pricing in a downturn
DESCRIPTION
There are simply some things that all marketers must do during a downturn. In this section we’ll cover the essentials of how to think about pricing, discounting and coupon strategies on a downturn along with some essential discussion on budgets and marketing spending. We’ll review case examples of what leading marketers from all industries have done in recessions and learn from their results.TRANSCRIPT
Pricing in a Downturn
January 27th, 2009
Pricing decisions should be viewed not as Band-Aid
solutions for bleeding income statements but as part of a
long-term strategy for fiscal fitness.
- Reed K. Holden, Harvard Business Review
Strategic pricing in downturn
If your pricing strategy is more than a few months
old, it‟s already obsolete!
Three primary driving of pricing decisions:
Willingness to Spend: Consumers in all income brackets
reevaluate their price sensitivity
Competitor’s Prices: Competitors will be tempted to
wage price wars
Company Economics: Volatility will lead to cost
uncertainty and cause marketers to second-guess their
price and cost structures
Definition
Price
The amount of money charged for a product or
service, or the sum of the values that consumers
exchange for the benefits of having or using the
product or service.
What is Price?
Price and the Marketing Mix:
Only element to produce revenues
Most flexible element
Can be changed quickly
Common Pricing Mistakes
Reducing prices too quickly to get sales
Pricing based on costs, not customer value
General Pricing Approaches
Cost-Based Pricing: Cost-Plus Pricing
Adding a standard markup to cost
Ignores demand and competition
Popular pricing technique because:
It simplifies the pricing process
Price competition may be minimized
It is perceived as more fair to both buyers and sellers
General Pricing Approaches
Cost-Based Pricing: Break-Even Analysis and Target
Profit Pricing
Break-even charts show total cost and total revenues at
different levels of unit volume.
The intersection of the total revenue and total cost
curves is the break-even point.
Companies wishing to make a profit must exceed the
break-even unit volume.
General Pricing Approaches
Value-Based Pricing:
Uses buyers‟ perceptions of value rather than seller‟s
costs to set price.
Measuring perceived value can be difficult.
Consumer attitudes toward price and quality have
shifted during the last decade.
Value pricing at the retail level
Everyday low pricing (EDLP) vs. high-low pricing
General Pricing Approaches
Competition-Based Pricing:
Also called going-rate pricing
May price at the same level, above, or below the
competition
Bidding for jobs is another variation of competition-
based pricing
Sealed bid pricing
Remember the big picture
Volume
Too many firms fail to account for the effects of price on volume and of volume
on costs. In a recession, trying to recover these costs through a price increase can
be fatal.
Impact on customer relationships
“Sucker pricing” is the term that Eric Mitchell, president of the Professional
Pricing Society (PPS), an Atlanta-based association of pricing and marketing
managers, uses for the excessive pricing that occurs when companies have locked
in customers through contracts or proprietary implementations. This creates ill will
and tarnishes your brand.
Impact on the industry
Price cuts not backed by cost reductions often lead to competitive counterattacks,
which erode profitability
Understand competitive advantage
Pricing should be shaped by industry position and
long term strategy
Price used as a weapon cuts both ways, don‟t hurt
yourself
Not everyone can be the “low cost leader”
If price is “all your customers ask for”, find new
customers who value something else
Leverage price segmentation
First class, business & economy = same
destination
Offer premiums for those willing to pay while
moving others „upmarket‟
Dynamic pricing based on (any factor you
like!) time, location, quantity, derived benefits,
perceived value
“The more you can slice and dice your prices and offerings without
affecting your brand, the more you can sustain profitability.”
- Eric Mitchell, Professional Pricing Society
Accenture reports
that a price
increase of just
1% can improve
operating profits
by 11% if sales
volume remains
constant.
Cost cutting can backfire
In 2002, Kimberly-Clark reduced
the number of diapers in each
package of Huggies in order to
improve margins. Procter &
Gamble could have followed suit,
but instead they kept their pack
size constant and added the
word “Compare” to the label. At
the same time, they increased
discount coupons and store
displays for Pampers, effectively
spoiling the pricing power of
Huggies.
Make products accessible with price
During the Argentinean economic crisis
of 2002, Unilever made it possible
for people to buy the Skip laundry
brand by making small packages
available, which carried a low unit
price. They also introduced large
economy sizes that offered people a
better deal.
Even if your brand is relatively high
priced, that high price, per se, need
not be a problem as long as people
believe your brand provides value
for money. Most people find security
in buying an established and
reputable brand. What you need to
do is make your brand accessible.
McKinsey &
Company Tailored
Pricing Approach
McKinsey &
Company Game-
Changing Pricing
Strategies
Careful with those budget cuts
Ogilvy & Mather Malaysia group managing director Zayn Khan says it is important
for companies to put in place a long-term plan covering three to five years,
including strategies for recession and post-recession recovery.
Most marketers make the mistake of taking a short-term view, which involves cutting
the marketing budget, because they consider the budget a cost that should be
sacrificed to “protect” other costs.
“Companies have to treat the marketing budget as an investment. It helps in building
brand equity and brand value in the long term,” Khan says.
It is good to maintain the marketing budget when rivals are cutting their budgets as
it is a way to emerge from the recession strongly, gaining market share as well as
improving profitability in the long run.
Research has shown that a company that cuts its advertising expenditure by 50%
during a recession year would take two years to recover its market share, while a
company that cuts its advertising budget completely in a recession would take
four years to regain its market share.