Skip to content
Tweak Your Biz home.
MENUMENU
  • Home
  • Categories
    • Reviews
    • Business
    • Finance
    • Technology
    • Growth
    • Sales
    • Marketing
    • Management
  • Who We Are

How Do You Raise Prices Without Losing Customers?

By Anna Johansson Published May 6, 2019 Updated October 14, 2022

If you study the history of staple products like eggs, bread, milk, gasoline, and cars, they go up over time. The same is true for non-essential products and services. Some of this is due to inflation, while other times it’s simply a capitalistic response to increasing demand.

If your business finds itself in a situation where it needs to raise prices, it’s important that you do so with purpose and discretion. Otherwise, backlash and attrition may follow.

Why Do You Need to Hike Up Prices?

The first step is to consider whether you actually need to conduct a price increase in the first place. And if you think you do, what’s the reason behind the surge? Common causal factors include:

  • Inflation. Over time, inflation drives the value of money down. To keep up, you have to raise prices. While inflation has been relatively stagnant over the past few years, experts anticipate it will kick up within the short-term.
  • Competition. Heavy competition requires increased marketing and advertising expenses. This may necessitate a price increase. You may also discover a huge increase in demand for your products. Raising prices is a smart way to meet this demand.
  • Added value. Have you suddenly added a bunch of value to your product? If so, a price hike is justifiable.
  • Cash flow needs. Have you suddenly invested in a new building, added additional employees, taken on new debt, or had a supplier raise prices on your business? A price hike could ease cash flow concerns.

If you want to elevate prices simply to increase profit margins, this may not be a good enough reason. Consider that many customers are price sensitive and will unsubscribe and/or stop purchasing from your business once prices cross a certain threshold. Some won’t like the price hike regardless of how minimal it is and will quickly bolt to a competitor. So even with greater profit-per-customer, attrition could leave you with smaller revenues.

Price hikes shouldn’t be haphazard or emotional. If you’re committed to increasing prices, you must find a way to keep your customers in the fold.

4 Ways to Ease the Pain

Google has been in the news recently for its decision to increase prices on YouTube TV – the popular media streaming service – from $39.99 to $49.99 per month for its subscribers. The change went into effect immediately. The service, which launched just a couple of years ago at $35, has now gone up 42 percent over the original price point. And while some customers are frustrated, there hasn’t been a ton of backlash yet. This is, at least in part, due to the fact that Google has managed each price increase with an appropriate level of intentionality.

If you decide that a price increase is the right thing for your business, proceed with a similar level of purpose. Here are some suggestions for how you can ease the pain:

1. Communicate Value (Early and Often)

It’s good business to communicate value to your customers and remind them of just how important your products and services are (and why they’re smart to choose your company over the competition). This is essential when raising prices, but should also be a normal practice all the time.

“If you are only communicating about the value you bring to members at dues renewal time, you are not doing things right,” MembershipWorks tells its clients. “Members need to be reminded all of the time, ‘What’s in this for me?’ Perceived value is the number one metric that determines renewal rates.”

2. Keep Existing Members Grandfathered In

You can always reward your existing customers by grandfathering them in. For subscription-based businesses, this looks like locking their price in (indefinitely or for a period of time). In a business where you sell physical products, it might look like sending out coupons to your existing customers to continue purchasing the product at the original price for a period of six months.

3. Stagger the Price Increase

When a price hike is considered significant, you may find it better to stagger the increase over time. For example, instead of raising the price from $100 per month to $150 per month, you could increase the price by $5 per month over the course of 10 months. This removes some of the sting and helps customers become more comfortable with the new pricing.

4. Add Features or Value

Customers have a hard time paying more for a product when they’re getting the same value in return. If you’re increasing the price, make sure you’re also increasing the value (or at least the perceived value). Google, for example, added a handful of new channels to its lineup to make customers feel like they’re getting additional value for their money.

Consider Your Other Options

There are other ways to increase profit margins and/or bolster the bottom line. If you’re averse to increasing prices, think through other options. You can always:

  • Cut costs. Try renegotiating supplier costs, switching suppliers, changing manufacturing processes, or eliminating wasted spending. Cutting costs can provide the same effect as increasing prices.
  • Increase quantities. If you sell physical products, increasing the quantity of your supplier orders (or making more units at once) can lower the cost per unit. Find more customers and your profitability will increase.
  • Add sponsors/partners. Can you form a partnership with another company or sell sponsorships to lower costs or create an additional stream of revenue?
  • Be a low-cost leader. There’s nothing wrong with being a low-cost leader in your industry. When everyone else is raising prices, you can keep your prices steady and target the price-sensitive slice of the pie.

Think of yourself as an engineer with dozens of levers and buttons in front of you. You have the option of pulling, pushing, and pressing a proprietary combination of elements to achieve the results you’re seeking. Whether it’s raising prices or manipulating something behind the scenes, it’s possible to improve your financial situation without frustrating customers.

 

Business Meeting

Posted in Growth

Enjoy the article? Share it:

  • Share on Facebook
  • Share on X
  • Share on LinkedIn
  • Share on Email

Anna Johansson

Anna is a freelance writer, researcher, and business consultant. A columnist for Entrepreneur.com, HuffingtonPost.com and more, Anna specializes in entrepreneurship, technology, and social media trends. Follow her on Twitter and LinkedIn.

Visit author twitter pageContact author via email

View all posts by Anna Johansson

Signup for the newsletter

Sign For Our Newsletter To Get Actionable Business Advice

* indicates required
Contents
Why Do You Need to Hike Up Prices?
4 Ways to Ease the Pain
1. Communicate Value (Early and Often)
2. Keep Existing Members Grandfathered In
3. Stagger the Price Increase
4. Add Features or Value
Consider Your Other Options

Related Articles

Business
Growth

Transform How You Nurture Business Relationships

Elizabeth Barlowe July 30, 2025
Business
Growth

How to Build a Standout Limousine Service That Customers Keep Coming Back To?

Jessica Miller July 28, 2025
Business
Growth

Kevin Ciresi Weighs in on Europe’s $18.6 Billion Medical Tourism Boom in 2025

Jarred Wrangler July 24, 2025

Footer

Tweak Your Biz
Visit us on Facebook Visit us on X Visit us on LinkedIn

Privacy Settings

Company

  • Contact
  • Terms of Service
  • Privacy Statement
  • Accessibility Statement
  • Sitemap

Signup for the newsletter

Sign For Our Newsletter To Get Actionable Business Advice

* indicates required

Copyright © 2025. All rights reserved. Tweak Your Biz.

Disclaimer: If you click on some of the links throughout our website and decide to make a purchase, Tweak Your Biz may receive compensation. These are products that we have used ourselves and recommend wholeheartedly. Please note that this site is for entertainment purposes only and is not intended to provide financial advice. You can read our complete disclosure statement regarding affiliates in our privacy policy. Cookie Policy.

Tweak Your Biz
Sign For Our Newsletter To Get Actionable Business Advice
[email protected]