Common examples of velocity pricing
Now that you have a good idea of what velocity pricing is and how to calculate it, let's take a look at some examples of how the strategy has been used so you'll be able to get a better idea of how it works in practice.
Peanut Butter
You can see a much more detailed analysis of this example in our blog post on the subject. There exists a large enough market for niche peanut butter products, such as fully organic or GMO free, to justify their sales. They do not have nearly the same sales velocity that regular peanut butter has. As a result of this, the more niche peanut butter is priced higher, regardless of whether it takes more to make it.
Business Software
You see the same mechanism in business software, especially before software as a service became popular and the full cost of the software was presented up front. It may take millions of dollars to make a modern video game, but it sells for $50 or so. Compare that to the thousands of dollars that business class software can cost, and you'll see very quickly that they are being priced based on sales velocity.
In each of these cases, the people paying more for the niche product saw more value in it. Health-conscious eaters are going to prefer organic food and be willing to pay a premium for it. Businesses need software to make money and are therefore not as reluctant to pay high prices as a consumer would be.
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Our take on velocity pricing
For the types of industry where the data is clean and dependable, setting price points based on sales velocity is a proven strategy. If you can get dependable data on product prices and sales figures across the industry, then velocity pricing is well worth implementing. One of the things that makes it a compelling strategy is that it looks at the prices that people are paying per unit, so it isn't concerned so much with hitting a specific profit margin, but is instead based on the value that consumers place on a category of product when they make their buying decisions.
Ultimately, product prices must match the value that consumers place on the product or it will not sell. One important thing to note in that regard is that pricing should never be a "set it and forget it" endeavor. Companies, on average, spend far too little time evaluating their pricing strategies. The same data that showed us the effectiveness of velocity pricing can also drive your own pricing decisions. Making use of it will guide you in tweaking whatever pricing strategy you end up with so that it maximizes your revenue.
Over time, velocity pricing should help companies with high-velocity products match prices with market demand in a more meaningful way, and increase the sales velocity of products that might not have been priced effectively. As velocities change in response to price alterations, the process must be repeated until an equilibrium is found. Even then, you should monitor your pricing strategy regularly.