Friday, April 15, 2011

Roadmap to Pricing Excellence


The Pricing Excellence Cycle

I have worked with many companies in various capacities related to pricing.  Many have focused on pricing software, but of those, almost all included reviewing and refining the pricing strategies, processes, and procedures in place to support pricing excellence, also known as the "Roadmap to Pricing Excellence", or R2PE.  Although indicative of a journey with a specific end in mind, pricing is slightly different.  A "journey"... absolutely.  But in reality, there is no end state other than, "we must be better tomorrow than we are today."  Yes, we can put milestones along the way, but much like a youthful road trip, we may get sidetracked and discover new and novel milestones that are more relevant tomorrow than anything we planned on today.
First, we must understand where we are today.  Where is pricing effective?  Where is it not?  And while we are at it, what defines "effective" pricing?  Ultimately, we as a pricing community are here to maximize margin.  There are many more metrics, but using margin as the pinnacle measurement, we must be able to uncover quickly areas of profitable and not-so-profitable pricing.  Where is margin trending upwards or downwards?  What is the root cause of these trends and what can be done to either eliminate and fix or continue and replicate them?
Out of the "Analyze" phase, we have targeted areas on which to focus our pricing efforts.  Next comes the "Define" phase; in other words, what price should I be charging based on the empirical evidence at hand?  What is the impact of making these price changes?  Many times, after further analysis in this phase, our targeted audience for the price change slims down.
Up next, executing on these price changes.  Set the price up in SAP and get customers paying these new prices.  More importantly, we should now set the timetable for measurement of these price changes.  A simple metric known as "price realization" is very handy in situations like this, especially for price increases.  As the axiom goes, sales forces love price increases... higher discounting!  Joking aside, many price increases are countered by discounting, which is not a bad practice (even though at times, discounting can be the bane of a company's revenue and margin goals.  Price realization attempts to measure actual versus expected price gain.  100% should not be expected, but how much is realistic?  80%?  50%?  Different situations have different expectations.  By setting your goals properly, discounting practices can actually lead to pleasant surprises!  Additionally, margin variance is a better metric to set goals against, especially in instances where prices are both increasing and decreasing.  After all, if our ultimate goal is to maximize margin, understanding how price changes offset or complement other factors in the margin variance waterfall will lead to better price setting techniques.
Finally, we move into the "Monitor" phase.  Here, we are standing by our original hypotheses regarding our price changes and measuring to the KPIs we have put in place.  Right or wrong, every price change will have its actual outcome and these are important to learn from in order to behave differently in the future.  And most importantly, this phase provides the ability for pricers to "manage by exception".  This implies that we all do not have time to monitor every minute detail - who is buying what and at what specific price.  Instead, we should set thresholds on which we do wish to be alerted about, in case any specific transaction or aggregate of transactions crosses (i.e. avg margin week over week is down 5%, or 10%).  Setting these thresholds up allows the pricing community to turn their attention back to other areas identified in the "Analyze" phase, and take additional action on prior events if and when the need arises.

Friday, April 8, 2011

Price changes and the PLC in a B2B environment

Understanding the product life cycle (PLC) is critical to decisions made regarding price changes, especially in a Business-to-Business (B2B) environment.  Whether you are in the introductory, growth, maturity, or decline stages should alter your view on how price changes can impact revenues and margins.
First, I must give credit where credit is due.  The impetus for this post came from Reed Holden’s book, Pricing with Confidence.  If you have not read it yet, it is very well-written and provides practical examples of ways to improve pricing; find it on Amazon here.  After reading this book, the PLC discussions stuck with me.  How could I apply what I read to what I had experienced?  The below is the result of that though process.
For example, early on in the introductory stage, price plays an important baseline role.  Setting the price is crucial to the value perceived by the targeted audience.  What price to set is another topic for another day, but price too low and you are potentially forgoing future profits.  Price too high and you may never gain the adoption necessary to move into the growth stage.
Assume for this post that we are beyond the introductory stage of the PLC (new product pricing is another entire topic to cover).  Next up: the much-anticipated growth stage.  During this stage, increasing prices leads to higher revenues and higher profits.  However, we must pay special attention to competitor actions.  Is this product quickly converted into a commodity?  If so, the growth stage could be short-lived.  If competitors can quickly reproduce the product and your customer’s switching costs are low, raising prices too fast and too often can lead to declining revenues through lost volume.  Moreover, if the product cannot be easily reproduced or your customers’ switching costs are high, there is more value offered by TE that could be captured in the price.  By raising prices to match this value, we can increase our revenues and margins exponentially, due to increasing volumes during the growth stage.
To put this in context, I have seen this work well and fail spectacularly.  Focusing on the latter for the moment, when product managers at an industrial manufacturer failed to recognize the small switching costs of their customers, they ended up underestimating the duration of the growth stage.  The result?  They kept prices elevated; competition circled like hawks; and before they knew it, their products were an afterthought to their customers: priced too high with other, fully-substitutable products available to purchase.  However, the flip side is just as dramatic.  When those same product managers (on a different product line) were able to quantify the value their customers should achieve, and in this case, no other competitors could offer anything close to their product line, they priced to the value during the growth stage and helped secure other, ancillary business as well as dramatically exceeding profitability expectations.
Moving along, the maturity stage is next in line on the PLC curve.  During this stage, demand elasticity is commonly correlated to your customers’ switching costs.  Raise prices too much, and they will switch.  However, lowering prices is highly unlikely to increase demand.  This is a characteristic of the B2B environment.  TE’s customers are rarely, if ever, end-users.  Therefore, the demand for our products is not set by our customers, but by our customers’ customers (or ever further down the supply chain).  For example, if BMW is expected to make 500,000 X5 automobiles for Europe in 2011, this is not driven by the price of our wire assemblies.  Their demand is driven by their market analyst’s prediction of what their customers want.  Therefore, is we lower prices to BWM, all we are doing is giving away revenues and margins.  They will not purchase more from us, simply because the price went down.
This is why it is crucial to understand which stage of the PLC you are in for any given product.  Raising prices in the growth and maturity stages typically has a positive impact on revenues and margins.  Lowering prices typically only works in the decline stage in order to liquidate stock or manufacturing capacity as we move on to the next product evolution.  Recognizing in which stage we are operating, along with the competitive pressures and abilities, greatly enhance our ability to change prices to meet the market expectations, while maximizing revenue and margin potential (commonly known as price optimization).
And yes, there are always exceptions.  Where have you seen success (or failure) with pricing strategies and the PLC?

Friday, April 1, 2011

The role of sales, product, and pricing - can't we all just get along?

Many of us in pricing are tasked with what some may view as an unenviable responsibility: somehow get two distinct, separate roles to coordinate and execute on a strategy (commonly given by your management) that those roles might see in conflict with their own management's strategy.  In other words, "ignore them, listen to us!".
OK, it may not be that bleak of a picture, but it sometimes feels like it.  This is one of the reasons I wholeheartedly believe in conducting “day in the life” reviews of sales or product.  But as “pricing”, we must still manage the right expectations, execute on our strategies, and help others along the pricing chain do the same, even if those strategies are, at times, in conflict with our own.  And this is where we must work harder to get those commonly involved in the pricing chain (Sales and Product Management) involved.
Take a step back and look at where in the organization pricing is discussed.  Although in the day-to-day activities of pricing, we may forget that pricing decisions DO happen elsewhere, we cannot overlook this fact.  After all, how can we help evaluate our marketplace of pricing without prices that are already set or without prices that are being communicated to customers?  This is where Product Management and Sales are involved; and it is because of this fact we as “pricing”, must account for and include those roles for the overall betterment of the enterprise.
Let’s examine one situation I was involved in almost 5 years ago.  Pricing was tightly entwined with Product Management (in fact, both VPs reported directly to the CFO, who encouraged cooperation on pricing).  Whenever new products launched, products changed life cycles, or a market shift occurred, Product and Pricing worked side-by-side to understand the market and price accordingly.  However, they continually had issues with their price expectations vis-à-vis sales communications to customers.  The problem here was Sales.  It’s not that they were bad people or simply did not want to cooperate; it was that the Sales VP had a different vision of what his team was responsible for.  In addition, the Sales VP reported to a separate Chief Sales Officer, and therefore incentive programs were completely disparate.  Time and time again, Pricing and Product struggled to set and keep prices at a certain level.  Many times, they resulted to playing games within their own organization: setting prices unusually higher, knowing sales would discount.  While this may have lead to some reasonable price levels, it built distrust between Pricing and Sales… not a good working environment.
Unfortunately, by the time I stopped working with this client, the situation had not changed.  However, I have since heard that an organizational change resulted in more cooperation between the three groups, resulting in more profitability and a better working environment.
Regardless of what happened at that client, it does not have to take an organizational shift to create change.  Pricing may have an unenviable task, but a powerful one.  By working closely with Product and Sales, soliciting input, and helping define and demonstrate the “what’s in it for you” (WIIFY) for each group, many pricing teams have helped drive increase profitability for the enterprise… something all groups should share in.
I am interested to hear from others… what have your experiences been with “changing the pricing culture”?  What has it taken along the lines of organizational, policy, practice, or other change?