I've read occasional copies of <i>Cooks Illustrated</i> and know only enough about balsamic vinegar to realize that I've probably never tasted the real thing.<p>I might be part of your target market!<p>Unfortunately, what I, clueless aspiring foodie, have read about balsamic vinegar is that the real thing costs $50 or $100 a bottle and up, so if I see a bottle with the word "balsamic" on it, but it doesn't cost as much as that, and it doesn't look like the ones I see on websites like this one that I just googled up:<p><a href="http://whatscookingamerica.net/balsamic.htm" rel="nofollow">http://whatscookingamerica.net/balsamic.htm</a><p>... I am seized with the deep and unreasoning fear that I'm being ripped off.<p>Yeah, I know it's not the same product. But that does not make me feel better!<p>And, you know, if I want to buy something that <i>looks</i> like balsamic and that has a <i>nifty label</i> that uses <i>words</i> like "tradizionale", I don't need to click a button, I can just walk over to my cupboard and take out one of the three bottles I already own. (Two of them were gifts.) They taste... pretty good? I guess? I wouldn't know! In my more cynical moments I suspect that at least one of them was lovingly designed in the traditional chem labs of Northern New Jersey.<p>If I ever bother to fix this situation, my plan is to find someplace where I can actually <i>taste</i> a range of vinegars and decide if I believe that the difference matters.<p>Or maybe I can get to culinary heaven faster with the help of the right website. What might help me to click your buy button? Consider this phrase on the site I just linked to:<p>"If a company produces a "traditional" balsamic vinegar, they will also produce a less expensive, but high quality vinegar as well. This is the same vinegar with the same heritage but not aged as long. You can have confidence in purchasing these balsamic vinegars."<p>Clever. By a staggering coincidence, the page this quote appears on has some links to Amazon where you can buy $100 bottles of vinegar (sales rank: 238543 in their category)... next to some links to Amazon where you can buy some $13 bottles of vinegar (sales rank: 5842).<p>Do what these folks did. Add some super-premium balsamic to the product line. Put it in some kind of classic bulb-shaped bottle with an "authentically wooden" cork and wax. Get the one that bears the official seal of the guild and that has been blessed by the Vatican and what have you. Whatever makes it look more real to somebody like me who knows nothing. Put it on your website wrapped in golden paper with a nicely printed Guide To Your New Vinegar and a gaudy price like $150 for 3 ounces.<p>Then write some copy that goes like this: "We welcome you to try our super-product, the greatest balsamic vinegar ever made, an elixir that reduced Mario Batali to tears... though, lest you become overwhelmed by the force of its flavor, we encourage you to taste it only one drop at a time via an authentic Venetian glass eyedropper that we also sell on this website. But... let's get real. The farmers who make this stuff do not eat it every day. They prefer to sell it to hedge fund managers. Moreover, they are wise, and they have been doing this for hundreds of years, so they know how to make a blend of less-expensive vinegars from the same growers that provides <i>almost</i> as great a taste, but inexpensively enough that they can enjoy it every day. And now <i>you too</i> can enjoy it every day in glaze form for only $20 a bottle."<p>I believe they call this "anchoring". ;)<p>(Incidentally, I do have fun writing anecdotes, but need I point out that I'm only one person, I've never visited your website until today, and I don't buy vinegar over the internet? Test with your actual audience.)