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Name your price: stumped about what to charge? Setting prices is both an art and a science—and a little bit of guesswork. Here's how to figure it out

Entrepreneur,  Sept, 2005  by Geoff Williams

Jeannette Doellgast spends a lot of time thinking about numbers. She has been doing so for more than a year, ever since she and her husband and business partner, Mohsen Alam El Din, bought the Plumbush Inn in breathtakingly scenic Cold Spring, New York. For Alam El Din, 50, born in Egypt and entrenched for 20 years in the restaurant industry, miming his own company is his American Dream. Doellgast, 44, gamely switched careers to join him--after about 15 years as an executive in the textiles industry, and a three-year stint as an elementary school teacher. With the bed-and-breakfast, she soon found herself immersed in the art and science of setting prices.

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First, Doellgast concluded that they would have to raise all the prices for both the rooms and food at the Plumbush Inn, which had been in existence for 30 years when the couple bought it. Long-time customers weren't pleased, and they made sure to let Doellgast and Alam El Din know it. "It was a risk," admits Doellgast.

It has paid off. The Plumbush Inn stands to bring in $1.25 million by the end of 2005. Considering that Doellgast and Alam El Din paid $1 million for the business--with a matrix of many loans and all their life savings--they appear to be off to a good start.

As you likely know or suspect, you'll have many motives when deciding the prices for your products and services, from understanding what the market can bear to figuring out what you can bear. It may be that you want to serve customers with modest incomes, or perhaps you aspire to a level of greatness that demands high prices. As Doellgast herself observes, "It's instinctive and emotional, but part of it is also tangible." In elaborating on that point, she adds: "Oil bills go up every year, electric bills. Expenses are continually rising."

Watching inflation reports and making sense of what's going on in the market can make new entrepreneurs wonder what they should charge for their products and services. And you should wonder. If you don't, and you come up with your fees lightly, you yourself may end up paying the hefty price.

Determining the Price

There is no set formula for price-making, because every single business is unique. If setting prices were simple, there wouldn't be a Professional Pricing Society in Marietta, Georgia, a support group full of people whose job it is to determine prices. But at its most basic level, you could think of it in the way that Gaithersburg, Maryland, business strategy consultant Marsha Lindquist does.

"I can get fancy," says Lindquist breezily. "But the basic questions you need to answer are, What is the market going to pay, and what are your costs?"

Those two concepts get a little tricky when you're a service business and not selling a product, so let's stay with products for a moment: Meet Anthony Shurman, 34, president of Yosha Enterprises Inc. in Westfield, New Jersey. His company provides a valuable service to the world--conquering bad breath. His product is Momints, breath mints that were introduced in 2002 at $1.99 for a 36-mint package. Later, Shurman dropped the price to $1.79, and in 2003, he took the product nationwide, charging $1.69 per package. Each time he dropped the price, he had a good reason for doing so--to stay competitive with competing brands.

When Momints debuted, Shurman says it was the only liquid breath mint on the market, so its uniqueness allowed him to charge higher prices. As Shurman explains, "I think when you're launching a new product or starting a new business, there are plenty of examples of businesses going after a target audience and creating a cachet for themselves by pricing a little higher and adopting an elite strategy, where you present yourself as this high-end competitor in the market." Shurman also felt he could price the product a little higher because each package had 36 mints, more mints than any other brand.

Looking back, Shurman believes his first strategy for pricing really wasn't the best one. "If I were to do it again, I probably would have started with a lower price. Our consumers don't really give us credit for having those extra mints, and I think a more visible difference to the average consumer would be a lower price," says Shurman. That's why he recently used a regional grocery chain as a test market, where he sold a 28-mint package for 99 cents--70 cents less than his 36-mint package. Says Shurman, "Our sales went up 350 percent." Yosha now brings in more than $3 million annually, and Shurman has reason to believe he'll sell even more mints at the lower price.

Shurman's story can't help but reinforce the idea that coming up with the right price is vital. "If you're off [from what the consumer wants to pay] by a few pennies here and there, it probably doesn't matter much," concedes Shurman. "But I do think it's a critical part of the overall package. If you're going to price a product at $5, when it should have been $1.99, that could spell doom."