Gym owners often slap “DISCOUNT” on a preorder and wonder why margins vanish. The fix isn’t a coupon code—­it’s a price incentive. Done correctly, it gets members to order early, protects your margin, and leaves inventory for drop-ins.


1. Price Incentive ≠ Discount

A discount is a race to the bottom: “Regular price $30, preorder price $22.”
A price incentive is a temporarily preferred price that nudges action without cheapening your brand.

Script:
“Our Summer 2025 collection is open for preorder until Friday 11:59 PM at $29.99 per item. After the deadline, remaining inventory will be $37.99.”

No coupon codes, no percentages off—just two clear tiers: preorder and in-stock.


2. Why It Works

Lever Impact
Urgency Deadline makes “later” impossible.
Perceived Value Members see they’re saving future money, not getting a markdown.
Inventory Control Early orders lock quantities, so you aren’t stuck guessing sizes.
Margin Protection Post-deadline price more than covers extras, creating real profit.

Fitness brands you follow already charge $38+ once shipping hits. Your members will pay that too—if they know they had a shot at the lower preorder rate.


3. Implementation Guide

  1. Set Two Prices

    • Preorder: competitive but still profitable.

    • In-stock: at least 25 % higher.

  2. Promote the Difference

    • State both prices in every post, email, and class announcement.

  3. Hold Firm

    • Never drop in-stock pricing to clear extras; that trains members to wait.

  4. Reinvest Profits

    • Use the higher-margin in-stock sales towards something special- a vacation, a member appreciation party, etc... 


4. Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • Undercutting Yourself
    Selling preorders at $20 trains members to expect $20 forever.

  • “Limited Discount” Language
    Call it a special preorder price, not a sale.

  • Moving the Deadline
    Extending the preorder window kills urgency and credibility.


5. Next Steps

  1. Pick your preorder and in-stock price points.

  2. Write the exact two-tier script.

  3. Launch the campaign for 5–7 days and stick to the cutoff.

Need a quick price-calculator sheet? Drop a comment or book a fifteen-minute call and I’ll send the template.

Put price incentives to work and watch members move fast—while your margins stay healthy.

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