1. Cost-plus pricing
What is it?: Cost-plus pricing is one of the most widely used methods of determining price. Its principle is that your company makes something, then tries to sell it for more than was spent making it. Simple, quick, and broadly representative.
In order to create your target rate of return, simply calculate your cost of production, then select your desired profit margin, and put the two figures together.
Pros: This hugely simple pricing strategy requires minimal resources to execute, demands very little market research, all the while providing full coverage of your total cost and a consistent rate of return.
Cons: It’s highly inefficient. It generates a very inexact picture of your costs and creates an arbitrary margin that has very little to do with how much your customer is actually willing to pay. Plus, this market research-free approach keeps you ignorant of competitor strategies. If you’re running in a densely packed field, this can be a crucial stumbling block further down the line.
Is it the pricing method for you? While cost-plus pricing may be popular and easy, it’s actually not well-suited for most SaaS companies, principally because the value a software company provides is traditionally much more than its cost of doing business. At best, it’s a decent stop-gap pricing strategy when you don’t have much time to devote to figuring out your perceived value and just need something to tide you over while you work on fulfilling those orders or improving your product.
2. Competitor-based pricing
What is it?: A competitor-based pricing method provides simplicity, accuracy, and relatively low risk.
Competitor-based pricing is a more research-intensive approach than cost-plus. Assess the pricing of your immediate competition and average the results for a price point in a competitive ballpark.
Pros: A competitor-based pricing strategy can be effective, so long as your goods are congruent with those of your competitor. If your industry is particularly saturated with competitors, competitor-based pricing is likely to give you an accurate pricing point that will allow you to remain competitive while focusing on adding superior value compared to your peers. It’s also less likely to lead to financial ruin - what’s good for your competitor is good for you!
Cons: By essentially copying your competitors, you run the risk every student with a wandering eye runs into during a test - if your customers are making mistakes in their pricing, then you’ll likely inherit those mistakes too.
Competitor-based pricing brings a certain stability, but its extremely local and context-dependent focus can lead to a stifling focus on short-term thinking, as well as plenty of lost opportunities where a plan more singularly adapted to your company’s vision would have benefited you financially.
Is it the pricing method for you?: The risk of homogeneous thinking goes double in the SaaS field because of the importance of buyer personas. Defining your personas, and tailoring your market approach to them, is so important. Go too far with competitor-based pricing, and you’ll find yourself selling more to a competitor’s customer base than to your own.