CATEGORIES
- NYC COVERAGE
- WEB STARTUPS
- WEB NEWS
- CONFERENCES
- WEB TECH JOBS
- VENTURE CAPITAL
- MICROSOFT
- INTERVIEWS
- ADVERTISING
- VIDEO
- ALL TOPICS
- ALL COMPANIES
CONTRIBUTORS
- ADRIAN CHAN
- ALICIA NAVARRO
- ALLEN STERN
- CORSIN CAMICHEL
- DRAMA 2.0
- DARREN HERMAN
- HANK WILLIAMS
- MARK DAVIS
- RICK TUROCZY
- SANFORD DICKERT
- SHANNON CLARK
- Comment on YouTube Down by DVS01
- Comment on Twitter COO Costolo: Advertising Coming To Twitter Soon by Satoshi Nakajima
- Comment on Twitter COO Costolo: Advertising Coming To Twitter Soon by OMG Stop the Web! Twitter is gonna run ads ? and Scoble says you?ll love it
- Comment on What?s Up With Yahoo Mail Delivery? by MJ
How Haggling Helped a Golf Company Increase Their Online Sales 685%
I’ve written a number of times before about startups who employ the freemium model which brings together a free option plus premium paid upgrades. Most startups give away so much for free that users have no reason to upgrade. Most startups I speak with do little (or no) testing to see just what the right level is to set the free/paid bar at.
Marketing Sherpa posted a case study late last week of a golf supply company that increased their sales 685% by adding a "haggle" button next to the item price. The golf Web site is pretty Web 1.0 in look but the case study is well worth a read. You’ve got to keep testing your pricing plans until you find the sweet spot. It could easily mean the difference between small growth and major paid usage growth.
TEST TEST TEST







Excellent post – I agree.