Pricing Strategies for Small Business. Andrew Gregson
product is a chop saw and the weekend warrior is in your store, the salesperson’s first question has to be, “What project are you planning?” If the project is crown moldings, the cheapest machine will simply not be satisfactory.
“The job of sales and marketing is not simply to process orders at whatever price customers are currently willing to pay, but rather to raise customers’ willingness to pay to a level that better reflects the product’s true value … Low pricing is never a substitute for an adequate marketing and sales effort.”[4]
The Un-Trap of Customer Driven Pricing
Consider for a moment turning this argument on its head and giving yourself a new vision for your business.
What would happen if you started with the price at which your research shows you can sell Product X? You are certain of the volumes because you have a purchase order in your hands.
Can you make or produce Product X for that price and have a profit after all costs are taken into account? One of history’s greatest industrialists did exactly this.
What Ford put first: The profit lure of mass production obviously has a place in the plans and strategy of business management, but it must always follow hard thinking about the customer. This is one of the most important lessons that we can learn from the contradictory behavior of Henry Ford. In a sense Ford was both the most brilliant and the most senseless marketer in American history. He was senseless because he refused to give the customer anything but a black car. He was brilliant because he fashioned a production system designed to fit market needs. We habitually celebrate him for the wrong reason, his production genius. His real genius was marketing. We think he was able to cut his selling price and therefore sell millions of $500 cars because his invention of the assembly line had reduced the costs. Actually he invented the assembly line because he had concluded that at $500 he could sell millions of cars. Mass production was the result — not the cause — of his low prices.
Ford repeatedly emphasized this point, but generations of production-oriented business managers have refused to hear the lesson he taught. Here is his operating philosophy as he expressed it:
“Our policy is to reduce the price, extend the operations, and improve the article. You will notice that the reduction of price comes first. We have never considered any costs as fixed. Therefore we first reduce the price to the point where we believe more sales will result. Then we go ahead and try to make the prices. We do not bother about the costs. The new price forces the costs down. The usual way is to take the costs and then determine the price; and although that method may be scientific in the narrow sense, it is not scientific in the broad sense, because what earthly use is it to know the cost if it tells you that you cannot manufacture at a price at which the article can be sold? But more to the point is the fact that, although one may calculate what a cost is, and of course all of our costs are carefully calculated, no one knows what a cost ought to be. One of the ways of discovering … is to name a price so low as to force everybody in the place to the highest point of efficiency. The low price makes everybody dig for profits. We make more discoveries concerning manufacturing and selling under this forced method than by any method of leisurely investigation.”[5]
As you examine the methods to analyze your business in later chapters and the appendices, you will discover that starting at the desired end product and working backwards generates some fascinating insights. Ford explained that he started from a price and worked backwards to make the product fulfill the profit objective.
Can you do this in your business? Yes. Customer expectations can be managed at the marketing and sales levels. This drives volumes. Can you buy the ingredients or raw materials at better prices? Can you find a smarter way to make the finished product?
If you are going to have pricing driven by customer expectations, be the market leader. Have more market share than the next competitor. Sell at 7 percent to 10 percent above the rest of the market and commit a large chunk of that extra money to marketing and advertising to keep you on the top of the brand wagon. Then back up your promises with a quality product and great service. It sounds easy, if you say it quickly.
The only sustainable way to increase relative profitability is by achieving a competitive advantage that will enable you to increase sales and margins. In short, the goal of a strategic plan should not be to become bigger than the competition (although that can happen), but to become better. Such positive-sum competition, rather than undermining the profitability of an industry, constantly renews it.
Myth Busting: Market Share
It is a common mistake to expect to grab market share by dropping a price. Not only do marketers think this, but so do salespeople in the hope of getting a sale to boost their numbers. But market share precedes profitability, not the other way around.
A common myth in the marketing world is that market share is the key to profitability. Robert Jacobson and David Aaker in their 1985 article in the Journal of Marketing, “Is Market Share All That It’s Cracked Up To Be?” examined this pervasive myth. If you consider the companies on the planet that have dominated their industries that would mean some gigantic companies like GM, Ford, and Philips should also be hugely profitable. The contrary is true. In fact, these companies have experienced significant financial setbacks, especially as of late.
Nevertheless some large companies with huge market share command huge profits, like Microsoft. Why? Perhaps it’s because both profitability and market share are caused by the same underlying source of business success; a sustainable competitive advantage in meeting customer needs and doing so more efficiently. When a company has a competitive advantage that makes it stand out from the crowd, it can earn higher margins due to either higher prices or a lower cost of production.
A strong competitive advantage, if sustainable, also discourages competitors from targeting the company’s customers or from effectively stonewalling its attempts to expand. In reverse, a less efficient company with large market share would find itself targeted by lean and mean competitors ready to slice off chunks of market share with price competition. What this means is that market share is not the path to huge profits, but rather a further indicator of a well-run company.
Unfortunately, the received wisdom among many managers is the contrary and they perceive a cause and effect, and seek to change that by engaging in a price war to drive out competitors. Much of the time the hoped-for profits never materialize. In fact, profits take a huge hit in the company instigating a price war.
It follows, therefore, that the objective of a plan for company growth should not be to achieve sales volumes but to create and sustain a competitive advantage. Look at the two exemplars of this. Wal-Mart entered the retail market long after Sears. Wal-Mart was a hugely profitable company long before it came to dominate the market and then challenge Sears. Sears, as market leader, reported poor profits for decades, making it vulnerable to Wal-Mart’s aggression.
A strategic plan created to gain market share by dropping prices or accepting higher costs like free delivery is likely doomed to failure. The collapse of margins makes companies vulnerable to ruthless and deep-pocketed competitors. When they drop prices even more steeply, the instigator of a price war may not be able to follow easily.
Rather, it is important to realize that the connection is between profits and real competitive advantage. If the competition cannot follow, then prices are safe, volumes will grow, and profits will soar.
Creating a Benchmark — Cost of Doing Business Surveys
Average is exactly that: Average. Fifty percent are better than you and fifty percent are worse.
Where to begin? Know where the average is and rise above it!
A simple strategy to establish your benchmark and to know whether your company has good pricing or bad is to join an association and get their cost of doing business