: Re: Why does pricing one's ebook at .99 tend to result in far lower sales than pricing it at .99 or [CO].99? This is what I keep hearing but no one seems to be able to provide an explanation.
The [CO].99 option sells better because it is the standard promotional price. Someone wanting a cheap read (defined as [CO].99) will surf through the [CO].99 books available on KDP or whatever.
I think you saw the idea here and at links within.
By this logic (I'm just gonna go with it) .99 is not promotional, it's twice the promotional cost--and therefore may not seem like a good deal. If the author wrote a good book it'd be more than that, so the thinking goes, and if you are lucky you'll catch that (more expensive) book on a 99c promotion.
But when it comes to marketing, .99 is nothing. It's like the 30% off sales rack with the shirts that are all the wrong shape and too-large neck holes. Now, you might buy something that is marked down 90% just because you know it's a good deal; very little sunk cost. But if it is marked down 30% or 50% you might just wonder if it was overpriced to begin with.
If it's full price you would only buy it if you wanted it--and pay full price--and that's a different sales model altogether.
That's my best guess, anyway.
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