
Place Discounts Next to Dissimilar Products
Price Design
Place Discounts Next to Dissimilar Products
More customers buy the adjacent products if they don't compete.
Discounts capture attention.
And they push attention toward surrounding products.

Similar products seem worse compared to the discount, yet dissimilar products are less impacted because they don't compete. In fact, customers are more likely to buy these noncompeting products because their attention is now fixated in this area (Kan et al., 2023).
Imagine that you're discounting a regular yogurt. A competing yogurt on the right would seem worse.

However, a dissimilar greek yogurt on the right would benefit because (a) it doesn't compete with the discounted yogurt, and (b) the discount is pushing more attention toward it:

How to Apply
- Insert New Brands Next to Discounts. Most customers won't seek a new product (e.g., oat milk), so you need to grab their attention by placing it next to a sale item (e.g., regular milk) to penetrate their consideration set.
- Embrace Discounts From Noncompetitors. Even if street vendors aren't running a promotion, situating their cart next to a vendor that is running a promotion could boost sales due to heightened attention in this area. Especially if the food cuisines are different.
Caveats
- Don't Sacrifice Organization. Help customers find products they're seeking.
- Kan, C., Liu, Y. (Lucy), Lichtenstein, D. R., & Janiszewski, C. (2023). The Negative and Positive Consequences of Placing Nonpromoted Products Next to Promoted Products. Journal of Marketing, 0(0).

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