0 Antworten
Seller_c9lY8wF1Vo61O
List Price is maximum price at which you want to sell the product (usually used to show perceived value).
Whereas Your Price is the actual price at which the products are currently being offered for sale.
And List Price should always be higher or at par with Your Price.
Seller_nRFmxiQg4EGrw
No, "Your Price" is the price that you are selling it to the customer. Maybe call it "Selling Price".
"List Price" is the price that the manufacturer suggests it be sold at. So for example, if a car ad from the brand mentions a car being $30,000, that's the "list price". If you go to the dealer and they sell it to you for $28,000, that is the "selling price".'
Another example; my grocery store has corn chips that have printed on the bag as part of the package design "$2.79". That's the List Price. But the store sells them for $2.49; that's the price you pay if they were to set their "Your Price" at $2.49.
List price is nothing more than a reference; Amazon sometimes uses that to detect when people are charging too much, with the best example being a few years back when people were buying the latest hard-to-find video game console (PS4 maybe? Not sure) for $700 at the store (which was the List Price), then selling them for $1500 (the price they put in "Your Price"). That was about the time that Amazon became aggressive with the High Price alerts.