This post is part of the article series: "How to Use Willingness-To-Pay for Optimizing Prices, locally and globally". You can find the rest of the articles here.
In previous blog posts, we have emphasized the importance of developing a value-based pricing strategy, where your customer’s willingness-to-pay determines the price you charge. If you haven’t read this article yet, I suggest you do that first: Value Based Pricing: The Secret to Profit Maximization
However, if you have found the right price for your product or service, this article will cover the next step towards reaping the rewards and realizing all potential profit: coordination of your pricing efforts.
It is crucial to understand that pricing doesn’t exist in a vacuum. Implementation of a new price should be done across marketing, sales and product development too.
Collaborate with Your Salespeople
In a previous post, we made the case that your salespeople shouldn’t be the ones developing your pricing strategy. Pricing strategy is first and foremost about strategy and salespeople are so close to the customer that introducing some bias into the development of the pricing strategy is inevitable. After all, they’re the ones facing the countless rebate requests and customer uproar.
That being said, your sales team is executing your pricing strategy and for that execution to be successful, you must work closely together with them and build a framework:
Have Marketing Understand the Value-Drivers
Developing a proper pricing strategy will inevitably involve researching your customers’ value drivers. That is, why are your customers buying your product rather than that of your competitor?
Often, it turns out your customers aren’t buying what companies think they’re selling. The value drivers are much different than anticipated and your marketing efforts should be changes accordingly:
Develop Products Your Customers Love
This point may seem obvious, but in fact, a lot of product development is done with complete disregard to the hard facts on customer preferences and value-drivers. In order to maintain your current price level or increase it (and your profits) in the future, you need to make sure that the value-drivers are taken into account when developing your product.
You should place a numerical value on different product features. A prioritization isn’t enough for product development as you want to be able to calculate the ROI on a potential investment into developing particular product features. This numerical value can be derived with a conjoint analysis which is incredibly effective for analyzing customer preferences. This will not only help you increase your prices, but also increase customer loyalty. Your customers will appreciate that you continuously strive to improve your product on the features they care about, and increasingly view you as a market leader within your niche.