Can you see when this business lost its pricing mojo? [Go on. Click on it. It won’t bite]
Good for you! Then you’re one up one them. They can’t.
Beyond that, can you see why it lost its pricing mojo? Probably not from this information alone. So when it comes to asking what exactly did they lose by losing their pricing mojo, the short, sharp snappy answer would be that they lost 13.5% of market-share which at $112M per point of market-share adds to up to $1.5Bn/year of lost gross margin per year. Now that’s very careless I think you would agree.
Now, if you want to get your pricing mojo back, call a real pricing expert. Not one of those famous big name consultants, but someone who will actually find out what your problems are, fix them quickly, and get your pricing mojo back.
Better Call Paul 281-782-9821 (before someone else does).
Cool Pricing Play
Value Server, n. Misnomer. Hist. Very high list price, very high discount product wrapped up with some sort of an assumption that you’ll also pay through the nose for o/s’s, apps, storage and services. Not a value server at all in the true economic sense of the word “value”. For a true value server with a reliable processor, investment protection in innovation within industry standards, and a product roadmap which actually exists, see, rather ironically, “Volume Server.”
Volume Server, n. More specifically, a volume server is a high volume server simply because it is good value for money. Should really be called a value server because value is the cause and volume the symptom. But that would be far too straightforward and understandable. See “Value Server”. (Well, wait a week, and strap yourselves in for “Value Server”).
Prevarication,n. Pricing problems. The longer you leave them, the worse they get, the more money you leave on the table, the more they cost to fix. Just saying.
Value, n. or adj. Often mistaken to mean “cheapest” or “budget” by consumers, marketing people, and “sigh“ product managers of Intel/X86-based products; while simultaneously mistaken by others who make proprietary servers to mean “expensive”. Rather ironically, neither represent value in the true sense of the word.
Previously from Paul’s Pricing Dictionary:
Bad Selling, adj.+gen. Bad Selling is somehow always absent as an option in Bid-Loss analysis. But if there ever was a Bid-Win analysis, I’m sure that Good Selling would somehow get 100% of the credit. Of this I feel absolutely sure.
Big Data, n. pl. but s. or pl. in constr., often attrib. It doesn’t matter how big your data is, how big your cube is. It’s how much insight you get from it that counts. And how quickly.
Currency, n. 1) The first refuge of the scoundrel when there is the slightest adverse movement in exchange rates to excuse crap business performance. This is a phenomenon which miraculously disappears just as soon as there is a beneficial shift in exchange rates. 2) Usually a key ingredient in a cocktail beloved of CEOs called “The Perfect Storm” to explain away a quarter of exceptional – and to everyone except them – entirely predictable under-performance (recipe available under NDA) 3) The perfect excuse for a list price increase and just one of the many reasons why list prices matter.
Pricing Patience, n.

Meta Price Analysis Value (MPAV), n.