Pricing The Brand Ecosystem

Mark Di SommaNovember 3, 20143 min

Take a look at the diagram below courtesy of Ryan Jones (thanks for the point Marc Abraham). It shows how Apple spans its offerings over a surprisingly wide range of price points.

Apple Brand Pricing Strategy

By introducing new lines, retaining older lines at degraded prices and through the use of provider subsidies, Apple delivers an impressive range of ‘step-in’ opportunities for customers to join its ecosystem.

I’m intrigued by this because, from a brand point of view, these arrangements provide a powerful alternative to traditional “up-sell” approaches and to the discounting that brands so often use to make high-end products more available.

Apple’s approach enables the brand to retain its all-important brand equity while providing consumers with the means to address any price barrier in the way they feel most comfortable with. They can enter the Apple world uncommitted or very committed in terms of contracts, with a spec’d up or spec’d down product (which they will then be encouraged to upgrade/add to). Until I saw Ryan’s analysis, I hadn’t realized the sophistication and range of this strategy.

Key Learnings:

Choice is not the same as access. In Ryan’s graph, Apple has used product, price, capacity and configuration to turn 3 lines into 25 different ways to buy. The choices shown here are simple: iPhone; iPod; and/or iPad. The technical features offer scope to pay more or less for each product without cannibalizing the opportunity to invest in the other members of the family (where more choices are available). There’s always a way to buy what consumers want – and there’s always more to buy.

Consumers are buying the brand, but they are deciding on the user experience they want by how they buy. Apple and its service providers have carefully calibrated the user experience (in terms of things like speed) so that, day to day, consumers either pay for what they get or get what they pay for. Regardless, they do so without any compromise to the Apple brand integrity.

Price isn’t about price. It’s about quantifying commitment. Most brands ask for the sale. Apple, it seems to me, goes one step further, and uses price options to actually ask for the commitment on two levels. First of all, they ask consumers to commit to the product without any obligations and pay upfront for that freedom, or commit over time with obligations and defer the cost of doing so. Secondly, and more importantly, they want consumers to commit to more and more of Apple. The Apple ecosystem exists to make this happen. So they’re not just pricing each range so that it is versatile and defendable, they are using their full ecosystem (including all the products not mentioned here such as laptops and desktops) to actively enable one point or multi-point commitment.

People commit to what they enjoy – and the more enjoyment they get, the more likely they are to continue to commit. With apologies to Hotel California, people can step in any way they like, because Apple’s intention is to then make sure they never leave.

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Mark Di Somma

2 comments

  • Michael B. Moore

    November 4, 2014 at 8:10 am

    I love the piece. You’re right. Consumers don’t buy based upon cost. They buy based upon value; what the brand experience delivers to them, both in the form of physical and emotional benefits. Apple, obviously, confers a tremendous amount on both variables, hence they can command the premiums they do.

    Here’s something I just wrote about Samsung bungling this concept vis-a-vis their competition with Apple: http://thebrandfarm.com/profiles/blogs/samsung-here-s-what-went-wrong

  • Amy Fry

    December 1, 2014 at 2:38 am

    Very insightful article Derrick.I agree with you price isn’t just about price, if a customer isn’t just looking for the cheapest option but a high quality one focusing on low prices will not resonate with them at all and this can be simply unsustainable in the long-term.I came across this piece that maybe of interest, it provides some great tips on how to get your pricing and positioning strategies right http://lerablog.org/business/sales/two-pricing-positioning-mistakes-to-avoid/

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