A S L 3 Lecture Notes - Lecture 18: Early Access, Price Discrimination, Complementary Good

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17 Sep 2020
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Value-based pricing (selling your product at different prices to different customers) is a key aspect of pricing your information product. Personalized pricing (first-degree price discrimination) requires knowledge of different customers, and this data of customers might be expensive and hard to collect. However, versioning (second-degree price discrimination), which means offering your information product in different versions to different market segments, might be a solution to this problem. You can learn a lot about customers by seeing which version they choose. Two basic principles for designing your product line: offer versions tailored to the needs of different customers. Self-selection: you do not have to figure out what value the customer places on your information product as the customers reveals this value by the choice of version he/she makes. First, identify different dimensions of your information product that are valued differently by different customers. For example: timeliness is a dimension that is valued differently by different customers.

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