Don’t Make Your Offering Cheaper, Make It Better

Daily deal sites are about discounts and the best offers, which in turn imply that they exist to bring to consumers the lowest prices and the biggest savings. Ergo, it may be intuitive that, to be the market leader in a niche, a daily deal business may need to undercut its competition with margin-suppressing price cuts. The problem with this mentality is not only that it almost always results in less revenue (one might find that economics principles do not always apply in real life; the buyers do not necessarily make it up in numbers) but also that the retail pricing of deals is never the sole decision of the daily deal business itself – the merchant has a substantial say (sometimes whole say) in the pricing details.

The fact is that the customer of any daily deal business is the merchant, not the end-consumer. The end-consumer is the customer of the merchant. The end-consumer basically acts as a supplier to the daily deal business, because they aid in the acquisition of merchants as customers. Revenue is collected first by the daily deal site, yes, but that revenue is in effect passed on in whole to the merchant, who then passes a cut to the daily deal business in the form of a commission.

Price-is-right

Pricing in the business model of daily deal businesses thus refers to the commission percentage that the daily deal business is willing to work on. Dropping your commission percentage to unhealthy levels may seem like a good idea to undercut the competition, but consider the fact that daily deal sites may be Veblen goods: their perceived value drops with their pricing. When you drop your pricing, you not only give up revenue unnecessarily but also create a negative perception impact on your offering.

The obvious solution is to start at a higher pricing; aim to be a premium daily deal site servicing local merchants with a higher-than-average commission percentage. The only thing better than cheap is good. When no merchant buys at your ideal price point, do not make your offering cheaper; make it better. Provide a range of value-added services, such as faster payment timelines, customer retention strategies, super-strict lead qualification, generous collection and sharing of buyer data, etc. Merchants do not actually want to work with the cheapest daily deal site, which probably does not even bring in enough revenue to provide meaningful value – merchants simply want to work with daily deal sites that can do their job, and do their job well.