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openclaw skills install pricing-psychologyApply cognitive biases and strategic principles to design pricing that maximizes conversions, optimizes tier structures, and leverages pricing perception.
openclaw skills install pricing-psychologyDesign pricing that converts using cognitive biases and proven psychological principles.
Sources: Phoenix Strategy Group, ScaleCrush, NetSuite research, SaaS pricing studies (2024-2026).
All outputs go to workspace/artifacts/.
Prices ending in .99 or .97 feel significantly cheaper than the next round number.
The science: Our brains process left-to-right, anchoring on the first digit. $9.99 feels like "$9-something," not "$10."
Impact: Studies suggest charm prices can outperform rounded prices significantly (estimates range from 10-24% depending on context and product category). Moving from $4.99 to $5.00 typically causes a 3-6% sales drop.
When to use:
When NOT to use:
Application to our products:
The first price a prospect sees becomes their reference point for everything after.
The science: Cognitive anchoring bias. A $500/mo option makes $149/mo feel like a steal, even if $149 was always the target.
How to implement:
Critical rule: The anchor must be credible. An absurd anchor ($10,000 for a simple service) backfires and destroys trust.
Customers have mental boundaries. Crossing them triggers disproportionate resistance.
Common thresholds: $10, $25, $50, $100, $500, $1,000
Strategy: Price just below the threshold.
The math: A product at $49 can outsell the same product at $51 by 15-20%, even though the actual difference is $2.
Application: Our Reef product at $29 (below $30 threshold) — already correct.
Add an intentionally unattractive option to make your target option look superior.
Classic example (The Economist):
How to design a decoy:
3-tier formula:
| Tier | Price | Value | Purpose |
|---|---|---|---|
| Basic | Low | Adequate | Entry point, captures budget buyers |
| Pro (TARGET) | Medium | High | Best value ratio — this is what you want them to buy |
| Premium | High | Highest | Anchor + decoy (close in price to Pro, makes Pro look smart) |
Combining products increases perceived value. Separating them increases perceived cost.
Bundle when: You want to increase average order value and perceived savings.
Unbundle when: You want to show how much you're providing.
Key insight: Bundling works for purchases. Unbundling works for perceived value in proposals and negotiations.
Limited availability increases perceived value and triggers loss aversion.
Ethical applications:
Unethical (avoid):
Loss aversion multiplier: People feel losses ~2x more intensely than equivalent gains. "Save $50/mo" is less powerful than "You're losing $50/mo without this."
Same price, different frame, different perception.
Daily vs monthly: "$3.27/day" feels cheaper than "$99/mo" feels cheaper than "$1,188/year" — even though they're identical.
Comparison framing: "Less than your daily coffee" (relatable anchor)
ROI framing: "Pays for itself in 2 weeks" (investment, not cost)
Per-unit framing: "$0.12 per automated message" (micro-cost feels trivial)
Best practice: Frame in the smallest credible unit for affordable products. Frame in ROI terms for expensive ones.
What others chose influences what new buyers choose.
Tactics:
For us: When we have ClawHub downloads, show install counts. "500+ agents use this skill."
Multiple tiers capture different willingness-to-pay segments.
The rule of 3: Three tiers is optimal. Two feels like "cheap vs expensive." Four+ causes choice paralysis.
Tier design principles:
When setting any price, run through these questions:
| Situation | Primary Tactic | Secondary |
|---|---|---|
| SaaS/subscription pricing | Tiered + Decoy | Charm + Anchoring |
| Freelance rate setting | Anchoring + Framing | Bundling (package deals) |
| Product launch | Scarcity + Social Proof | Threshold pricing |
| Price increase | Framing + Bundling | Add value before raising |
| Competitive market | Threshold + Comparison | Charm pricing |
| Premium positioning | Round numbers + Anchoring | Unbundling (show value) |
| Proposal/quote | Anchor high → present price | Unbundle + ROI frame |