Occasionally the novelty of a new product will drive its starting price far above its real value.
A market determines the value of an item over long periods of time as client behavior levels out as well as the people I was with and I see exactly how much people are willing to pay for a particular product.
This is even more complicated when there are several competitors offering similar products simultaneously. You’re not constantly given an self-explanatory decision as a consumer if 1 product is nearly identical to another in every way besides their cost. So you have to watch carefully as a market tests a product love that in real time. The cannabis industry has seen a lot of products come as well as go over the years. The ways cannabis oils are made have evolved as well as you can find more solventless products than ever before with rosin being so popular nowadays. You aren’t necessarily limited to cannabis distillate oils that are made with ethanol as a solvent as well as botanical terpenes as a chopping agent instead of cannabis-derived terpenes. One product—cannabis drinks—used to be seriously overpriced at all of the cannabis stores in our area. They were a novelty as well as thought to garner $40 in value compared to cheaper marijuana edibles. Thankfully you can find the same cannabis drinks nowadays for only $10 from the same weed stores selling them for $40 a few years prior. I think that even with overpriced products, occasionally you just need to have patience for the prices to fall naturally. It’s often a matter of time because the market adjusts the price accordingly.