Download price: the nuclear weapon of marketing

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Multicultural marketing wikipedia , lookup

Street marketing wikipedia , lookup

Green marketing wikipedia , lookup

Marketing mix modeling wikipedia , lookup

Product planning wikipedia , lookup

Advertising campaign wikipedia , lookup

Marketing strategy wikipedia , lookup

Marketing channel wikipedia , lookup

Perfect competition wikipedia , lookup

Sensory branding wikipedia , lookup

Global marketing wikipedia , lookup

Pricing wikipedia , lookup

Dumping (pricing policy) wikipedia , lookup

Gasoline and diesel usage and pricing wikipedia , lookup

Service parts pricing wikipedia , lookup

Pricing strategies wikipedia , lookup

Price discrimination wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
PRICE: THE NUCLEAR WEAPON OF MARKETING!
SLASHING PRICES ISN’T THE SAME AS HAVING A MARKETING STRATEGY:
WHEN YOU CUT YOUR PRICE, THERE’S OFTEN NO WAY BACK
By President Dominique Turpin – May 2012
IMD
Chemin de Bellerive 23
PO Box 915,
CH-1001 Lausanne
Switzerland
Tel:
Fax:
+41 21 618 01 11
+41 21 618 07 07
[email protected]
www.imd.org
Copyright © 2006-2012 IMD - International Institute for Management Development. All rights, including copyright, pertaining
to the content of this website/publication/document are owned or controlled for these purposes by IMD, except when
expressly stated otherwise. None of the materials provided on/in this website/publication/document may be used, reproduced
or transmitted, in whole or in part, in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording
or the use of any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from IMD. To request such
permission and for further inquiries, please contact IMD at [email protected]. Where it is stated that copyright to any part of
the IMD website/publication/document is held by a third party, requests for permission to copy, modify, translate, publish or
otherwise make available such part must be addressed directly to the third party concerned.
PRICE: THE NUCLEAR WEAPON OF MARKETING! I Slashing prices isn’t the same as having a marketing strategy: When
you cut your price, there is often no way back
When business conditions are as tough as they are today, and sales flat or even declining, too
many marketers often see a price decrease as an easy and reversible choice. However, what may
look like a quick short-term strategic option can have devastating long-term consequences. A price
cut may lower the perceived value of products and services, depreciate the brand or even trigger a
price war.
Slashing prices isn't the same as having a marketing strategy! Cutting price is a bit like firing a
nuclear weapon; once you push the button there is often no going back. Not everyone will agree
with this, of course. For many companies, lowering their price is the only survival option when
dealing with rising competition, shorter product life-cycles, declining product differentiation, smarter
buyers, more private labels and an increasing value-for-money segment.
Companies might also consider a price cut if they are dealing with a rising currency in their home
market that could make their products and services uncompetitive. We have seen this over the past
couple of years in Switzerland, where the rise of the Swiss franc has made local companies and
service providers some 20-25% more expensive than before relative to their European or American
competitors.
However, it’s generally wiser to give more to the customer than to cheapen your value proposition
since the purpose of price is to reflect the value of a product or a service. By slashing prices,
marketers often nullify all the hard work that has been done in creating perceived value in the eyes
of their customers.
Why are many marketers behaving in such a way? There are two main reasons. Firstly, pricing is a
decision that can be taken relatively quickly. You can decide tomorrow to decrease your price by
20%, whereas it takes much longer to rethink your product or service, your communication or your
distribution.
Secondly, price cuts look like a cheap option. If you take the “four Ps” of the marketing mix – the
product, the place (distribution), the promotion (communication) and the price – then price is the
only one that does not generate money.
As much as possible, therefore, cutting price should be your very last course of action. For a start,
price cuts are almost always complex. How should a price be set? When should a company change
its prices? Should it seek to follow or lead? And should it cut prices across the board, or only for
certain products and segments? In mature markets, we know that today’s consumer typically wants
either the best product or the cheapest one, so there is not much room in the middle for many
products.
Price cuts are also hard to reverse, because very often, your competitors tend to lower their prices
in response. Hence my analogy with nuclear weapons; once you cut your price, there’s often no
going back.
So what can companies do instead of cutting their prices? There are several things, all of them
connected with adding value to the consumer or the client.
The first thing is to rethink your value proposition by offering more for the same price. These can be
things that cost relatively little but have a meaningful impact for the customer. Car companies can
increase their warranties, chocolate manufacturers can sell packs of 25 instead of 20, or training
companies can add a free session for a client. The key is to think in terms of value to the customer.
The second is to rethink your segmentation and brand portfolio so that you can appeal to more
clients. Because as we all know, one product and one offer cannot please everybody. This is why a
major tire manufacturer like Michelin uses various brands, from premium Goodrich tires for sports
cars to retailer brands for price-sensitive consumers at Wal-Mart or Norauto. Similarly, Singapore
Airlines has equity in three different brands (Singapore Airlines, Virgin Airlines and Tiger Airways) to
address three different price segments.
Third, companies should reconsider their communications strategy to augment the offer and make
the product or service better known to potential clients. Marketing and advertising spending often
come under pressure during a downturn. But this is counter-intuitive, because it’s precisely when
IMD – www.imd.org
Page 2/4
PRICE: THE NUCLEAR WEAPON OF MARKETING! I Slashing prices isn’t the same as having a marketing strategy: When
you cut your price, there is often no way back
business conditions are difficult that you need fresher ideas. As advertising guru David Ogilvy once
said: “When times are good, you advertise, and when times are tough, you must advertise.”
Unfortunately, most companies do the reverse — when times are good they spend, and when times
are tough they cut everything.
Fourth, and finally, use some good common sense and have another look at your costs. I’m not
suggesting you should necessarily cut your costs by cutting people. I mean you should rethink your
cost equation. This is an exercise companies do anyway, and it should be part of your daily best
practice. But there may still be scope to go through your budget line by line with the goal of finding
some extra fat to cut. Only after going through these four steps should companies reluctantly decide
that they have no other choice but to cut their prices. But for me, this should be the very last option,
because competing on price is always terribly risky!
Dominique Turpin is the Nestlé Professor and President of IMD. He co-directs IMD’s Orchestrating
Winning Performance program.
IMD – www.imd.org
Page 3/4
PRICE: THE NUCLEAR WEAPON OF MARKETING! I Slashing prices isn’t the same as having a marketing strategy: When
you cut your price, there is often no way back
Related Programs
ORCHESTRATING WINNING PERFORMANCE - http://www.imd.org/owp
The global business program for individuals and teams
Program Directors Bettina Buechel and Dominique Turpin
-
For individuals and teams who seek the latest management thinking and practical,
innovative solutions for their business
-
Anticipate global business trends
-
Boost your performance, broaden your perspectives and expand your global network
-
Design the program that suits you
IMD – www.imd.org
Page 4/4