Revenue Growth·June 4, 2026·8 min read

The Margin Multiplier: Low-Cost Strategies to Increase Average Order Value

The Margin Multiplier: Low-Cost Strategies to Increase Average Order Value

Increasing average order value does not require a bigger sales team, a new product line, or a marketing campaign. It requires a shift in the way the customer sees the value of what they are already buying. Here are the strategies that cost almost nothing to implement and produce revenue immediately.

The average order value is the most underutilized revenue lever in most businesses. It is the revenue that is already inside the transaction, waiting to be captured. The customer who is already buying is the customer who is already convinced. The cost of selling more to that customer is a fraction of the cost of acquiring a new one. And yet most businesses do not systematically increase the average order value because they do not have a strategy for doing so. They rely on the rep to upsell in the moment, which is inconsistent, unpredictable, and often uncomfortable.

The low-cost strategies to increase average order value are not about selling harder. They are about designing the offer so that the customer naturally chooses more. The strategies are structural, not tactical. They change the way the offer is presented, the way the options are structured, and the way the value is communicated. The cost of implementation is almost zero. The impact on revenue is immediate and compounding.

The customer who is already buying is not a prospect. They are a partner. The partner who sees more value is the partner who spends more. The question is not how to sell them more. The question is how to show them more value.

Strategy One: The Default Upgrade

The default upgrade is the simplest and most effective strategy to increase average order value. The strategy is to make the higher-value option the default option. The customer who is presented with three options will usually choose the middle one. The customer who is presented with a default option will usually choose the default. The default upgrade makes the higher-value option the starting point. The customer can downgrade if they want, but the default is the premium.

The default upgrade is not a trick. It is a presentation choice. The customer who sees the premium option first evaluates the lower options against the premium. The customer who sees the basic option first evaluates the premium against the basic. The reference point determines the perception. The premium as the default sets the reference point high. The basic as the default sets the reference point low. The default upgrade is the choice to set the reference point high.

  • The default upgrade should be framed as the recommended option. The language is 'Most customers choose this option' or 'This is our most popular plan.' The social proof signals that the premium is the standard, not the exception.
  • The default upgrade should include a clear value articulation. The customer should see exactly what they get for the additional investment. The value should be specific, quantified, and relevant.
  • The default upgrade should make the downgrade easy. The customer who wants the basic option should be able to select it without friction. The ease of the downgrade removes the pressure and makes the premium feel like a choice, not a trap.

Strategy Two: The Bundle Advantage

The bundle advantage is the strategy of packaging complementary products or services into a single offer that is more valuable than the sum of its parts. The customer who buys the bundle is the customer who buys more than they would have bought individually. The bundle is not a discount. It is a value proposition. The customer who sees the bundle as a better deal is the customer who chooses the bundle.

The bundle advantage works because it reduces the customer's decision-making burden. The customer who is evaluating individual products has to make multiple decisions. The customer who is evaluating a bundle makes one decision. The single decision is easier. The single decision is faster. The single decision is more likely to be yes. The bundle advantage is the strategy of making the decision easier by making the offer more comprehensive.

The bundle is not a pricing tactic. It is a value architecture. The customer who sees the bundle as a complete solution is the customer who sees the individual products as incomplete. The bundle is the complete solution. The individual products are the partial solution.

Strategy Three: The Threshold Incentive

The threshold incentive is the strategy of offering a benefit when the customer reaches a specific order value. The benefit is not a discount. It is a value-added service, a complimentary product, or an enhanced experience. The threshold incentive encourages the customer to increase their order value to reach the threshold. The incentive is the reward. The increased order value is the result.

The threshold incentive is effective because it frames the additional spend as an investment, not a cost. The customer who is close to the threshold sees the additional spend as the path to the benefit. The benefit is the motivation. The additional spend is the action. The threshold incentive is the strategy of making the additional spend feel like a gain, not a loss.

A thought before you continue

If what you are reading describes a problem your company is actively sitting on, a direct conversation is where it starts.

See if we're a fit
  • The threshold should be achievable. The customer who is spending $80 should see a threshold at $100, not $500. The threshold should be close enough to feel reachable.
  • The incentive should be valuable. The customer who reaches the threshold should receive something that feels meaningful. The incentive should be relevant to the customer's purchase and aligned with the customer's goals.
  • The threshold should be communicated clearly. The customer should know exactly what the threshold is and what they will receive. The communication should be part of the checkout process, not an afterthought.

Strategy Four: The Cross-Sell Context

The cross-sell context is the strategy of presenting complementary products at the moment when the customer is most likely to buy them. The cross-sell is not a random recommendation. It is a contextual suggestion that is based on the customer's current purchase. The customer who is buying a product is the customer who is most likely to buy the complementary product. The cross-sell context is the strategy of presenting the complementary product at the right moment.

The cross-sell context is effective because it is timely. The customer who is in the buying mindset is the customer who is open to additional purchases. The customer who has already made the decision to buy is the customer who is most likely to add to the purchase. The cross-sell context is the strategy of presenting the complementary product while the customer is still in the buying mindset.

Strategy Five: The Value Anchor

The value anchor is the strategy of presenting a high-value option first, so that the subsequent options feel more affordable. The customer who sees the $10,000 option first sees the $5,000 option as a bargain. The customer who sees the $5,000 option first sees the $10,000 option as expensive. The value anchor is the strategy of setting the reference point high so that the target option feels like a good deal.

The value anchor is not a trick. It is a presentation choice. The customer who sees the high-value option first evaluates the other options against it. The customer who sees the low-value option first evaluates the other options against it. The reference point determines the perception. The value anchor is the choice to set the reference point high.

The average order value is not a sales metric. It is a design metric. The offer that is designed to increase average order value will produce a higher average order value. The offer that is not designed to increase average order value will produce whatever the customer happens to choose. The difference is not the customer. The difference is the design.

The One Question That Determines Whether Your Average Order Value Will Increase

Before you implement any of these strategies, ask this one question: does the customer who buys more feel like they are getting more value, or do they feel like they are spending more money? If the customer feels like they are getting more value, the strategy will work. If the customer feels like they are spending more money, the strategy will backfire. The average order value is not a sales metric. It is a value metric. The customer who sees more value will spend more. The customer who sees more cost will spend less. The question is not how to increase the order. The question is how to increase the value.

Work with Jeff

If any of this mirrors where your business is right now, let's have a direct conversation about it.

Pick a time that works for you. It's a direct 30-minute conversation - no pitch, no follow-up sequence.

Schedule a free call
Jeff Bounds

Jeff Bounds

Revenue growth advisor to growth-stage founders and CEOs.

Let's identify what's slowing growth

More in Revenue Growth

Other Revenue Growth articles you may find useful

Stay Sharp

GTM strategy, sales psychology, and revenue frameworks - straight to your inbox.

No generic marketing content. No pitch emails. Practical thinking on sales execution, marketing alignment, and go-to-market strategy for growth-stage founders. Roughly twice a month.

Unsubscribe any time. No spam, ever.

Book Your 30-Min Discovery Call