My biggest nightmare if I ran a startup, and what I would probably do about it
“The strategy and tactics of pricing” is the toughest book I’ve ever read. Not tough as in boring, what most books regarding finance, accounting, law, programming, and other subjects I’m bad at end up being. But tough like Chess, you have think more than a few moves ahead. The fun part about chess is that it’s a game and you can fail without much pain, but with Pricing… it’s better not to make too many mistakes.
Picture this nightmare scenario, an example I just read about in the book [paraphrased]:
A large building products manufacturer is operating in a commoditised market, but has continuously been profitable due to banking on perceived technical excellence and exceptional customer service. Still, market share has been going down due to aggressive price cutting by competitors.
How would you address this problem? Well, this is what the new management of the company did:
Whenever an account was seriously threatened, sales manager were authorised to negotiate “special deals,” that would retain the business at lower, but still profitable prices. It seemed successful, and market share increased by a few points over the next few quarters.
But what happened in the long-term?
The company tried to minimise damage, by not making this a public policy. But still, customers eventually ended up talking and found out that other customers got the same quality and service for less. Worse, those customers that negotiated by threatening to go to the competition, were the ones that got the lowest prices!Long term effects were that customers decided to no longer get “taken” by the company. Whatever previous loyalty existed, eroded, and customers opened up their doors to competitors, which had previously been closed. The company had ended up creating a financial incentive for its buyers to become more informed and less loyal, and customers responded.
Something that seemed like a smart move in the short-term, had turned into a nightmare over the long term.
Now the book goes on to say that any strategic move you make, pricing wise, must be one that weighs the short-term vs. the long-term consequences. The difficulty is that pricing is an area often dominated by sales people, who use the sport-analogy in doing business: “there can only be one winner, and it must be me!” Pricing, as the example above shows, isn’t just about winning in the short-term however, it’s about operating in a triangular fashion, respecting your bottom-line, understanding what your customer needs, and dealing with the competition. In the words of the book, it requires a “diplomat,” rather than a general to manage this area of strategy.
Reading this book would probably take 1 month full time. It would take ca. 3 months total to understand what is being said. And it would probably take another 3 months to try and implement it in your business. No sane CEO / startup founder would have time learn this stuff! They’re busy enough managing other aspects of the business, such as cash flow and people. So what I would do, if I were the founder of a startup and wanted to master pricing strategy [and you really should], I would hire an intern and make that his job: take 1 month to read the book, take another 5 to develop a pricing strategy for our business.. Then, if successful, hire the kid as the pricing strategist for your company. I’m 100% sure that it will pay itself back and now consider pricing as one of the corner-stones of any company’s strategy.
This was just a brain-dump. Love to hear your thoughts on this.
Vincent
Like









