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I know that this question is too generic but yet, Which is the price you think a shareware buyer is most inclined to pay.

I know (from my experience) that $9.95 is scary low. Even you product is a killer in its niche, people refuse to buy it at such low cost.

I sell at $19.95 but I believe even more can be achieved.

So far I only have a marketing research over 10 000 users who bought 300 different pieces of shareware soft and the price curve showed that the $29.95 is the psychological barrier. If it is between $15 and $30 you have a chance to sell. Over $30 only highly specific (such as CAM, CAD, Airplane, etc.) software is sold.

What do you think?

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It really depends on what kind of software you're selling. $9.99 is scary high for an iPhone app. – BoltClock Sep 4 '10 at 22:39
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I don't know if this question can be answered as it is. It totally depends on your app, your audience, how you market it, etc. If Adobe offered Photoshop to me at $29.95, I'd grab it right away. Conversely, I wouldn't pay even $0.99 for an iPhone fart app. – Jeff Sep 4 '10 at 22:40

closed as not constructive by Burkhard, Aziz Shaikh, akjoshi, BenBarnes, Jla Nov 28 '12 at 9:48

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3 Answers

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Well considering you are selling MTG tools, why don't you make it the price of a standard pack. That would chime well with your potential customers.

Also: Relevant reading

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By standard pack I guess you mean Starter Pack? Starter Pack prices vary a lot but I got your point. 10x. Sample Starter Pack prices: abugames.com/… – Gad D Lord Sep 5 '10 at 8:27

Our products range from $29.95 to $159 for a single user license. I can assure you there is no correlation between the unit price of our products and the total revenue we get from each of these products. When setting your price, you need to look at what your product offers, what your competitors offer, what your competitors charge, what the market will bear, and whether you want to be the cheap alternative or the premium alternative.

Whether $19.95 is cheap or expensive depends on all those factors. You can't say that $19.95 is expensive for an iPhone app without knowing what the app does and who uses it. The fact that many apps sell for 99 cents is irrelevant. If you make an app that saves professionals in a particular vertical market one hour of non-billable time per week, and those professionals bill at $100 per hour, then your app is theoretically worth $5200/year. Then $99 for your iPhone app suddenly looks cheap.

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As far as pricing goes, its better to start high and then reduce. Its very hard to derive a higher price through value-add after a price is low. You'll be surprised at the pricing structure you achieve.

And really, its not ever about the price, is it? A successful business is built on providing the right customer with the right product/service at the right time. If you get all of those right, the price will work itself out.

My suggestion is to do some price testing with different customer segments and then release pricing based on what people will pay. As long as this price leaves you with profit, you're in business.

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