//pragmatic leaders

pricing strategies

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pricing strategies0%
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Pricing is arguably the most powerful lever you have to influence revenue and market perception, but it's also incredibly sensitive.
Talvinder Singh, from a Pragmatic Leaders session on Product Pricing Strategies

Product pricing is not just about covering costs or adding a margin. Price equals the user's perceived value, not just cost plus markup. Users pay for solutions to their problems, and the more critical the problem solved, the higher they are willing to pay.

Your pricing strategy must align tightly with your product strategy. If your product is a premium offering, your pricing should reflect that. If you are going after mass adoption and volume, a different approach is required.

Skimming strategy: capture maximum revenue from early adopters

Skimming pricing means launching your product at the highest price the market will bear. Your goal is to maximize revenue from customers who have the greatest need or highest willingness to pay — the early adopters.

This approach works only in certain situations:

  • There are enough customers willing to pay a premium.
  • The high price deters competitors initially.
  • Lowering the price later does not significantly reduce sales volume.

Apple is the classic example. When they launch a new iPhone, the price is at a premium. Early adopters pay top dollar. Over time, as new models arrive and competitors catch up, prices drop to attract more price-sensitive buyers.

The logic is straightforward: accrue as much revenue as possible while demand is high and competition is low.

// scene:

Product Pricing Strategy discussion at a mid-stage SaaS startup in Bengaluru

CEO: “We want to launch our new analytics module at ₹50,000. It's our most advanced feature yet.”

You (PM): “Are there enough customers who see that value and can pay ₹50,000 upfront? What happens if we wait and launch at ₹30,000?”

CFO: “At ₹50,000, we maximize early revenue and can fund further development. Competitors can't match this price yet.”

You (PM): “Then skimming makes sense. We target high-value customers first, then gradually lower prices to expand.”

The team agrees on a phased pricing plan aligned with customer segments.

// tension:

Balancing early revenue capture with long-term adoption

Penetration strategy: win market share with low prices

Penetration pricing means setting a low initial price to quickly gain market share and build a user base. The idea is to attract price-sensitive customers and discourage competitors by making entry unattractive.

This strategy suits products where:

  • Market adoption is critical for network effects or scale.
  • Price-sensitive customers dominate.
  • The product can improve or add features over time.

Unlike skimming, penetration pricing sacrifices early profits for volume and market presence.

A new fintech app entering a crowded market might offer zero fees or deep discounts initially to onboard users rapidly. Once established, prices can be increased carefully. Razorpay's early pricing followed exactly this logic.

The trap is setting prices too low without a clear path to profitability or without understanding your unit economics.

// thread: #pricing-team — Debating pricing for a new fintech feature
Rahul (Growth)If we price too high, we'll lose users to incumbents like PhonePe and Razorpay.
Priya (Finance)But at ₹0, our burn rate will spike. We need a plan to raise prices later.
You (PM)Let's model customer acquisition vs. lifetime value carefully before deciding. Penetration pricing only works if we can upsell or monetize later.
Rahul (Growth)Agreed. We want to build trust first, then convert.

Cost-plus pricing: the floor, not the strategy

Cost-plus pricing means adding a markup to the total cost of producing your product.

This is simple but ignores perceived value and competition. If your AI CRM costs ₹10,000 per user annually to run, you might add a 50% markup and price at ₹15,000. But if users perceive the value as ₹20,000, you are leaving money on the table.

Cost-plus is useful as a floor — the minimum below which you lose money — but should not be the primary pricing rationale. It becomes a problem when pricing teams use cost-plus exclusively without asking what the product is worth to the buyer.

The orientation questions that cost-plus ignores:

  • What would the user pay to achieve this outcome through an alternative means?
  • What is the economic value of the problem being solved?
  • What are competitors charging for comparable outcomes?

Value-based pricing: pricing for the value delivered

Value-based pricing demands a deep understanding of your customer's needs and willingness to pay.

If your CRM saves a sales team 10 hours a week, calculate the revenue gained or costs saved, and price accordingly. A sales team member billing at ₹2,000/hour saves ₹20,000 of value per week. Annual value: over ₹10 lakhs per person. A CRM priced at ₹15,000 per user per year is clearly underpriced by this logic.

Value-based pricing yields premium prices and strong differentiation but requires customer research and clear communication. The risk: if you cannot clearly communicate the value story, the customer's price anchor reverts to cost-plus or competitor pricing.

The pricing strategy selection:

StrategyWhen to useMarket signalIndian example
SkimmingNew, innovative, premium product; early adopters presentPremium, high valueEnterprise SaaS at launch
PenetrationCompetitive market; need rapid adoption; price-sensitive customersAffordable, accessibleRazorpay early pricing, Meesho commission-free launch
Value-basedHigh customer ROI; differentiated featuresAligned with customer outcomesEnterprise HR software priced on compliance cost savings
Cost-plusCommodity product; internal pricingCost-reflectiveInternal tooling, government contracts
CompetitiveCrowded market; similar productsMatch or undercut rivalsTelecom data plans
FreemiumDrive volume, upsell laterEntry-level accessNotion, Figma, Slack free tiers

Netflix's tiered pricing: a cautionary tale and a success story

Netflix's Qwikster attempt in 2011 is a lesson in pricing communication. Netflix tried to split DVD and streaming services, causing an effective 60% price hike for customers wanting both. The backlash was immediate: 800,000 lost subscribers and a 77% stock drop.

Netflix recovered by introducing tiered streaming pricing — Basic, Standard, Premium — based on features like simultaneous streams and video quality. This allowed:

  • Capturing different willingness-to-pay segments.
  • Clear upgrade paths with obvious value at each tier.
  • Subtle ARPU increases over time without a single disruptive price change.

The lesson: pricing changes communicate intent. How you change prices matters as much as the change itself. Abrupt increases that feel arbitrary destroy trust. Tiered structures that give users choices preserve it.

Skimming vs. penetration: the decision

Use skimming when:

  • Your product is innovative and has a clear premium value.
  • Early adopters are willing to pay more.
  • Competition is limited initially.
  • High initial prices are defensible with quality and brand.

Use penetration when:

  • You face a crowded market.
  • Customers are price-sensitive.
  • Network effects or scale are critical to long-term value.
  • You have a clear monetization path once market share is established.
// learn the judgment

You are PM at a Series A SaaS startup in Mumbai launching a new AI-powered analytics feature. The CEO wants to price it at ₹1,00,000, citing the premium nature and early adopter interest. The CFO warns that competitors offer similar features at ₹50,000 and fears losing market share.

The call: Should you recommend a skimming or penetration pricing strategy? How will you justify your choice to the CEO and CFO?

Your reasoning:

// practice

You are PM at a Series A SaaS startup in Mumbai launching a new AI-powered analytics feature. The CEO wants to price it at ₹1,00,000, citing the premium nature and early adopter interest. The CFO warns that competitors offer similar features at ₹50,000 and fears losing market share.

Your task: Should you recommend a skimming or penetration pricing strategy? How will you justify your choice to the CEO and CFO?

your reasoning:

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Pricing drives business model viability

Pricing impacts key metrics: ARPU, LTV, CAC payback period, and reinvestment capacity. Your pricing strategy is not just about revenue — it is about sustaining and growing your product.

The psychology of pricing also matters. Higher prices signal premium quality. Sudden price hikes alienate users (Netflix Qwikster). Round numbers and charm pricing (₹999 vs ₹1,000) affect conversion rates at scale. Clear, transparent pricing builds trust; hidden fees destroy it.

Pricing is a potent blend of strategy, economics, psychology, and storytelling. Getting it right requires understanding all four.