Upsell
Upsell is a sales technique where a customer is offered a more expensive, enhanced, or extended version of a product or service compared to the one they initially chose. The goal of an upsell is to increase the average order value and provide the customer with a product that delivers greater value.
What is Upselling?
Upselling is the practice of encouraging a customer to move to the “next level” of a product: a more powerful model, an extended plan, or a service with additional features.
Example:
A customer selects a smartphone for $300. The seller offers a model for $350 with a better camera and more storage.
How Upselling Differs from Cross-selling
- Upsell: Offering a more expensive or premium version of the same product (e.g., “Upgrade to the premium plan instead of the basic one”).
- Cross-sell: Offering complementary or related additional products (e.g., “Add a case and screen protector?”).
Both techniques increase revenue but work differently.
Where Upselling is Applied
- Online stores
- Marketplaces
- SaaS services
- Banking services
- Schools and online courses
- Hotels and tourism
- E-commerce businesses of any scale
- The restaurant industry
Examples of Upselling
- On a website: Displaying blocks like “Premium Version” or “Better Product.”
- In SaaS: Upgrading from a basic plan to a PRO plan with extended limits.
- In offline sales: Suggesting a model with superior features.
- In restaurants: Upsizing a meal or upgrading to a premium ingredient.
- In tourism: Offering a room with a view, enhanced service, or better insurance coverage.
Why Upselling Works
- The customer is already interested in making a purchase.
- It’s easier for them to decide on a “slightly more expensive” option than to search for alternatives.
- The upgraded product may genuinely solve their needs better.
- Upselling helps increase the average order value without raising marketing costs.
How to Upsell Effectively
- Highlight the benefit: Frame it not as “more expensive” but as “better”: higher quality, time savings, more features.
- Provide comparison: Use tariff tables or lists of premium version advantages.
- Ensure relevance: Upselling only works if the offer is logical and related to the chosen product.
- Maintain transparent pricing logic: The customer must understand what they are paying extra for.
- Minimize intrusiveness: The best upsell is one that feels like customer care, not an attempt to inflate the bill.
Conclusion
Upselling is the practice of selling an enhanced version of a product or service that aligns with the customer’s needs and helps increase the company’s revenue.
