Freelancer vs Employee: Which Is Right for Your UK Small Business?
19th September 2025Tips to get you started as a Sole Trader
10th October 2025Encourage customers to spend more money each time they buy
If you’ve been following our blog series, you’ll know that we’ve already covered increasing customer retention, boosting lead generation, improving conversion rates and increasing transaction frequency. The fifth way to grow your business is to increase the average transaction value – in other words, getting customers to spend more each time they buy.
As a reminder, the 7 Ways to Grow Your Business are:
- How to increase customer retention rate
- How to generate more leads
- How to increase conversion rate
- How to increase transaction frequency
- How to increase customer spend/transaction value
- How to reduce overheads
- How to reduce variable costs
This is one of the easiest ways to grow because you’re already doing the hard work to attract customers. Now it’s about maximising the value of each sale through smarter pricing, better packaging, and stronger relationships.
Here are some practical ways to encourage higher spending per transaction – without being pushy or salesy.
Upskill your team
If your team isn’t confident talking about pricing, upselling or add-ons, then it’s time to invest in training. Help them understand how to position products or services so that customers see the value. That way, they’ll feel more confident recommending upgrades or extra services that make sense.
Also – stop discounting as a default. It trains customers to wait for a deal rather than buy at full value. Instead, focus on what makes your offer worth the price.
Create standard upsells, cross-sells and add-ons
Not every customer will want to spend more – but many will, if you give them the option. Consider:
- Upsells: A better version or premium model of the same product.
- Cross-sells: Complementary items that go well together.
- Add-ons: Extra services or features that enhance the purchase.
Make these options standard at checkout, in your proposals or on your website. If it’s relevant, customers will often say yes.
Don’t forget the power of a down-sell too – offering a slightly lower-cost alternative when someone’s hesitant. It keeps the sale alive and still adds value.
Offer flexible payment and pricing options
Sometimes people want to spend more but need a nudge to make it easier. Try:
- Giving options in your proposals – like bronze, silver and gold packages.
- Introducing easy finance or payment plans.
- Using value-based pricing that aligns with the benefit the customer receives, not just your hourly rate.
If you sell services, think about service contracts that bundle work into a monthly plan, or points-based loyalty programmes that encourage ongoing spending.
Build better customer relationships
People buy from people. When customers feel appreciated and connected, they’re more likely to spend more.
Ways to build rapport:
- Send freebies or product samples
- Offer VIP specials for top clients
- Invite customers to exclusive events
- Share behind-the-scenes content on social media
- Personalise communications with a human touch
The goal is to make your customers feel valued – not just sold to.
Educate your customers
Customers often don’t know what they don’t know. So show them.
- Use clear signage or packaging to highlight bundles or add-ons
- Add simple video demonstrations or tutorials
- Create point-of-sale materials or proposal inserts explaining why certain products/services work well together
- Run short in-person or online promotions to showcase new features
When customers understand the value, they’re more likely to say yes.
Add value in creative ways
You don’t have to lower your prices to make a sale more attractive. Instead, consider:
- Free delivery on minimum orders
- “Four for the price of three” offers
- Gifting a small item with purchase
- Offering a discount on a related add-on
- Selling bundles of popular items at a slightly reduced price
- Creating impulse-buy zones if you sell physical goods
- Offering a % to charity for selected products
These are small but powerful incentives that can nudge a customer to spend just a bit more.
Be strategic with your pricing and merchandising
Your pricing says a lot about your brand. Sometimes, raising your prices can actually increase sales – especially if it positions your offer as premium or higher quality.
Other ideas to try:
- Introduce a minimum order quantity or spend threshold
- Use activity-based merchandising – e.g. putting BBQ lighters next to the BBQs. Think about when you checkout on an ecommerce site and it tells you ‘other customer purchased this’ – or similar.
- Review your product or service mix and consider dropping the cheaper, less profitable options
Review busy and quiet times
When your business is busy, have enough staff to offer upsells and great service. During quiet times, use promotions or targeted offers to attract more sales – especially from repeat customers who already know and like your brand.
5 Actionable Takeaways
- Map your sales process – Identify where you can offer an upsell, cross-sell, or add-on at the right moment.
- Create three-tiered pricing options – People tend to choose the middle option, so design your offers accordingly.
- Bundle your services – Package commonly bought items or services together and sell them as a single offer.
- Train your team on value selling – Help them explain the why, not just the what of your pricing and packages.
- Build relationships that drive loyalty – Show appreciation to top customers and encourage repeat purchases through perks and exclusives.
Next up: Reduce Overheads