I had an interesting discussion yesterday about pricing strategies in this economy. The discussion involved mergers and pricing power.
We have seen several large scale mergers that have eliminated accounts for many firms. What do you do if you have 2 firms as clients and they merge? You went from 2 clients to now only one client. Let's say Company A and B merge. Both were clients and had similar contracts and populations, around $100k and 2,000 users. They merge and you now have one client paying $100k but potentially servicing 4,000 people. You have now gone from $50/seat to $25/seat. A substantial hit. How do you gain some of that revenue back? Not an easy answer but one that a lot of marketers are faced with today.
Can you raise prices in this environment, especially if a competitor is lowering them? I think you can always raise prices, but you need to market the value first. If you have not proved the value proposition of your product or service you will never have pricing power regardless of the economy.
I believe that both speak to knowing your customers and knowing what their pain points are and how you can relieve this pain. If anyone is looking for a good book on pricing I suggest buying "The Strategy and Tactics of Pricing: A Guide to Growing More Profitably."
No comments:
Post a Comment