Ask most founders how they set their prices and you'll get a vague answer: "We looked at competitors" or "We calculated our costs and added a margin." Both approaches leave enormous money on the table.

The truth is, pricing is the single most powerful lever in your business — more impactful than acquisition, retention, or even product improvements. A 1% improvement in pricing yields an average 11% increase in profit, compared to just 3.3% for a 1% improvement in volume.

And the best pricing strategies aren't based on spreadsheets. They're based on how the human brain perceives value.

The Foundations: How Our Brains Process Prices

Anchoring Effect

The first number a person sees becomes their reference point for all subsequent judgments.

Example: Williams-Sonoma introduced a $429 bread maker. Sales were slow. Then they placed a $629 "deluxe" model next to it. The $429 model's sales doubled — not because the product changed, but because the anchor shifted.

Application: Always show your highest-priced option first. On pricing pages, list plans from most expensive to least expensive (left to right). The premium plan makes the mid-tier look reasonable.

Charm Pricing (Left-Digit Effect)

Prices ending in .99 or .95 feel significantly cheaper than round numbers:

PricePerceived AsDifference
$39.99"Thirty-something"
$40.00"Forty dollars"$0.01 actual, ~$4 perceived

This works because our brains encode the left digit first. $39.99 gets mentally filed as "$3X" before the rest of the number is processed.

B2C products, e-commerce, consumer SaaS. Luxury brands and premium B2B. Round numbers ($100, $500) signal quality and confidence.