By Reed K Holden and Mark R Burton
1. Replace the discounting habit
- If you talk with customers about price, there is no price that is going to be low enough. Start with value. If asked for a discount, start with “what do you know about us and how confident are you that we can solve your problem?”
 - Be arrogant about your product – be confident in your value
 - Be willing to fire unprofitable customers
 - Focus on the least profitable 5-10% and stop fire them
 - This increases profits
 - Sends signals to customers and sales staff that we have standards
 - Will free up resources to find more profitable customers
 
2. Understand the value you offer to your customer
- Win:
 - Create a range of low- to high-value items
 - provide quantifiable value propositions
 - create pricing strategies that capture a fair share of the value
 - Connect the price with the value that you bring your customers
 - Understand the attributes of the customers that seek or receive different levels of value
 - Ask your customers, and then have answers
 - What do you really need from us?
 - Conduct interviews
 - Data discovery – specific examples, insights into customer models, direct comparisons with competition
 - internal interviews with staff
 - customer value profiles (make hypotheses from what you’ve learned)
 - customer interviews – validate or discredit those interviews
 - what’s a critical success factor for customer?
 - what’s a critical process?
 - what keeps them awake at night?
 - what are their future aspirations
 - how do you use our service in your everyday life?
 - what’s most valuable to you and why?
 - what results do our offerings help our customers achieve?
 - who is the next best competitive alternative and why?
 - what can they bring to the table that we cannot and vice versa?
 - what sacrifices would be involved with using the various alternatives?
 - THANK the people who responded personally (a letter)
 - develop an understanding of the common thread between customers in a segment
 - produce a series of strong value propositions for sales staff and a series of questions for sales staff to ask to see if there is a need for your offering
 - develop offerings that clearly connect to customer value needs
 - define price points
 - create high-impact value propositions and tools
 
3. Apply one of three simple pricing strategies
- Skim pricing – differentiates from the competition (either more expensive or less)
 - Neutral pricing – close to the competition with intention of reducing the impact of price competition
 - Penetration pricing – price to be primary driver of a purchase decision
 
4. Play Better Poker with Customers
- Price buyers – don’t let themselves get committed to any particular supplier by making sure they have no switching cost: offer bare minimum options for them and don’t expect loyalty
 - Value buyers – people who recognize the flaws of price-only purchasing: meet the budget and provide analysis that shows value
 - Relationship buyers – close relationships with their supplier: these people are loyal but it may take a while to get them, start off with small elements of a solution so they can test and see the value for themselves
 - Poker-playing buyers – they like playing the pricing game who want to get the most out of the deal
 
5. Price to increase profits
- Stop worrying so much about revenue and worry more about profits
 - Move from revenue to profit focus
 - Efficiency = #1
 - Break down costs in detail – don’t average, or you’ll lose data on actual income/expenses
 - Get butts in the seats when there aren’t any (like offering morning pricing or something)
 - Plenty of capacity: low -priced offering, protect high-value offering, make lots of fences
 - Transition: advice low-value customers of capacity risks
 - No capacity: don’t take low priced business, charge high premiums for increased access and control
 
6. Add new products and services that give you negotiating flexibility and growth
- Innovate for growth and price for profits
 - Match offerings with high-value needs of target customer segments
 - Offer low-value flanking products that appeal to price-sensitive customers and reduce the effects of price negotiations on high-value offerings
 - Meet or beat competitive performance on core customer needs
 - build strong fences between offerings
 - enable sales to have clear discussions with customers to define price-value tradeoffs
 - arm sales with well-defined value levers to alter offering value and price
 - core offering – minimum attributes that make the offering viable for majority of customers
 - expected offerings – add things to the core to meet specific segments
 - value-added options: service, consulting, etc
 - Bundle: get customers to upsell by offering a lower bundled price than the sum of the component prices; create opportunities to earn more for your value with groups of customers that place different levels of value on individual components of a bundle (social, training, etc)
 - Start with a simple approach to customer segments. Find your core users and target them.
 - Develop the bundle for segments with high to low values to accommodate behaviors, ask – are they together because it’s logical or because you hope you can create something (aka, NO, don’t do it)
 - Price individual items higher than combined bundles
 
7. Force your competitor to react to your pricing
- Improve understanding of the environment
 - Determine pricing strategy
 - Develop a communication policy
 - Determine what to say
 - Determine what to do – practice what you preach
 - Monitor results and improve the system
 
8. Build your selling backbone
- Focus on what makes you awesome, not the same as your competitor
 - Believe in your value
 - Remember who you are
 
