1) The author has spent over 40 years studying pricing strategies and consumer behavior in order to advise companies on how to set prices.
2) Through his consulting firm, the author has influenced over $2.5 trillion in product and service prices and advised top executives around the world.
3) While the author aims to help companies maximize profits through pricing, he acknowledges ethical issues can arise and companies must consider legal and moral aspects in addition to profits.
1) The author has spent over 40 years studying pricing strategies and consumer behavior in order to advise companies on how to set prices.
2) Through his consulting firm, the author has influenced over $2.5 trillion in product and service prices and advised top executives around the world.
3) While the author aims to help companies maximize profits through pricing, he acknowledges ethical issues can arise and companies must consider legal and moral aspects in addition to profits.
1) The author has spent over 40 years studying pricing strategies and consumer behavior in order to advise companies on how to set prices.
2) Through his consulting firm, the author has influenced over $2.5 trillion in product and service prices and advised top executives around the world.
3) While the author aims to help companies maximize profits through pricing, he acknowledges ethical issues can arise and companies must consider legal and moral aspects in addition to profits.
1) The author has spent over 40 years studying pricing strategies and consumer behavior in order to advise companies on how to set prices.
2) Through his consulting firm, the author has influenced over $2.5 trillion in product and service prices and advised top executives around the world.
3) While the author aims to help companies maximize profits through pricing, he acknowledges ethical issues can arise and companies must consider legal and moral aspects in addition to profits.
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online from Scribd
Download as docx, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1of 2
CONFESSIONS OF THE PRICING MAN
How Price Affects Everything
Preface: Confessions Prices are ubiquitous. We pay them and charge them many times a day, often agOnizing over them, of ten giving them barely a second thought. Managers who understand the underlying dynamics of price can turn that knowledge into higher profits and a stroqg competitive advantage. The challenge is that the game of "price" is becoming more and more complex. Intense competition, the maturing Internet, and increasing globalization are causing massive, diSTuptive changes in how consumers perceive values and prices, and thus how sellers need to set prices. Managers must remain vigilant and learn constantly. When I started digging into the mysteries of prices and pricing more than 40 years ago, I could never have imagined that this fascinating area would evoke so much curiosity, intrigue, and innovation. Pricing became my vocation and my life's work. Over the span of four decades, my associates and I created a pioneering body of work which continues to guide price strategies and price setting for thousands of companies around the world. All this work has yielded an unrivaled store of accumulated experience, a treasure vault of practical pricing wisdom. This book is your access key to that vault. It will provide you the answers for everything you should know about the topic of price. These answers are just as relevant for executives, managers, sales professionals, and marketing experts as they are for consumers. I'll serve as your trusted guide as we look at the tricks, the tactics, and the "best" and "wors t" of pricing pract ices. We will explore price from its rational and irrational sides, through the lens of revolutionary behavioral research. And occasionally we will do some simple math to make some points clearer. Before we start our journey, though , I would like to introduce myself and make a few confessions. My colleagues and I study consumer behavior in great depth in order to get to the best prices for the seller. I did that in my first life of 16 years as a business school professor and researcher. I continued to do so at the consulting firm Simon- Kucher & Partners, which I founded in 1985 together with two of my doctoral students. With 30 offices in all major countries and revenue in excess of $250 million, our firm today is the global leader in price consulting. We serve top managers and executives in all industries: health care, automotive, telecommunications, consumer goods, services, Internet, and industrial products. Simon-Kucher & Partners has provided the guidance and analysis behind many of the modern , sophisticated pricing strategies which confront the consumer or the industrial buyer.These customers are almost always unaware of who created these sophisticated price structures in the first place. Through our recommendations, we have influenced prices of products and services with an aggregaterevenue of $2.5 trillion. Only six cou ntries in the world have a gross domestic product which is greater than this number. Yes, I confess that there may not always be a level playing field between the seller and the consumer. This is less true for industrial buyers, the procurement specialists who are tough in negotiating prices. But generally I think that the game is fair. The reason lies in one word: value. Ultimately the customer is only willing to pay for the value he or she gets. The challenge for any seller is to find out what this perceived value is and then price the product or service accordingly. The customer stays loyal only if the exchanges with the seller cultivate a lasting sense of fairness. Customer satisfaction is the only way to maximize long-term profits. Yes, I confess that we are occasionally confronted with ethical issues. Can you recommend to charge the highest possible price for a life-saving drug? Should a company ask the same price in poor countries as in rich countries? How far can a company go in exploiting a monopoly -like position? What is in conflict with antitrust and cartel laws and what is still allowed? These are difficult questions without clear-cut answers. Ultimately our clients have to decide. But we, as consultants, must still consider these legal and moral aspects. Yes, I confess that I have been helping thousands of companies to use smart pricing to maximize their profits. Some people see "profit" as the ugly side of capitalism. "Maximize profit" is an inflammatory phrase which can send shivers down these people's spines. The simple truth is thai: profit is the cost of survival. Making a sustainable profit is a matter of "to be or not to be"for each and every private business, for without profit the business will fail. And price, whether you like it or not, is the most effective way to generate higher profits. We try to instill a true profit orientation in managers. But I am not a fan of short-term profit maximization. My mission is to support companies in optimizing their prices to achieve sustainable long-term profitability. Finally, I confess that this book contains a comprehensive collection of my pricing endeavors, adventures, triumphs, and failures. I am still surprised almost every day as I see new, unconventional, and creative pricing ideas popping up. The confessions will continue. I hope you have a lot of fun exploring the vast world of price, and wish you many “a-ha” moments along the way! In the Fall of 2015
Stop Competing on Price: What every salesperson, entrepreneur and business professional needs to know to differentiate their product or service and make price irrelevant.