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This book examines how value perception tactics shape buyer decisions when pricing psychology techniques are used to increase revenue without expanding the customer base. It explores the tension between influencing perceived worth and changing actual prices, asking what happens when psychological cues become a primary driver of profitability instead of volume growth alone.The analysis begins with charm pricing, where prices ending in .99 or similar figures create the impression of lower cost while leaving the product itself unchanged. It then examines price anchoring, a mechanism in which higher-priced options establish a reference point that makes later choices appear more reasonable and often directs consumers toward higher-margin purchases. Decoy pricing is explored as another influence pattern, where an intentionally less attractive option nudges buyers toward a more profitable middle-tier alternative.The book also investigates prestige pricing and how elevated prices can function as signals of quality, exclusivity, or status for consumers who associate cost with value. Bundle pricing is examined as a method for increasing perceived savings and average order size by combining complementary products into a single offer. In addition, flat-rate bias is analyzed as a psychological preference for simple, all-inclusive pricing structures over fragmented or itemized costs, reducing decision fatigue and encouraging uptake.Finally, the discussion explores subscription psychology and how recurring payment models create steadier revenue streams while reducing dependence on continuous customer acquisition. Together, these mechanisms reveal how pricing strategies shape perception, emotion, and decision-making, influencing consumer behavior not through direct coercion but through carefully structured interpretations of value.