Suppose you let your prior means range between -4 and 4. Then, the probability that you would choose the alternative with a prior mean of -4 rather than the one with a prior mean of 4 is
p = exp(-4)/(exp(4)+exp(-4))
/*:
0.000335350130466478
If you really believed one alternative was that much better than the other, then you probably would not need to run an experiment :-)
Typically the fitted coefficients of choice experiments are less than 2 in magnitude. Effects that are much larger than this are so dominant that they swamp the effects of other alternatives.
The idea of supplying prior means is to indicate the relative preference for various levels of each alternative. This allows the design to avoid asking a respondent to choose between a profile with all the good levels versus a profile with all the undesirable levels of the attributes. Such a choice set does not provide any information because every respondent with choose the same profile.