The Psychological Aspects of Pricing in the Beauty SectorOliinyk Iryna Citation: Oliinyk Iryna, "The Psychological Aspects of Pricing in the Beauty Sector", Universal Library of Multidisciplinary, Volume 02, Issue 01. Copyright: This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. AbstractThis article’s purpose is to investigate the complex psychological determinants of pricing policy and consumer choice in the health and beauty services industry. It takes into account how perceived value, cognitive bias and emotional influence influence consumer choice tending to result in so-called irrational buying decisions outside the traditional cost-plus pricing models. Methodology: The study uses a conceptual analysis, combining fundamental ideas from consumer psychology, services marketing, and behavioral economics. To apply these frameworks to the particular context of the beauty services industry - a field distinguished by high levels of personal involvement and intangible outcomes - it thoroughly reviews the body of research on pricing psychology, perceived value, and cognitive heuristics. Findings: The statistics indicate that customer choices in the industry of beauty are largely propelled by an engineered perceived value instead of prices that actually exist. Underlying psychological principles, i.e., the anchoring effect, price-quality heuristic, Social proof and the decoy effect are worthy tools in the construction of this impression. The paper posits that the service environment (servicescape), the practitioner’s brand, and digital social validation are critical components in justifying premium pricing and influencing consumer decisions. The decision-making process is frequently dominated by emotional, System 1 thinking rather than rational, System 2 deliberation. Practical Relevance: This paper presents managers and marketing directors of companies specializing in beauty with practical recommendations. Acquaintance with and proper application of psychological pricing strategies like menu of services offered at different tiers, bundling of services, and membership pricing can help companies to potentially enhance perceived value, alleviate “pain of paying,” and form customer loyalty. The paper presents an outline for creating a pricing strategy aligned with brand positioning and value messaging. Originality/Value: This paper provides a consolidated theoretical framework specifically for the beauty services industry, a sector often overlooked in academic pricing literature. It connects behavioral economics theory with practical business applications, providing a sophisticated comprehension of why consumers are inclined to pay a premium for services that are fundamentally intangible and subjective. Keywords: Pricing Psychology, Perceived Value, Consumer Behavior, Beauty Industry, Irrationality, Behavioral Economics, and Services Marketing. Download![]() |
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