GTDC’s 2016 EMEA: Do List Prices Matter?

The Pricing Factory @ GTDC EMEA 2016 - Cropped 355x288 Making international pricing work: @PaulCharlton of  presenting at . There was a great question from Howard Davies of @Contextworld at the GTDC meeting in EMEA in June: Do list prices matter? I’ve heard this question lots of times before, and I’m sure Howard asked me because he’s heard it even more times than I have. Here’s the answer I gave Howard:

You need to work backwards from the objective you are trying to achieve. What businesses typically want and need are – not any particular pricing strategy – but consistent and predictable business outcomes. No matter how much growth in revenue/margin/risk reduction you can achieve, what your investors will value above all else is consistency and predictability. So Pricing needs to help businesses be consistent and predictable (bottom right-hand box): I’ve not come across any business leader who has objected to this approach … somehow all the discussions about particular pricing strategies disappear when I put this on the table.

GTDC June 2016 - Do List Prices Matter v2 960X720 © TPFAnd so working back from that, if you want consistent and predictable outcomes you need to have consistent and predictable discounts/discounting (middle-center box). No-one gets consistent and predictable outcomes is they have inconsistent and unpredictable discounts, do they?

And working back from that, the only way to get consistent and predictable discounts/discounting is to have consistent and predictable list prices (top left-hand box).

Yup. List prices do matter because what you want to do is build a sustainable and repeatable process/system which is designed to produce the consistent and predictable outcomes you want.

This is the answer I gave to Howard but there are other ways of looking at this. More to follow.

Thank you Howard! Great question!

Pricing Strategy as a Wrapper for End-to-End Pricing: Step 10

Step 10 – Pricing Strategy

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The documented Pricing Strategy can then be used to tie all the key elements together.

It should define the process for updating and changing all the elements of the end-to-end pricing process, including:

  • Roles and responsibilities
  • Values and guiding principles
  • High level objectives of list pricing & and discounting
  • Complete set of pricing metrics (not just LPPS)
  • Documented approach designing the discounting policy, programs and handling escalations
  • A description of how list pricing & discounting fits into selling process
  • How value is delivered to, consumed and sensed by customers …..
  • Etc

So this is end-to-end pricing

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Like the sculptor or bridge designer, the pricer should have an idea (thesis) what the final outcome should look like before he/she starts.

And that view will constantly evolve as more knowledge is obtained going through the ten steps …. the design assumptions are modified, the analysis re-computed, the outcomes compared to objectives, deltas analyzed, design assumptions modified etc ….. to get closer and closer to the optimal solution. A typical design process.

Anyhow, for your enjoyment, a simplified representation of End-to-End Pricing.

Extract from “10 Steps to Creating End-to-End Pricing” in April 2016 edition of The Pricing Advisor, authored by Paul Charlton of The Pricing Factory®.

Read the paper.

  • The Pricing Advisor is the monthly publication of the Professional Pricing Society, The World’s Leading Association Dedicated to Pricing Management.
  • This is the second article of Paul’s that the Professional Pricing Society has published. Read the paper in slideshow format …..
  • Any questions, please contact paul.charlton@thepricingfactory.com

 

The Pricing Factory: Making International Channel Pricing Work at the GTDC’s 2016 EMEA event

The Pricing Factory @ GTDC EMEA 2016 - Cropped 355x288

Making international pricing work:  of  presenting at 

Great to be part of such a vibrant event!

The scope of my presentation included:

  • A brief introduction to managing global pricing …
  • A channel pricing framework that provides competitive, consistent and predictable channel discounts and pricing halos.
  • And finally a practical framework to help disties check for vendor pricing functionality vs dysfunctionality.

If your vendor isn’t proactive with their pricing and keeping their list prices consistently competitive, then your warehouse is going to be pretty full of over-priced product ….!

Pricing is always more interesting to Finance than anything else they could be doing. Believe me. I’ve been in Finance. ….. End-to-End Pricing: Steps 8 & 9

Step 8 – Financial Objectives

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Financial Objectives – such as Revenue Growth, GM% expansion, Opex, PBT, ROIC v time – need to be reconciled with the List Price Positioning Strategy

This is an interactive process with Finance, but the outcome should not be dictated by Finance.

Finance unilaterally & arbitrarily setting unrealistic financial goals in their annual target setting process is typically the second biggest cause of “pricing issues” that I come across.

 

Step 9 – Integrated Financial Plan

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Planned list prices and discounting should be rolled into a product-based financial plan along with new products introductions & discontinuations, product cost plan and demand plan.

Compare the outcome with your financial objectives. Then re-iterate ….

Make sure that your pricing plan is baked into Finance’s “official” financial plan or at least consistent with it.

Make this a joint exercise with Finance who typically will be willing to get involved because working on pricing is always more interesting than anything else they could be doing. Believe me. I’ve been in Finance.

Extract from “10 Steps to Creating End-to-End Pricing” in April 2016 edition of The Pricing Advisor, authored by Paul Charlton of The Pricing Factory®.

Read the paper.

  • The Pricing Advisor is the monthly publication of the Professional Pricing Society, The World’s Leading Association Dedicated to Pricing Management.
  • This is the second article of Paul’s that the Professional Pricing Society has published. Read the paper in slideshow format …..
  • Any questions, please contact paul.charlton@thepricingfactory.com

 

Do you have a “You Gotta Haggle” pricing strategy? ….. End-to-End Pricing: Steps 5, 6 & 7

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Step 5 – Deal Analysis

Deal Analysis will start to give insight where there is over-discounting and under-discounting, how consistent or – more likely – inconsistent the discounting is. This is where most of the opportunities are.

This will also inform the List Price Positioning Strategy, List Price Plan and ….

 

 

Step 6 – Discounting Policy & Programs

The conclusions from the Deal Analysis should be taken forward to create/update the Discounting Policy & Programs.

In most organizations this involves establishing a rational, policy-based approach to discounting which allows Sales to focus on “selling the value”.

Typically this will be a move away from a “You Gotta Haggle” strategy.

Additional discretionary discounting programs should be designed so that they are only given in exchange for something which helps your business achieve its goals.

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Contractual discounts for channel partners should be designed to reflect the tasks that the partner is contracted to perform in reselling your product.

The policy should include bid escalation criteria, process & SLA (Service Level Agreement).

The Discounting Policy & Programs should be aligned with the List Price Positioning Strategy & List Price Plan.

Step 7 – Sales Comp

Sales Compensation should be designed in order to support the execution of the Discounting Policy & Programs and the attainment of the business plan.

Importantly this should not be left to Sales – or even worse, the GM or CEO – to design unilaterally. Sales Comp needs to be consistent with all the other elements of End-to-End Pricing.

10 Steps - Step 7 609x609 ©TPF

Extract from “10 Steps to Creating End-to-End Pricing” in April 2016 edition of The Pricing Advisor, authored by Paul Charlton of The Pricing Factory®.

Read the paper.

  • The Pricing Advisor is the monthly publication of the Professional Pricing Society, The World’s Leading Association Dedicated to Pricing Management.
  • This is the second article of Paul’s that the Professional Pricing Society has published. Read the paper in slideshow format …..
  • Any questions, please contact paul.charlton@thepricingfactory.com

 

List Price Positioning Strategy, Value Proposition & List Price Plan ….. End-to-End Pricing: Steps 2, 3 & 4

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Step 2 – List Price Positioning Strategy

Once you’ve worked out where you are competitively, it then becomes much easier to work out where you would like to be through probably applying nothing more than common sense – deductive reasoning – which is generally a lot cheaper, quicker and more useful than any market research that could be conducted.

Good GMs, Sales VPs/Directors and Product Managers/VPs typically know where they need to be positioned: they just need a bit of help articulating it.

Also be aware that an LPPS is reactive metric (“you know, they move and then we follow them”) so it’s very easy to stumble from being a price-leader into being a price-follower without realizing it. So to avoid this, you will also need some proactive metrics in your Pricing Strategy.

The LPPS should be in a presentable format and include a brief written rationale for every element in the strategy so the purpose of the price positioning can be easily explained to management for their approval, and to Sales for development into sales tools to communicate value to customers.

Step 3 – Value Proposition

The List Price Positioning Strategy needs to be consistent with and informed by the Value Proposition at multiple business and product levels.

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The Value Prop needs to be appropriate for target market/segmentation, and implicitly captures how the business expects to create value for its customers.

There is an implication here that the Value Proposition needs to be meaningful – again, if I didn’t need to say this, I wouldn’t.

At a product level, insisting that the value proposition is:

  • quantitative – usually helps focus a product manager’s mind, or if it is
  • qualitative – include superlatives or comparatives which are independently verifiable

OK, so this section doesn’t have very many words in it. But there again, neither should your Value Prop. Succinctness and relevance are the keys to a successful Value Prop. The best one I came across was citable by the CEO. Another was developed by the CIO, not product management.

Step 4 – List Price Plan

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Now list price changes can be planned. This is where the pricer starts to apply the paint to the canvas … chips away at that stone block …. puts quill to paper.

The overall approach to & rationale for the list price changes should be documented, not only so you can remember why you did what you did, but also so Sales don’t have to work out what you intended for themselves.

 

Extract from “10 Steps to Creating End-to-End Pricing” in April 2016 edition of The Pricing Advisor, authored by Paul Charlton of The Pricing Factory®Read the paper.

  • The Pricing Advisor is the monthly publication of the Professional Pricing Society, The World’s Leading Association Dedicated to Pricing Management.
  • This is the second article of Paul’s that the Professional Pricing Society has published. Read the paper in slideshow format …..
  • Any questions, please contact paul.charlton@thepricingfactory.com

 

“He lives in a very big house house for someone who puts the price tags on PCs in Best Buy” ….. End-to-End Pricing: Step 1

 

End-to-End Pricing 589x594 ©TPF

I told an old friend who had been a colleague of mine and had worked closely me with that “I was pleased to have been able to sort out the pricing for my client from “end-to-end””, and he replied that he had no idea what “end-to-end pricing” meant. Which made me think, if he doesn’t know what I meant, who does?

The purpose of the paper is to help pricing professionals explain to non-pricing executives and managers not only what “end-to-end pricing” is in a simplified, integrated 10-step program, but also articulate and visualize what pricing professionals create. So I am defining – for the purpose of this exercise – that the objectives of end-to-end pricing are to:

  • create competitive list prices and discount policies and guidelines which:
  • allow sales to be more efficient and focus on selling the value of the product …
  • … rather being margin managers or, even worse, sellers of deals for internal approval,
  • consistently apply your pricing strategy and price list positioning strategy,
  • align with your marketing, sales comp and financial plans;
  • All of which can be refreshed with a sustainable, efficient and repeatable process.

This is applicable to pretty much all B-2-B from those with one product to those with hundreds of thousands; small to large; regional to global; new to old; and particularly high tech.

If you like it’s like building a factory – a pricing factory – for prices & pricing processes, discounting policies and sales tools.

Step 1 – Competitive Analysis

I think this is the piece that everyone knows that pricing folks do – that is in between putting price tags on PCs in Best Buy as the parent of one of my daughter’s friends thought – but there are lots of opportunities for pratfalls. And I’ve seen some pratfalls in my time ….

The analysis needs to make sense and be easily understandable.

If it doesn’t instinctively make sense to your sales people, then there’s probably something wrong with it … and you’ll never be able to transform the analysis into a sales tool for communicating value to your customers.

The methodology and format needs to be consistent and repeatable … and timely.

If I didn’t need to mention any of this, obviously I wouldn’t.

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Ah, and the link between qualitative and quantitative analysis is the valuation/$-ization of those previously qualitative, subjective valuations …. everyone’s favorite topic. But for a lot of businesses, those valuations are the reason – not a reason, the reason – why the business exists, or is able to command a premium. So you gotta learn to love them … even if you don’t like them.

Extract from “10 Steps to Creating End-to-End Pricing” in April 2016 edition of The Pricing Advisor, authored by Paul Charlton of The Pricing Factory®Read the paper.

  • The Pricing Advisor is the monthly publication of the Professional Pricing Society, The World’s Leading Association Dedicated to Pricing Management.
  • This is the second article of Paul’s that the Professional Pricing Society has published. Read the paper in slideshow format …..
  • Any questions, please contact paul.charlton@thepricingfactory.com

 

“10 Steps to Creating End-to-End Pricing” has now been published by the Professional Pricing Society …

 

  • End-to-End Pricing 589x594 ©TPF … in April 2016 edition of The Pricing Advisor, authored by Paul Charlton of The Pricing Factory®Read the paper.
  • The Pricing Advisor is the monthly publication of the Professional Pricing Society, The World’s Leading Association Dedicated to Pricing Management.
  • The purpose of this article is to help pricing professionals explain to non-pricing executives and managers not only what “end-to-end pricing” is in a simplified, integrated 10-step program, but also articulate and visualize what pricing professionals create.
  • This is the second article of Paul’s that the Professional Pricing Society has published. Read the paper in slideshow format …..PPS logo 166x74
  • Any questions, please contact paul.charlton@thepricingfactory.com

 

Ask not for whom the enterprise bellwether tolls …..

One-man-looking-at-anotherin-a-crowd-white-border-190x156The WSJ highlighted some gloomy numbers from Intel’s Data Center Group recently “Intel’s Data-Center Revenue Disappoints” 01/14/16 And the WSJ is right, Intel DCG’s results were disappointing relative to analysts’ expectations, but it didn’t really pick up on what the potential implications are for other players in enterprise IT. What’s interesting is when you view Intel DCG as the bellwether for enterprise IT. After all it is at the core of the data center and everything needs compute. And being a quasi-monopoly it is the most unfiltered view that we can get of compute in the enterprise. Well, unfiltered by not having little complications like changes in market-share to distort that view. So if we think of viewing other IT vendors’ enterprise performance through the lens of how they grew their product revenue relative to Intel DCG then everything becomes a little clearer and easier to understand. Here’s what it looks like:

Intel as Enterprise Bellwether 1 960x720So this includes HP ESSN (products only remember), Cisco Products, IBM Total Systems and Dell Enterprise. Well, whenever Dell Enterprise reported its numbers publicly that is. Viewed historically, Intel DCG reported its lowest year-over-rear revenue growth for 11 quarters. What’s also clear is that in most quarters, Intel’s DCG out-grew most other major IT vendors most of the time. In fact in 17 of the 25 quarters shown in the chart, Intel’s DCG had the highest growth-rate. Takeaways are:

  • Intel DCG’s growth tends to be the upper limit of enterprise vendors’ product revenue growth which also means that whenever Intel DCG has a bad time, pretty much everyone has a bad time
  • If a business did out-grow Intel DCG, it was doing exceptionally well
  • Intel reporting cycle is ahead of the others and as such is also an early indicator – and in this case a possible early indicator of poor enterprise results.

Intel as Enterprise Bellwether 2 960x720HP ESSN outgrew Intel DCG for one quarter in 2010, as did IBM’s Data Center Group – the DC5 of IT, yes, they really are glad it’s all over – in 2011. But that was pretty much a swan-song for IBM … and arguably Hewlett-Packard Company.

Intel as Enterprise Bellwether 3 960v720

 

 

Dell Enterprise managed to out-grow Intel DCG for 5 out of 6 quarters from 2012-13. This is noteworthy because no-one else has ever outgrown Intel DCG over such as sustained period in recent history.

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Here you can see the sort of grief that Cisco was going through ….. with growth rates <5% from 2011 to nearly the end of 2014 with Intel DCG out-growing them by more than 1500 bps for 5 straight quarters in 2014-15.

 

 

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Reminder: revenue growth is only worthwhile if it contains calories and there a lot of segments with few or no calories. But these are relatively clean, comparable numbers that come straight from companies’ 10-Q’s.

So the big questions are can anyone buck Intel DCG’s downward revenue growth trend? Indeed, can Intel DCG buck Intel DCG’s trend? And no, that’s not a typo.

Paul’s Pricing Dictionary: Re-present

P 75x75Re-present, vb. To re-present a deal by re-ordering and re-formatting discounts in order to give the impression of an improved deal. Not the same as re-structure in that the discounts quoted are exactly the same as before.

 

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