low prices, making it difficult to raise prices later.

For example, an Indian SaaS startup entering a crowded market might price aggressively low to lure SMB customers. The goal is to get users hooked, then upsell premium features or higher tiers.

Pricing strategy must align with your product and business context

Choosing between skimming and penetration is not arbitrary. It depends on:

  • Your product’s uniqueness and differentiation.
  • Your brand strength and customer loyalty.
  • Market competition intensity.
  • Customer segments and their willingness to pay.
  • Cost structure and margin requirements.

If your product is highly innovative with few competitors and a loyal following, skimming can maximize revenue upfront. If you are entering a crowded market with price-sensitive customers, penetration might be the right choice.

Skimming and penetration are part of a broader pricing playbook

Pricing strategy includes many approaches that you can combine or tailor:

Pricing StrategyCore PrincipleExample Use CasesProsCons
Skimming PricingHigh initial price, lowering over timeApple iPhones, PlayStation 3Maximizes revenue from early adoptersLimited time window; risk of losing price-sensitive customers
Penetration PricingLow initial price to build market shareIndian SaaS startups targeting SMBsQuickly builds user base and discourages competitorsSacrifices margin; hard to raise prices later
Value-Based PricingPrice based on perceived value to customerEnterprise SaaS, Tesla FSDCaptures maximum value; aligns price with benefitRequires deep customer understanding; complex to implement
Freemium PricingBasic free version, paid premium featuresMany SaaS products like TrelloLowers adoption barrier; drives upgradesCan limit revenue if free tier is too generous
Competitive PricingPrice relative to competitorsCommodities, new entrants matching leadersSimple to justify; positions productCan lead to price wars; ignores unique value
Tiered PricingDifferent plans with different features and pricesNetflix Basic, Standard, PremiumSegments customers; maximizes revenueComplexity in communication; risk of confusing customers

The choice depends on your market, product maturity, and strategic goals.

The value equation: price equals perceived value, not just cost plus margin

Remember, your price must reflect the user’s perceived value. Customers pay for solutions to their problems. The more critical or unique the solution, the higher their willingness to pay.

For example, a simple note-taking app and a sophisticated project management tool may have similar development costs, but their pricing differs vastly because of the value they deliver.

Your pricing strategy should also align with your product strategy. Are you positioning your product as premium or budget-friendly? That decision influences your pricing approach.

Skimming strategy in practice: Apple and Indian market examples

Apple’s iPhone launches at a premium price point because:

  • Early adopters value the latest features and brand.
  • The high price signals quality and exclusivity.
  • The brand’s cult following reduces price sensitivity.
  • Over time, price reductions make older models accessible to a broader audience.

In India, this strategy works well for aspirational products with strong branding. Razorpay’s early pricing of its APIs targeted startups willing to pay for reliability and developer experience, charging a premium for early access.

However, if the price stays high too long or competitors offer more affordable alternatives, you risk losing customers.

Penetration pricing in Indian startups: gaining volume quickly

Penetration pricing is common in Indian SaaS and consumer internet startups. For instance, a new fintech app entering the crowded payments space might offer zero fees or cashback to quickly acquire users.

Meesho used low-cost entry points to onboard resellers in tier-2 and tier-3 cities, building a large user base rapidly.

The challenge is to monetize later without alienating users. This requires careful feature gating, tiering, or upselling strategies.

The risks of skimming and penetration pricing

Risk TypeSkimming Pricing RiskPenetration Pricing Risk
Market ReactionLate price drops cause users to switch to competitorsCustomers expect low prices and resist increases
CompetitionInvites premium competitors if price is too highAttracts price wars and margin erosion
Brand PerceptionPrice cuts may hurt premium brand imageLow price may signal low quality
Customer SegmentationMay miss price-sensitive segments early onMay miss high-value customers willing to pay more
Financial ImpactHigh margins initially but slower volume growthHigh volume but low margins initially

Balancing these risks requires ongoing market monitoring and flexibility.

Advanced pricing considerations: cost, value, and competition

Price setting is not just about picking a number. It involves:

  • Cost analysis: Understanding development, support, and delivery costs to ensure profitability.
  • Value perception: Researching how much customers value your product and what they are willing to pay.
  • Competitive landscape: Knowing competitors’ pricing and positioning to avoid destructive price wars or missed opportunities.
  • Market structure: In monopolistic or oligopolistic markets, pricing power differs. For example, telecom companies in India price strategically based on competitors’ moves and customer sensitivity.

Strategic pricing formula examples

  • Cost-plus pricing: Price = Cost + Markup (%)
  • Value-based pricing: Price = Cost + (Perceived Value - Cost) × Strategic Markup Factor
  • Competitive pricing: Price = Competitor Price ± Strategic Adjustment Factor

Applying these requires data and judgment.

Pricing is a core PM responsibility

While finance might finalize prices and sales negotiate deals, the PM must:

  • Understand user problems and value delivered.
  • Influence pricing to drive product usage and adoption.
  • Segment the market with pricing tiers and offers.
  • Balance revenue goals with customer satisfaction.

Pricing is part of the product experience.

Test yourself: Choosing between skimming and penetration in an Indian SaaS startup

// learn the judgment

You are the PM at a Series A SaaS startup in Bangalore offering an AI-powered CRM for SMBs. Your competitors have priced similar products at ₹10,000 per user per year. Your product has unique AI features that save users time but is new to the market.

The call: Do you launch with a skimming price of ₹15,000 or a penetration price of ₹6,000? What factors do you consider and how do you justify your choice to leadership?

Your reasoning:

Where to go next