As any experienced marketer knows, developing strategy is one thing—managing the change process to embed that strategy in the organization is quite another. All too frequently, companies make substantial investments in more effective pricing strategies and then fail to reap the expected return on that investment because they didn't sufficiently invest in implementation.

The truth is that implementing effective pricing strategy involves changing the expectations and behaviors of all of the actors involved in the sales process. Customers must learn that they will be treated fairly and that abusive purchase tactics will not be rewarded with ad hoc discounts. Sales must learn that they will be rewarded for closing deals that increase firm profitability rather than using price as a tactical lever to increase sales volume. Finance must learn to look beyond cost as a determinant of price to better understand the tradeoffs between price, cost, and market response.

Successful implementation of pricing strategies requires targeting specific undesirable behaviors and devising a detailed plan to change them. Our experience has shown that there are three main ways to affect these behavioral changes:

1. Provide effective incentives.

2. Set appropriate expectations.

3. Develop the necessary organizational skills.

Provide Effective Incentives

When actor/playwright/composer Noel Coward said, "If you must have motivation, think of your paycheck on Friday," he might well have been talking about how to motivate salespeople to move to a value-based selling approach.

Financial incentives are, without question, one of the most powerful levers for behavioral change among salespeople. Today, most salespeople are rewarded for top-line sales instead of profitability. When faced with a choice between working harder to sell value to gain additional price or closing an additional deal at a lower price, most opt to close the additional deal because they receive far more commission for the additional, albeit less profitable, volume. It is nearly impossible to get salespeople to work harder to get higher prices without changing their commission structure so that total compensation is more closely tied to profitability. Making those changes, although often difficult, is a crucial first step toward more effective price negotiations.

Just as salespeople need appropriate incentives, so, too, do customers. Strategic pricing requires convincing customers to change deeply ingrained behaviors that have been reinforced by years of ad hoc discounting, poor pricing discipline and poorly communicated value messages. Some customers will be asked to start paying for value received or accepting a lower value alternative. Other customers must be convinced to limit usage of high-cost services or else begin to pay for them. Still others may be asked to change purchase timing or volumes, or meet other conditions to qualify for continued discounts.

Convincing customers to change behaviors like these requires discipline and thoughtful design of appropriate incentives. Fortunately, marketers have many tools available to get the job done. For example, pricing policies can be used to encourage service "abusers" to reduce their usage of high-cost services or to begin to pay for them by aligning price paid with value received. Marketers in distribution, manufacturing and retail frequently use this technique to control delivery and logistics costs by offering a free minimum delivery option and then adding a metric that increases price for additional delivery guarantees.

Another tool that pricers can use to induce more profitable behaviors by customers is discount level. Consider the telecommunications manufacturer that had been giving costly support services away in order to match a major competitor's offering. The practice was highly unprofitable because the company could not price for the services for fear the competition would not follow and, like most services, they were costly to deliver.

Because the company could not change customer usage by increasing prices, it looked to discounting instead. A simple financial analysis showed that the company would improve profitability by offering a 5% product discount for every customer that opted to accept a restricted service package in which they had to use online support to solve technical problems. Price-sensitive customers found the package appealing, in part due to the lower price point but also because they could purchase personal support for an additional fee if needed.

As these examples illustrate, there are numerous opportunities to create incentives for more profitable behaviors on the part of customers and company personnel.

Set Appropriate Expectations

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

John E. Hogan is vice-president and director of research in the Boston office of Strategic Pricing Group. He can be reached at jhogan@spgconsulting.com. To register to receive SPG Insights, visit www.strategicpricinggroup.com.

To, is a group leader in the Cambridge, Massachusetts, office of Strategic Pricing Group, a member of Monitor Group. He can be reached at tom_nagle@monitor.com.